Thursday, November 22, 2018
As The Judicial System Veers to the Right
Associate
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg is 85 years old. She recently fell in her
office, cracking a rib. A powerhouse of a justice, appointed in 1993 by
President Bill Clinton, Ginsberg has been a liberal force in an increasingly
conservative court. Her determination to hang on is beyond incredible, a
motivation and determination that seems to be model for all of us, right, left
and center.
But
her age and her injury combined with a rather GOP clear win in the United
States Senate, the body that confirms presidential judicial appointments,
suggest that even the 5-4 tilt of the Court to the right is far from over. A
minority party, bolstered by voting restrictions aimed at favoring traditional
white mainstream incumbents, is set to maintain a rural value system on a
nation that has long since become a predominantly urban nation for decades to
come. Hang on Ruth! Your country needs you.
Notwithstanding
the remaining vestiges of moderate and liberal federal judges – each with a
life time appointment – who try and hold the government to its statutory
obligations and past promises within constitutional limits, Trump executive
branch appointees are effectively trying
to reverse immigration policies without Congressional approval, alter our
statutory asylum laws and reneg on our promises to DACA children. They are
trying to force repayment on federally-backed student loans from failed
for-profit post-secondary schools that the feds themselves shut down.
Consumer,
environmental protections and expanding healthcare, despite exceptionally wide
bipartisan grassroots support, are being cut to the bone or simply eliminated.
Only judicial action has limited the intended damage, and those judges are in
Donald Trump’s angry cross-hairs. Since Republican politicians who separated
themselves from Trump in the mid-term election, for the most part, were voted
out, Trump is the Republican Party.
Any GOP candidate to the contrary faces Trump-wrath and a strong likelihood of
committing political suicide. The GOP is now threatening Medicare, Medicaid and
Society Security for cuts to fund the massive tax cut for the rich they passed
earlier this year: the “it will pay for itself” legislation that is generating
hundreds of billions of deficit dollars in this year alone!
We
watched as the conservative Supreme Court, in Shelby County vs Holder (2013), gutted the Voting Rights Act
oversight of designated states with a history of voting rights restrictions
that penalized minorities, resulting in an almost immediate reinstatement of precisely
those restrictions. Several states had already passed that those restrictive
statutes that would come into effect the instant any such voting practices
oversight were lifted. Most of the other states that had been subjected to such
federal scrutiny followed suit. Cases against those discriminatory practices
were filed immediately, with mixed results (wending their way up to the Supreme
Court), and some discriminatory voting restrictions were passed at the 11th
hour making judicial review difficult if not impossible.
But
with two rather clearly right wing candidates, apparently ready to carry
partisanship to the Supreme Court as their mandate, appointed by Trump to the
highest court in the land – affirmed by a hair by the GOP-controlled Senate – and notwithstanding popular sentiment to the
contrary, we can expect a strong push to the discriminatory practices faced
half a century or more ago, gun legislation to continue to shift toward NRA
interpretations, and Christian evangelical values to seep into government with
full judicial support. The Supreme Court is considering whether a cross can be
a government-supported landmark, and there are cases pending in the lower
courts, challenging new legislation that has added increasing layers of
restrictions on abortions, that are clearly aimed at reopening Roe vs Wade.
University
of Alabama law professor, Ronald J. Krotoszynski Jr. looks at the nascent
effort of states to approve “if Roe vs
Wade is reversed” automatic policies to stop abortions in their respective
states (from the Op-Ed pages of the November 9th Los Angeles Times).
Nothing presents that reality like Amendment 2 (to the Alabama State
Constitution) passed by 59% of Alabama voters on November 6th making
it clear that Alabama would definitely reinstate its former ban on abortions
should the Court so rule:
“It
would be easy to dismiss Amendment 2 as an empty political gambit aimed at
increasing Republican voter turnout, but that would be a mistake. Instead, it
represents clear and troubling evidence of what a post-Roe vs. Wade world would
look like — and the U.S. Supreme Court should take note now.
“On
its own, Amendment 2 does not have much immediate legal effect. It makes it
Alabama’s public policy ‘to ensure the protection of the rights of the unborn
child’ and ‘to recognize and support the sanctity of unborn life and the rights
of unborn children, including the right to life.’ Existing Alabama state law
already says as much, but two U.S. Supreme Court rulings prevent the
Legislature from completely banning abortion: Roe vs. Wade (establishing the
privacy right to choose an abortion) and Planned Parenthood vs. Casey (stating
that state regulations can’t place a substantial obstacle in the path of women
seeking an abortion).
“Amendment
2, however, has a potent political effect: It gives Alabama’s GOP-controlled
Legislature an electoral and constitutional mandate to enact a ‘fetal
personhood’ statute. That is, to pass a law stating that life begins at
conception — and to do so as soon as possible if and when the Supreme Court
overturns Roe. A fetal personhood statute would create a veritable hornet’s
nest of intractable legal issues revolving around two people sharing a common
body (the woman’s).
“The
politics of antiabortion legislation are already irresistible to Republican
legislators in many conservative states, not just Alabama, because they are
wildly popular with base voters but also don’t tax state budgets. If Roe were
overturned and abortion policy returned to the states under their traditional
power to regulate public health, safety, welfare and morals, it is virtually
certain that fetal personhood statutes would be adopted in many states…
“Even
if Amendment 2 does not alter today’s legal landscape, it make plain how states
are already positioning themselves to respond immediately if Roe is overturned.
The liberty of women who find themselves pregnant could be significantly
curtailed — if not denied completely — in the interest of protecting a
gestating fetus. States that are particularly hostile to women’s reproductive
rights will certainly enact and enforce laws that permit women to be imprisoned
for nine months because they might pose a threat to their ‘unborn child.’…
“Fetal
personhood statutes, and their attempt to create legal recognition of two
people inhabiting the same body, will enmesh the federal courts in questions
they are in no better position to answer now than they were 45 years ago. As
Justice Harry Blackmun sagely wrote in his 1973 Roe decision, ‘When those
trained in the respective disciplines of medicine, philosophy, and theology are
unable to arrive at any consensus, the judiciary, at this point in the
development of man’s knowledge, is not in a position to speculate as to the
answer.’”
Women
could be prosecuted. Even cases where there might be dangerous complications of
a continued pregnancy. Fetuses suffering from dangerous medical risks or
permanent disabilities would be guaranteed birth and probably a lifetime of
rejection and misery. But most of all, women would lose control of their bodies
to the older white men passing these laws.
The
big picture here is simply that regressing into problems that were solved a
long time ago, imposing minority white traditional views based on rural and
deeply held minority values on a nation that is 85% urban just doesn’t work.
Our founding fathers feared and looked down on cities and towns and through the
“New Jersey Compromise” created a legislative system where farms states could
not be outvoted by densely populated states with large cities. Right-wing
Wyoming – with fewer than 600,000 people – has precisely the same number of
U.S. Senators – two – as does California with 38 million residents.
Between
gerrymandering and the New Jersey Compromise, Democrats cast 12 million votes
more than did the GOP in the 2018 mid-terms (Quora.com, November 8th)
and yet lost the Senate and only edged their way into a House majority.
Representative democracy? Obviously not. And remember, it is the rural-biased
Senate that confirms federal judicial appointments. Disenfranchising non-white
Christian-leaning voters to favor a decreasing minority of white
traditionalists might seem like a good idea, but when governments do not work
for most… they end. The level of income inequality combined with severe political
polarization in this country augur very badly for its future.
I’m Peter Dekom, and those who think
that they have trounced the chorus of a growing urban majority that really
defines the United States of the future… and actually the present… might be in
for an ugly and possible violent surprise.
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