The Volokh Conspiracy
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After Rucho, Dobbs, and Moore, State Supreme Courts Take On Even More Significance
As the unelected judiciary becomes depoliticized, the elected judiciary becomes more politicized.
In recent years, the Supreme Court of the United States has devolved several important decisions to the states--or more precisely, the state Supreme Courts. Of course, Dobbs extricated the federal judiciary from the abortion issue. In the wake of Dobbs, several states have enacted constitutional protections for abortion. But in other states, state supreme courts have recognized a constitutional right to abortion in the state constitution. Those rights were apparently there all along, but there was no need to see them because of Roe. Go figure!
Unsurprisingly, the stakes of state supreme court races have become far more significant. Look no further than Wisconsin, where a candidate ran, and prevailed, on the not-so-subtle platform of protecting abortion rights. Dobbs unquestionably got the federal courts out of the abortion business, but the locus for judicial overreach shifted to the next option--the state courts.
A similar dynamic is at play with regard to partisan gerrymandering. Rucho v. Common Cause held that the United States Supreme Court would not resolve disputes about partisan gerrymandering. Rather, the state supreme courts would decide those issues under state constitutions. These decisions, of course, may implicate the Election Clause and the Independent State Legislature doctrine. But Moore v. Harper reaffirmed that the state courts have extremely broad power to redraw maps for federal elections. Indeed, it will be extremely difficult for the inferior federal courts to even hear challenges to these maps. Perhaps the only route for review will be through certiorari petitions, which will be routinely denied. (Derek Mueller made this point shortly after Moore was decided.) Once again, the significance of the state courts becomes even more important. Look no further than North Carolina, where the recently-elected Republican state supreme court overruled the "precedent" (but not the "judgment") of the former Democratic majority.
As the unelected judiciary becomes depoliticized, the elected judiciary becomes more politicized. On balance, I am okay with this shift. As Judge Sutton explains, there are 51 imperfect solutions, and just that many imperfect state supreme courts, plus hundreds of imperfect state supreme court justices. Fortunately, it is much simpler to improve a state bench, than to "reform" the highest court of the land. Still, I worry deeply about races like the one in Wisconsin where candidates effectively prejudged cases. Neutrality, or at least the pretense of neutrality, is a bedrock of any judicial system. Otherwise, we are just left with a Council of Revision, which didn't work out too well in New York.
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Prejudged? You mean like what Trump said after taking credit for Dobbs?
“Today’s decision, which is the biggest WIN for LIFE in a generation, along with other decisions that have been announced recently, were only made possible because I delivered everything as promised, including nominating and getting three highly respected and strong Constitutionalists confirmed to the United States Supreme Court,” Trump said.
You don’t think the fix was in there, do you? No, we all know that conservative judges never make up their minds until the evidence is heard and have utmost respect for precedent. Then they deliver the goods for the far right.
Another masterclass on how to remain mired at one of the shittiest law schools in America.
And how to be invited to join a polemical, wrong-side-of-history blog with a scant, fading academic veneer.
Life begins at 5 weeks and 6 days.
Governor Rob DeSantos
The unelected judiciary is becoming depoliticized? Did multiple justices quit the Supreme Court?
Oh, it's Blackman. Never mind.
Those rights were apparently there all along, but there was no need to see them because of Roe.
Yes. I'm not sure why that is complicated.
Yeah. When I read it, I was first assuming that Josh was making a joke (since it is indeed as obvious as you pointed out; not to mention what we spent first year Con Law learning). Is it possible that Josh *was* making a joke, and it just whooshed over your head and my head as well?
Was he really expecting a 2010 (to pick a year at random) court to say, “Well, Roe and its progeny are settled law. But hey; if Roe were to disappear tomorrow, just for shits and giggles, let me just add into this opinion--for the edification of the public--a bunch of other justifications for leaving a woman’s control over her own body in place. You know; in case anyone from Earth Two happens to be reading this decision.”
OTOH Wisconsin has been a state since 1848 and the abortion law was passed in 1849, so it's been there pretty much the whole time. Nobody noticed that the state constitution prohibited abortion restrictions any time between 1849 and 1973? That's actually a longer period than the one involved with Roe since that used the 14th amendment which wasn't passed until 1868.
A lot of rights weren't noticed until a century later. Wisconsin added to its statutes newer provisions that were compatible with Roe, and the dissent in the Indiana case a few posts ago argued that the 1984 changes to their constitution brought in Roe. But Wisconsin did not remove the old law; pro-choice forces not wanting to expend their efforts on little gain when anti-abortion groups would just attack them over it. As I recall, when it came up the Rehnquist owned several homes with covenants barring Jews and nonwhites, defenders pointed out it was irrelevant because they were unenforceable - but why not remove them, which would hardly be a controversial act or expend political capital?
I mean, White landed Americans missed the "all men" part of "being created equal" for quite a while.
“As the unelected judiciary becomes depoliticized, the elected judiciary becomes more politicized. On balance, I am okay with this shift.” …. Still, I worry deeply about races like the one in Wisconsin where candidates effectively prejudged cases. Neutrality, or at least the pretense of neutrality, is a bedrock of any judicial system.” How on earth is neutrality guaranteed when the elected judiciary is politicized? What Josh’s argument amounts to is to just accept the PRETENSE of neutrality. Seriously? There is a funny thing about US politics: there are quite a few instances where political decisions have to be taken by qualified majorities, imho partly on decisions where a simple majority would be perfectly justified. Why not impose such qualifications on issues that do profoundly matter, such as the — if you insist upon — election of judges. In order to become a judge you’d have to pass a threshold of say, two thirds, three fifths of the votes, or 50% plus one of the eligible voters? I know that people will argue that this will empty the judicial chambers because such qualified majorities are impossible to attain — at the moment. Well, it is one measure to educate people that they have to compromise when they want to live together with people that profoundly disagree with their own political views. Currently, people are trying to excommunicate the other: “only real Americans, and [mostly] Democrats/Republicans are not!” (Mind you, I for one am really neither citizen nor resident.) Friedrich Hayek is considered a conservative icon — when he himself denied that he even was a conservative. In explaining why, he wrote: “When I say that the conservative lacks principles, I do not mean to suggest that he lacks moral conviction. The typical conservative is indeed usually a man of very strong moral convictions. What I mean is that he has NO POLITICAL PRINCIPLES which enable him to work with people whose moral values differ from his own for a political order in which both can obey their convictions. It is the recognition of such principles that permits the coexistence of different sets of values that makes it possible to build a peaceful society with a minimum of force. (my CAPs, https://www.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/articles/hayek-why-i-am-not-conservative.pdf)
So Hayek joins multitudes of right-wingers who deny being right-wingers but leap to defend right-wing causes and politicians. You can often spot them all over the internet, claiming to be lifelong Democrats but talking about the "Democrat party" and driven from the party by trivial issues. Plenty of right-wing deniers here in the VC comments.
In defense of Hayek whose right wing libertarian policies I did not share as a socialist libertarian myself, I’d like to point out that Hayek´s understanding of conservatism was still making the distinction between conservatism and libertarianism — or European type of “liberalism”. It is true, though that his libertarianism was quite muted when Chile’s bloody dictator Augusto Pinochet applied his preferred economic policies.
That is however not true for ALL right wing libertarians, I think, for example, about Justin Amash — a founding member of the Freedom Caucus which he left in 2019 before leaving the GOP altogether. Again, I do not agree at all with his economic policies but on civil liberties he was sticking to his guns. It was only consistent that he turned to the Libertarian Party.
You’ll find a lot of people who are considered socially liberal and economically “conservative” among US libertarians. That economic “conservatism” is a misnomer because there is very little conservatism in unfettered capitalism. The paleo-conservatives in a way are the “true” defenders of economic conservatism since they correctly identify the destructive force of capitalism which tears into the very social fabric of society. Right-wing libertarians with their insistence on all-out individualism and little love lost for the common good can’t care less for the wiping out of whole communities by capital looking for a higher return on investment elsewhere.
Ironically, Comrade Chuan Jin Guo in his economic nationalism is far more “conservative” in the Hayekian sense than the libertarian Koch brothers. (That is not to say that 45 has any convictions, hence the quotes!) The fusion of conservatism and libertarianism culminated in Ronald Reagan’s GOP, but their inherent tensions are coming to the fore again. Unfortunately, the whole bit has revealed an authoritarianism — quite a conservative feature! — but without the core conservative guardrail of “virtue”. (I doubt very much that “virtue” works that way but then I am not a conservative.)
Fortunately, it is much simpler to improve a state bench, than to “reform” the highest court of the land.
Not after the Federalist Society gets through with it.
Ballotpedia reports there are 344 state supreme court justices. Set aside half a billion or so to corrupt the 870-strong federal judiciary, and that will still leave a more-than-adequate $3.2 million per-state-justice in Federalist Society coffers to corrupt state supreme courts.
That will pay for plenty of yachting trips, airplane rides, fishing lodge visits, and relatives’ tuition payments. More than enough. Not until they start to get the full perks extended to SCOTUS justices will state supreme court justices fully realize their new importance.
You forgot relatives' homes.
And (understandably) the stuff Thomas, Alito, Thomas, Leo, Crow, and the others have been able to continue to conceal (so far) from the American public.
Yet you have no issue with an avowed homosexual, Judge Walker, from deciding on the constitutionality of Prop 8.
If a judge who thinks another man's rear end is the right place to park his pecker being allowed to hear a case on the constitutionality of his anal-sex based relationship isn't corruption, I don't know what is.
As the unelected judiciary becomes depoliticized...
I'm glad I wasn't in the middle of drinking my coffee when I read that. It would have ended up all over my monitor.
Depoliticized???
What a moron Blackman is.
Blackman's ludicrous "depoliticized federal judiciary" is just teeing up attacks on the "politicization of the federal judiciary" when Supreme Court expansion comes up, or maybe just to shift the framing against the next Biden nominee if a Supreme Court vacancy comes up.
Sigh. There is no such thing as a depoliticized judiciary. It’s conceptually impossible. Judicial power is political power. Judges are picked by politicians or run for office themselves for this reason. All judicial decisions are inherently political choices even if they don’t always fit into a particular moment’s partisan fault lines.
And a court deciding that it doesn’t want to be involved in a particular matter like protecting a right to an abortion or ensuring fairness in legislative maps is obviously a political choice in the same way Congress deciding not to pass a law on a particular subject is a political choice. And of course in those examples they are both political choices AND they fit neatly into the moment’s partisan politics. Plus obviously Blackman would claim it’s a political choice for a court to say take a hands off approach to state gun regulation.
It would be easy to point out that Blackman is a moron for actually believing that there is a “depoliticized” federal judiciary. Or is acting in clear bad faith by smugly claiming that “ the good decisions I support are apolitical and the bad ones you support are political.” But unfortunately this attitude about courts and lawyers doing something called “law” that is somehow apolitical is endemic to the legal academy and lawyers generally.
Justice neutrality is bogus, and always has been bogus.
Justices are selected for their partisan views, whether by appointment or election.
It's better to have that be explicit rather than cheeseclothed.