Linda Greenhouse wrote in The New York Times:
You know the Rubicon has been crossed when the
Supreme Court issues a conservative voting rights order so at odds with settled precedent and
without any sense of the moment that Chief Justice John Roberts feels
constrained to dissent.
This is the same John Roberts who in 1982, as a
young lawyer in the administration of President Ronald Reagan, fought a crucial
amendment to the Voting Rights Act of 1965; whose majority opinion in 2013 gutted one-half of
the Voting Rights Act and who joined an ahistoric opinion last summer that took aim
at the other half; and who famously complained in dissent from a 2006 decision in favor of Latino
voters in South Texas that “it is a sordid business, this divvying us up by
race.”
Yes, that Chief Justice Roberts. What the 5-to-4
majority did was that far out of line.
The unsigned order that drew the chief justice’s
dissent Monday night blocked the decision by a special three-judge Federal
District Court ordering the Alabama Legislature to draw a second congressional
district in which Black residents constitute a majority. Alabama’s population
is 27 percent Black. The state has seven congressional districts. The lower
court held that by packing some Black voters into one district and spreading
others out over three other districts, the state diluted the Black vote in
violation of the Voting Rights Act.
The Supreme Court will hear Alabama’s appeal of the
district court order in its next term, so the stay it granted will mean that
the 2022 elections will take place with district lines that the lower court
unanimously, with two of the three judges appointed by President Donald Trump,
found to be illegal.
Chief Justice Roberts objected that the ordinary
standards under which the Supreme Court grants a stay of a lower court opinion
had not been met. “The district court properly applied existing law in an
extensive opinion with no apparent errors for our correction,” he wrote.
Justice Elena Kagan, joined by Justices Stephen Breyer and Sonia Sotomayor,
also dissented in a more extensive opinion that accused the majority of using
the court’s emergency “shadow docket” not only to intervene improperly on behalf of
the state but also to change voting rights law in the process.
This is no mere squabble over procedure. What
happened Monday night was a raw power play by a runaway majority that seems to
recognize no stopping point. It bears emphasizing that the majority’s agenda of
cutting back on the scope of the Voting Rights Act is Chief Justice Roberts’s
agenda too. He made that abundantly clear in the past and suggested it in a
kind of code on Monday with his bland observation that the court’s Voting
Rights Act precedents “have engendered considerable disagreement and
uncertainty regarding the nature and contours of a vote dilution claim.” But in
his view, that was an argument to be conducted in the next Supreme Court term
while permitting the district court’s decision to take effect now.
While the majority as a whole said nothing, Justice
Brett Kavanaugh took it upon himself to offer a kind of defense. Only Justice
Samuel Alito joined him. Perhaps the others — Justices Clarence Thomas, Neil
Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett — chose not to sign onto his rude reference to
Justice Kagan’s “catchy but worn-out rhetoric about the ‘shadow docket.’ ” Or
perhaps his “To reiterate: The court’s stay order is not a decision on the
merits” rang a little hollow when, as Justice Kagan pointed out, “the district
court here did everything right under the law existing today” and “staying its
decision forces Black Alabamians to suffer what under that law is clear vote
dilution.”
In other words, when it comes to the 2022 elections,
for Black voters in Alabama the Supreme Court’s procedural intervention is the
equivalent of a ruling on the merits.
Or maybe the others couldn’t indulge in the
hypocrisy of Justice Kavanaugh’s description of the standards for granting a
stay. The party asking for a stay, he wrote, “ordinarily must show (i) a
reasonable probability that this court would eventually grant review and a fair
prospect that the court would reverse, and (ii) that the applicant would likely
suffer irreparable harm absent the stay.”
But wait a minute. Weren’t those conditions clearly
met back in September when abortion providers in Texas came to the court
seeking a stay of the Texas vigilante law, S.B. 8, which was about to go into
effect? That law, outlawing abortion after six weeks of pregnancy and
authorizing anyone anywhere in the country to sue a Texas abortion provider for
damages, was flagrantly unconstitutional, and the law was about to destroy the
state’s abortion infrastructure. But did Justice Kavanaugh or any of the others
in Monday’s majority vote to grant the requested stay? They did not. Chief Justice Roberts did.
It’s impossible not to conclude that what we see at
work is not some neutral principle guiding the Supreme Court’s intervention but
simply whether a majority likes or doesn’t like what a lower court has done. In
his opinion, Justice Kavanaugh sought to avoid that conclusion by arguing that
when it comes to election cases, the Supreme Court will more readily grant a
stay to counteract “late judicial tinkering with election laws.” But there was
no late “tinkering” here. The legislature approved the disputed plan in
November, after six days of consideration, and the governor signed it. The
district court conducted a seven-day trial in early January and on Jan. 24
issued its 225-page opinion. The election is months away — plenty of time for
the legislature to comply with the decision.
Disturbing as this development is, it is even more
alarming in context. Last July, in a case from Arizona, the court took a very
narrow view of the Voting Rights Act as a weapon against vote denial measures,
policies that have a discriminatory effect on nonwhite voters’ access to the
polls. That case, Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee, was
brought under the act’s Section 2, which prohibits voting procedures that give
members of racial minorities “less opportunity than other members of the
electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives
of their choice.” Justice Alito’s opinion for a 6-to-3 majority set a high bar
for showing that any disputed measure is more than just an ordinary burden that
comes with turning out to vote.
It was an unusual case, in that Section 2 has much
more typically been used as it was in Alabama, to challenge district lines as
causing vote dilution. Obviously, at the heart of any Section 2 case is the
question of how to evaluate the role of race. In its request for a stay, Alabama characterized the district court of
having improperly “prioritized” race, as opposed to other districting factors,
in ordering a second majority Black district. In response, the American Civil Liberties Union and
the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, representing the Alabama
plaintiffs, called this a mischaracterization of what the district court had
actually done when it took account of the compactness and cohesion of the Black
community and the history of white Alabama voters refusing to support Black
candidates.
Stripped to its core, Alabama is essentially arguing
that a law enacted to protect the interests of Black citizens bars courts from
considering race in evaluating a redistricting plan. Justice Kagan’s dissenting
opinion contained a warning that granting the stay amounted to a tacit
acceptance of that startling proposition. She said the stay reflected “a
hastily made and wholly unexplained prejudgment” that the court was “ready to
change the law.”
The battle over what Section 2 means has been
building for years, largely under the radar, and now it is front and center.
The current Supreme Court term is all about abortion and guns. The next one will
be all about race. Along with the Alabama case, Merrill v. Milligan, the Harvard and University of North Carolina admissions cases
are also on the docket — to be heard by a Supreme Court that, presumably, for
the first time in history, will have two Black justices, and all in the shadow
of the midterm elections. The fire next time.
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