Erin Miller | Tuesday, February 9th, 2010 4:02 pm
Below is an essay for our Race and the Supreme Court program by Michael E. Rosman, general counsel for the Center for Individual Rights (scroll down on the page to see his bio). Mr. Rosman has published several articles on race and law, and has argued before the Supreme Court.
My thesis is that, although the Supreme Court has interpreted the Constitution and various statutes in an aggressive fashion in order to combat all kinds of discrimination, it has placed racial discrimination at the top of the list. My main proof for this will be the 1968 case of Jones v. Alfred H. Mayer, Co. and its progeny. With Jones, the Court embarked on interpretations of both statute and the Constitution that were very aggressive, and it has stuck to its guns on these issues – indeed, has been supported by Congress on the statutory interpretation – ever since. The consequences for the Court’s jurisprudence have been significant.
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Matt Sundquist | Tuesday, February 9th, 2010 12:08 pm
Last week, former FEC Commissioner Hans A. von Spakovsky (now affiliated with the Heritage Foundation) moderated a panel discussion at the Heritage Foundation that examined the practical impact and potential outcomes of the decision in Citizens United v. FEC. The panel – whose other members were all veterans of the FEC and/or campaign law specialists – agreed that the decision was one of the most (if not the most) significant campaign finance decisions since Buckley v. Valeo. The panelists also largely agreed on three other points: first, Congress and state legislatures will likely enact stricter disclosure laws to monitor corporate and labor spending on election advertising; second, the decision will likely spur further litigation and require courts and the FEC to resolve additional questions, while also addressing the status and rights of foreign corporations; third, because it is difficult to predict what the results of the decision will be, the panel should reconvene next year to reflect again on the decision.
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Erin Miller | Tuesday, February 9th, 2010 12:02 pm
On a regular basis, we intend to post recently filed petitions that Tom deems noteworthy. Each will later appear on one of our “Petitions to Watch” lists — and will together constitute the bulk of those lists — depending on the conference it is eventually distributed for.
Two such interesting petitions have been filed recently: No. 09-920, Simmons v. Galvin, and No. 09-923, Arar v. Ashcroft. In both cases, briefs in opposition have not yet been filed, and likely will not be until next month at the earliest.
Title: Simmons v. Galvin
Docket: 09-920
Issues: (1) Whether Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (“VRA”), 42 U.S.C. § 1973, applies to state felon disenfranchisement laws that result in discrimination on the basis of race; and (2) whether the Massachusetts felon disenfranchisement scheme established in 2000 violates the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution as applied to those Massachusetts felons who were incarcerated and yet had the right to vote prior to 2000?
Title: Arar v. Ashcroft
Docket: 09-923
Issues: (1) Whether federal officials accused of conspiring with foreign officials to subject an individual in U.S. custody to torture may be sued for damages, particularly when the federal officials also intentionally obstructed the victim’s access to the judicial remedy provided by Congress to prevent torture; (2) whether willful participation in joint action with government officials is insufficient to constitute action under “color of law” of that jurisdiction, within the meaning of the Torture Victim Protection Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1350, when defendants are alleged to have conspired with Syrian officials to have petitioner tortured in Syria; and (3) whether petitioner’s Bivens claim for obstruction of access to court may be dismissed on the ground that he did not sufficiently identify the particular defendants who took part in blocking his access to court.
Jay Willis | Tuesday, February 9th, 2010 10:39 am
Joan Biskupic of USA Today discusses what Citizens United may portend for the rest of the current Term, in which the Court will hear several “momentous” cases. Biskupic opines that the contentious Citizens decision may have reinforced the Court’s “caustic ideological divide” as it moves forward in reviewing and deciding pending cases, and in particular other high-profile cases such as McDonald v. City of Chicago, Doe No. 1 v. Reed, and Free Enterprise Fund v. PCAOB. Meanwhile, at the Huffington Post, Frances Moore Lappe criticizes the decision as eliminating “the freedom to choose among a range of political candidates far wider than those favored by our society’s vast concentrations of wealth.” Also at the Huffington Post, Chris Weigant discusses how the decision might affect politics “out of sight of the viewing public,” exploring scenarios in which a corporation could manipulate media airtime or use the threat of election spending to influence pending legislation. Finally, at Politico, Jeanne Cummings reports on public opposition to the Citizens United decision and its possible effects for both parties in the upcoming midterm elections.
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Erin Miller | Monday, February 8th, 2010 10:53 am
The following is an essay for our Race and the Supreme Court program by Abigail Thernstrom, vice-chair of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and adjunct scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. Ms. Thernstrom is the author, most recently, of the book Voting Rights — and Wrongs: The Elusive Quest for Racially Fair Elections.
Northwest Austin Municipal Utility District No. 1 v. Holder (NAMUDNO) was one of the most anticipated cases of the 2008-2009 term. Civil rights advocates had been in a state of panic, fearing a majority would declare the most radical provision in the 1965 Voting Rights Act unconstitutional – no longer justified in the context of a racially changed nation. But the Court declined to decide the complex constitutional question hanging over the nation’s most sacred civil rights law. Eight justices agreed: Right question, perhaps, but wrong case.
The issue was the continuing constitutional legitimacy of section 5. The provision had put southern states, long committed to black disfranchisement, under the equivalent of federal receivership in the conduct of their elections. That receivership had several parts, the most well known being the obligation of the “covered” jurisdictions to submit all proposed changes in their methods of election to the Justice Department or the seldom-used D.C. district court for pre-approval—“preclearance.” The provision prevented states from acting to exercise traditional constitutional prerogatives without prior federal permission, and was unique in American law.
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Matt Sundquist | Monday, February 8th, 2010 10:30 am | Tags: round-up
Above the Law reports that Justice Thomas, discussing clerk hiring at his Thursday talk at the University of Florida, contrasted his views with those of his colleagues, whom he says mainly hire clerks from Ivy League schools. “I don’t believe they [Ivy League schools] have a monopoly on intelligence,” said Thomas. “I also don’t believe they have a monopoly on the best kids to clerk.” Tony Mauro reports that Thomas also praised Silvia Ibanez, an advocate from Florida who represented herself, and, according to Thomas, persuaded the Court to rule in her favor in a 1994 case. The Foundry also weighs in, focusing on Thomas’ remarks on the State of the Union speech. The University of Florida’s campus newspaper measures student reactions to the discussion.
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Erin Miller | Monday, February 8th, 2010 8:43 am
The Court’s recess continues until February 19, when the Justices will meet for their next private conference. The next oral arguments are scheduled for February 22.
As we posted on Friday, the Washington Legal Foundation holds its mid-Term evaluation of the Court this Wednesday at 9:30 a.m in Washington, D.C.
The schedule of merits briefs due this week follows the jump.
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Lyle Denniston | Friday, February 5th, 2010 6:06 pm
In a move that might head off another major Supreme Court ruling on detention policy, the Justice Department on Friday suggested that the Court consider dismissing the pending case of Kiyemba v. Obama (08-1234) as one that should never have been granted in the first place. In its merits brief, the Department said that all seven Chinese Muslim (Uighur) detainees remaining in the case have been offered opportunities to re-settle in countries other than China, so the Court should not even consider ordering their transfer to live in the U.S. as an alternative re-settlement.
As an alternative, the Department urged the Court to uphold a D.C. Circuit Court ruling that denied federal judges any authority to order the transfer of Guantanamo prisoners to the U.S. itself.
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Anna Christensen | Friday, February 5th, 2010 4:58 pm
This week, we introduced a new feature on our sister site, SCOTUSwiki: we have created case pages for each “CVSG” case – cases in which the Supreme Court invited the Solicitor General to submit a brief expressing the views of the United States. Each new case page includes the question presented and the filings in the case to date. You can see an index of the CVSG cases here; you’ll also see a link to it on the SCOTUSwiki homepage.
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Matt Sundquist | Friday, February 5th, 2010 2:31 pm
Last month I interviewed Jerry Goldman, Professor of Political Science. Goldman is the creator and director of the Oyez Project, a publicly-accessible archive of all Supreme Court oral audio recorded since 1955 and a vast collection of Court-related images and other media. His other projects include the Spoken Word Project, a database of media and audio sources, and IDEAlog, a program that analyzes political values. See Part I here.
6. Has the Court changed its technology as you have suggested solutions or pointed out potential improvements?
They have recently tried new strategies, and for a few years, experimented with reel-to-reel recordings and CD recordings. The CDs would be much better quality, but the Court makes it almost impossible to access them. The Court also considered using a proprietary system from Australia, but later reconsidered, and finally moved a to a full digital recording environment. Even still, the Court chose a low bit rate and an inappropriate recording standard, which means we lose data in the recording, and overall the quality is well below where it should be.
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Erin Miller | Friday, February 5th, 2010 11:16 am
UPDATE, Monday, Feb. 8: The original post said this event would occur on February 10, but it has been rescheduled to the 18th.
On Thursday, February 18, the Washington Legal Foundation will hold its annual media briefing evaluating the Court halfway through the Term. The speakers scheduled are:
- Hon. Dick Thornburgh (host)
- Gregory Garre, former Solicitor General and current partner at Latham & Watkins
- Patricia Millett, Akin Gump partner
- Noel Francisco, Jones Day
The briefing begins at 9:30 a.m. at the WLF headquarters in Washington, D.C. It can also be viewed live online at www.wlf.org.
The invitation with more details can be viewed here (though please note that the date is incorrect; it should be Feb. 18). Free online registration and an RSVP to glammi@wlf.org is requested for attendance.
Erin Miller | Friday, February 5th, 2010 10:59 am | Tags: round-up
As Tony Mauro reports at the BLT, Justice Thomas answered questions yesterday from students at the University of Florida, after speaking on Wednesday at Stetson University College of Law. Justice Thomas touched on a range of issues, including his preference for hiring non-Ivy League law clerks and his opinion that Supreme Court justices are just “second guessers” whose work is not as hard as that of district court judges. The AP discusses the Justice’s remark that some commentary about the Court is “irresponsible.” The local Gainesville Sun and the CBS News blog also have coverage of the event, and you can read Josh Blackman’s LiveBlog of the event here. After Justice Thomas’s earlier remark at Stetson that he no longer attends State of the Union addresses because he finds them uncomfortable, Ben Smith of Politico briefly summarized his recent attendance record.
Yesterday Ariane de Vogue of ABCNews reported that the White House may be gearing up to fill two Court vacancies this summer, which would be created if both Justice Stevens and Justice Ginsburg decided to step down.
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Matt Sundquist | Thursday, February 4th, 2010 4:13 pm
Last month I interviewed Jerry Goldman, Professor of Political Science. Goldman is the creator and director of the Oyez Project, a publicly-accessible archive of all Supreme Court oral audio recorded since 1955 and a vast collection of Court-related images and other media. His other projects include the Spoken Word Project, a database of media and audio sources, and IDEAlog, a program that analyzes political values. Part II comes tomorrow.
1. Your scholarly research focuses on audio and media instruction, government, and information technology, so the Oyez Project seems to be a natural fit for your interests. What, in particular, drew you to the Supreme Court, and to want to make arguments and opinions available?
Some time ago, a legal historian named Linda Kerber played an audiocassette from a Supreme Court oral argument during a talk at Northwestern. I was stunned, as I hadn’t realized that Supreme Court audio was available for scholars, and I started poking around for more information. My interest in organizing audio recordings developed soon after, when I saw an English professor demonstrate how he had linked the text of a Shakespeare play to a video laser disc. He could highlight a portion of Macbeth, and immediately play the corresponding audio segment. He suggested that you could develop a program to allow you total control of any available media. The environment he was working in, HyperCard, stores information on “cards,” then organizes them into stacks. Again, I was stunned, and HyperCard gave me an opportunity to pursue my newfound interest in the Supreme Court.
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Erin Miller | Thursday, February 4th, 2010 10:35 am
Below is an essay for our Race and the Supreme Court program by Harvard Law School professor Kenneth W. Mack. Professor Mack writes extensively on the history and politics of civil rights law; his book Representing the Race: Creating the Civil Rights Lawyer, 1920-1955 will be published by Harvard University Press this year.
Although political scientists are fond of presenting it as a novel idea, the idea that the Supreme Court is a political institution has long been fairly obvious to African Americans and their constitutional advocates. The proposition that the Court is an institution embedded in the larger politics of the world around it was self-evident to those who had noticed the curious convergence between the narrowing of their constitutional rights and the onset of the Jim Crow era. Los Angeles civil rights lawyer Loren Miller stated a strong version of the thesis when he wrote, in the mid-1930s, that “I know that behind the scenes . . . public opinion exerts the determining role in law,” but he captured the general thrust of what had become conventional wisdom. Sometimes even the Justices have to be reminded of it, as the exchange between President Obama and Justice Alito during this year’s State of the Union attests, but to those who have had perhaps the largest stakes in the question, its answer has been clear for quite some time. The first two African Americans to sit on the Court, Justices Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas, were keenly aware of this issue. Each man approached it in a different way, as will, no doubt, the newest Justice, Sonia Sotomayor.
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Adam Chandler | Thursday, February 4th, 2010 9:53 am
Plans for a legislative response to the Court’s decision in Citizens United v. FEC were much in the news yesterday. Ryan Grim of The Huffington Post reports that “House Democrats are forming a Citizens United task force to decide on the best set of legislative push back[s].” The BLT has a post on yesterday’s House Judiciary subcommittee hearing on the issue, headlined by Harvard’s Laurence Tribe as a witness. In a separate post, the BLT’s David Ingram writes that the idea of banning books looms over the debate: “In two congressional hearings today, advocates for corporate and union spending in campaigns ridiculed the idea that the federal government can ban books, suggesting that they plan to use the specter of extreme censorship to try to block any new legislation.” NPR has a report on yesterday’s hearings, and Yale’s Heather Gerken—author of yesterday’s post on this blog about Justice Kennedy and race—links to her submitted testimony at Balkinization (which is also highlighted at ACSblog).
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