Election Wars at the Supreme Court
'While its been obvious for years that election law the rules by which votes are counted, district lines are drawn and campaigns are paid for represents a front in the culture wars, we dont usually think of it that way.
Thats because the term culture war signifies the politicization of competing belief systems over abortion, for example, or religion or the appropriate social roles for men and women. (I use the word belief advisedly, recognizing that an anti-abortion position is purely opportunistic for a fair number of the Republican politicians who embrace it, including but not limited to President Trump.)
The election-law wars, by contrast, arent about belief. They are about power: who has it, who gets to keep it. And as underscored by this weeks Supreme Court decision invalidating two North Carolina congressional districts as unconstitutional racial gerrymanders, the justices are as fully engaged in combat as anyone else.
There was something delicious about the warning in the dissenting opinion by Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. about the danger that the federal courts will be transformed into weapons of political warfare if they remain open to deciding such cases. He said that by being too casually receptive to complaints like those brought by African-American voters in this case, courts will invite the losers in the redistricting process to seek to obtain in court what they could not achieve in the political arena.
Please. When did the Supreme Court acquire such diffidence about offering a forum for electoral struggle? Am I the only one to recall the late Justice Antonin Scalias explanation for why the Supreme Court had to intervene to stop the recount of Floridas votes in the 2000 presidential election? Permitting the recount to go forward, Justice Scalia wrote then, would cause irreparable harm to George W. Bush by casting a cloud upon what he claims to be the legitimacy of his election. Note that Justice Alitos dissenting opinion this week in Cooper v. Harris was joined by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., who as a private lawyer was a member of the Bush legal team in Palm Beach County, and by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, a prime mover in the courts eventual decision in what became Bush v. Gore.'>>>
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/25/opinion/supreme-court-congressional-redistricting.html?ref=opinion
dalton99a
(81,565 posts)Alice11111
(5,730 posts)on here many times, including today. That's when the big cheating started or became evident. It's gone on ever since.
ATL Ebony
(1,097 posts)the SCOTUS's underlying position and Thomas' historic vote.
elleng
(131,053 posts)(I post her articles whenever they appear,) good analysis and historical perspective.
Her NYT articles are probably 'collected' somewhere.