Showing posts with label Supreme Court. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Supreme Court. Show all posts

Thursday, September 3, 2015

The Coming Liberal Disaster at the Supreme Court - The New Yorker

image

By Jeffrey Toobin

The conservatives on the Court are poised for a comeback. The conservatives on the Court are poised for a comeback. Credit Photograph by Alex Wong/Getty

The beleaguered liberals on the Supreme Court had a great deal to celebrate in the term that ended in June. Two epic cases, and even some lesser ones, went their way. In Obergefell v. Hodges, the Justices ruled, five to four, that all fifty states must recognize same-sex marriages. And in King v. Burwell, the Court, by a vote of six to three, dismissed a challenge to the Affordable Care Act that might have, as a practical matter, destroyed the law. A surprising victory in a housing-discrimination case and another where the Court allowed limits on judges’ soliciting campaign contributions completed a major run of progressive victories.

Don’t expect the streak to last. The liberals’ big victories last term arose from a very particular set of circumstances. Justice Anthony Kennedy has displayed a consistent respect for the rights of gay people, which made his alliance with the four liberals (Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan) on same-sex marriage almost a foregone conclusion. In King v. Burwell, a group of conservative legal activists pushed such a transparently fraudulent claim about the text of the Obamacare law that Chief Justice John Roberts and Kennedy (who are no fans of the law) had to reject the claim.

But the conservatives on the Court are poised for a comeback, and the subjects before the Justices appear well suited for liberal defeats. Consider:

Affirmative action. The Chief Justice has been primed to get rid of any kind of racial preferences since he took office, a decade ago. In 2013, in Fisher v. University of Texas, the Justices essentially kicked the issue of affirmative action in college admissions down the road. Lower courts upheld the Texas plan, which allows an extremely limited use of racial diversity in admissions. Now the Supreme Court has agreed to hear the case a second time—an unusual step in itself. It’s hard to imagine that the Justices reached out for this case again simply to preserve the status quo. A decision limiting—or eliminating—racial preferences in admissions seems highly likely.

Abortion. After the Republican landslides in the 2010 midterm elections, more than a dozen states tightened their restrictions on abortion. No state banned abortion altogether, but several came close. Some have banned abortion after the twentieth week of pregnancy, and others have imposed requirements on clinics that make them virtually impossible to operate. (For example, the laws require that doctors who provide abortions must have admitting privileges at local hospitals; they also impose on clinics the building standards of ambulatory surgical centers.) In Texas, the new rules would require all but nine abortion providers in the state to close their doors. It’s true that, in June, five Justices (the liberals plus Kennedy) issued a stay, preventing the law from going into effect; but Kennedy has favored limits on abortion in recent years, and there is every reason to believe he will support these new ones, too.

Public-employee unions. At the end of June, the Justices agreed to decide Friedrichs v. California; it could sharply limit the power of public-employee unions, which have been bulwarks of support for Democratic office-holders. In states like California, public employees who choose not to join a union must still pay the equivalent of dues (“fair share” fees) when the union negotiates their contracts. If the challengers win this case, the unions may lose millions of dollars in revenue, with a consequent loss of power. Since public-employee unions have done so much better than private-sector unions in recent years, that would hurt the union movement as a whole in an especially vulnerable place. The campaign against fair-share fees has been a special crusade for Justice Samuel Alito, and he may kill them off for good this time.

There is not yet a major campaign-finance case before the Justices, but in an election year it would be no surprise to see one surface. The conservative majority, led in this case by Kennedy, has shown no sign of backing away from its Citizens United decision, from 2010, which said that campaign contributions are a form of free speech. On the rights of criminal suspects, especially those sentenced to death, the Court remains deeply conservative as well. It only underscores the magnitude of the liberal victories in 2015 to recognize that they may seem deeply aberrational in 2016.

The Coming Liberal Disaster at the Supreme Court - The New Yorker

Monday, November 26, 2012

Supreme Court rejects plea to ban taping of police in Illinois - chicagotribune.com

Tribune staff

has rejected an appeal from the Cook County state's attorney to allow enforcement of a law prohibiting people from recording police officers on the job.
The justices on Monday left in place a lower court ruling that found that the state's anti-eavesdropping law violates free speech rights when used against people who tape law enforcement officers.

READ THE ENTIRE STORY BY CLICKING ON THE FOLLOWING:  Supreme Court rejects plea to ban taping of police in Illinois - chicagotribune.com

The full text of the Supreme Court Decision is available at:  http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/breaking/chi-full-text-of-ruling-on-illinois-police-recording-law-20121126,0,4537043.htmlpage

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

CBO: Court ruling cuts cost of health-care law, but leaves 3 million more uninsured - The Washington Post

In its June 28 ruling, the court upheld the bulk of the Affordable Care Act, but struck down its plan to require states to expand their Medicaid programs to cover poor people who earn as much as 138 percent of the federal poverty level. ….

Factoring in other changes, the total cost of the coverage expansion would be $1.168 trillion, the CBO said, compared with an original estimate of $1.252 trillion — a net reduction of $84 billion.

Click on the following for more details;  CBO: Court ruling cuts cost of health-care law, but leaves 3 million more uninsured - The Washington Post

Monday, January 23, 2012

Illinois Supreme Court gives OK for cameras in trial courts

By Scott Reeder | Illinois Statehouse News

The new policy includes some restrictions:

• Jurors and potential jurors may not be photographed.

• Cameras and recording devices will not be allowed in juvenile, divorce, adoption, child custody and evidence suppression cases.

• No more than two television cameras and no more than two still photographers will be allowed in a courtroom at one time.

• Victims of violent felonies, police informants and relocated witnesses may request that the judge prohibit them from being photographed.

Although the policy goes into effect Tuesday, the chief judges of Illinois’ 23 circuit courts are responsible for implementing the policy. Once a chief judge of a circuit court applies and is approved by the Supreme Court, news media may request to cover eligible cases electronically in that circuit court.

Members of the news media are responsible for applying for electronic coverage each time they want to cover a particular case. Specific details of the application process will be released Tuesday.

Read the entire story by clicking on the following:  http://illinois.statehousenewsonline.com/7506/illinois-supreme-court-gives-ok-to-cameras-in-trial-courts/

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Justices Rule for Protesters at Military Funerals - NYTimes.com

Chief Justice Roberts wrote in the ruling that three factors required a ruling in favor of the church group

  1. its speech was on matters of public concern
  2. the relationship between the church and the Snyders was not a private grudge.
  3. the members of the church “had the right to be where they were.” They were picketing on a public street 1,000 feet from the site of the funeral, they complied with the law and with instructions from the police, and they protested quietly and without violence
  4. Click on the following for more details on the Supreme Court decision:  Justices Rule for Protesters at Military Funerals - NYTimes.com

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Supreme Court Declines to Review Important Ninth Circuit Decision Upholding Washington State Ballot Measure Disclosure Laws - Inbox - Yahoo! Mail

 

The Supreme Court’s denial of certiorari in Human Life of Washington gives the green light to advocates of effective campaign finance disclosure to aggressively defend existing disclosure laws under challenge by Bopp and other opponents of transparency in government, and to legislators to enact stronger disclosure laws to shine light on the recent flood of corporate dollars into U.S. elections that are being laundered through intermediaries like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and increasingly-prevalent fly-by-night 501(c)(4) organizations formed solely for the purpose of hiding the identities of special interests trying to buy our elections.

Click on the following for more details:  Supreme Court Declines to Review Important Ninth Circuit Decision Upholding Washington State Ballot Measure Disclosure Laws - Inbox - Yahoo! Mail

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Illinois Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Kilbride Retains Seat | Progress Illinois

 More than $2.5 million in campaign expense was spent for the judge to maintain his seat.  See: http://www.pantagraph.com/news/state-and-regional/illinois/article_7b1a8ff8-e395-11df-a865-001cc4c002e0.html 

image

Illinois Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Kilbride retained his seat today after a heated battle with big business interests. With 65 percent of the vote and 74 percent of precincts reporting, Kilbride earned the 60 percent of votes needed to win a second term.

Click on the following for the election result:  Illinois Supreme Court Chief Justice Thomas Kilbride Retains Seat | Progress Illinois

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Supreme Court Considers Protests at Military Funerals

Westboro Baptist Church, a self-described religious group whose members picket the funerals of slain soldiers and shout anti-gay rhetoric. God, according to the fundamentalist group, is angry at the country for not punishing homosexuality and smites its soldiers and marines in retribution

The Supreme Court, which began a new term this week, will take up as one of its first items of business the case of Albert Snyder, the father of a slain soldier, who sued Fred Phelps, the leader of the Kansas-based church, for intentional infliction of emotional distress.

a jury awarded Snyder $11 million, which a judge later reduced to $5 million. But the verdict was reversed on appeal, and it will now be adjudicated at the high court, where it provides an unusual case for the justices to demarcate the frontiers of freedom of speech.

Click on the following for more details:  Supreme Court Considers Protests at Military Funerals - US News and World Report

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Elgin’s Rauschenberger wins case to stay on ballot

around a 2009 vote Rauschenberger placed in the local Democratic primary to support his sister, Carol Rauschenberger.

He later filed to run as a Republican in this year's Feb. 2 primary.

 

Rauschenberger's attorney maintained the case law doesn't apply in the current situation because Rauschenberger pulled a Democratic primary ballot in a separate election cycle.

Click on the following for more details:  Daily Herald | Rauschenberger wins case to stay on ballot

Monday, March 29, 2010

Is the Health Care Law Unconstitutional? - Room for Debate Blog - NYTimes.com

Here is a great summary of the possible issues which the court will weigh as presented by constitutional experts. 

  • Spring view of the Supreme Court BuildingWhat the opponents are really claiming is that it is unconstitutional to make Americans pay taxes.
  • The Supreme Court has never upheld a “tax” penalizing private citizens who refuse to enter into a contract with a private company
  • Any state that does not want to expand Medicaid can simply drop the program entirely.
    • If Congress can legislate this broadly, then there is no limit to federal power in every aspect of life.

 

Is the Health Care Law Unconstitutional? - Room for Debate Blog - NYTimes.com

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

U.S. Supreme Court: Ref. 71 names to remain sealed for now

Interesting case in Seattle—Signatures cannot be reviewed and thereby challenged for reasons of the First Amendment (Free Speech vs. open/transparency of election process)

In a rare move, the U.S. Supreme Court has ordered that signatures collected to get Referendum 71 on the November ballot should continue to be sealed until the court decides whether it will hear an appeal in the case — a process that could take up to a year.

Click on the following for more details:  Local News | U.S. Supreme Court: Ref. 71 names to remain sealed for now | Seattle Times Newspaper