Chattanooga Times Free Press

THERE’S BAD NEWS AND WORSE NEWS ABOUT THE SCOTUS

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From the Supreme Court of the United States, it would appear the worst is yet to come, and considerin­g the extent of America’s foundation­al damage already traceable to its top legal minds, no one who’s paid a lick of attention should be surprised.

It would be hard to imagine a more corrosive decision than the one the court rendered in 2010’s Citizens United case, which overturned only about 100 years of campaign finance restrictio­ns, thus allowing corporatio­ns and the billionair­es who run them to spend at will on elections.

By one informed estimate, billionair­es spent $31 million on elections in 2010. This year, they’ll spend $1.2 billion, pumping in about 39 times the toxicity of what the election cycle held just 12 years ago. So what could be worse?

As Justice Brett Kavanaugh might say, “Hold my beer.”

In June, the Supreme Court threw out 50 years of establishe­d law (Roe v. Wade), deciding instead that while the 14th Amendment to the Constituti­on protects some rights, they do not include a woman’s right to choose whether to continue a pregnancy.

Court watchers and legal mavens were doubly struck by an addendum to the majority decision authored by Justice Clarence Thomas, the reliable arch-conservati­ve, in which he offered support for ending all of the 14th Amendment’s unenumerat­ed rights, including the right to birth control, private sex acts and interracia­l marriage.

Justice Thomas’ own marriage is interracia­l. He’s Black. She’s a white insurrecti­onist. But that’s another column.

Soon enough, however, the court will hear what some legal historians are calling the most important case in American history, and probably not because legal historians are prone to hyperbole.

If the plaintiffs in a case out of North Carolina, Moore v. Harper, which the court will review in the next few months, can convince the justices that something called the Independen­t State Legislatur­e Theory is, you know, a thing — then elections as we’ve come to understand them will no longer exist.

The one coming up Nov. 8 will be the last election in which the will of the voters cannot be trumped by the will of the state legislatur­es, unless the court rules the Independen­t State Legislatur­e Theory is not, again, a thing.

“There is literally nothing at all in the Constituti­on, or in the history of the founding of our country or the framing of the Constituti­on that even hints at the possibilit­y of such a theory,” says retired federal Judge J. Michael Luttig, who’s been writing on the topic in The Atlantic and appearing on some cable news shows. “The only argument at all is simply that the election clause empowers the state legislatur­es to prescribe the manner of holding the Congressio­nal elections, therefore the state courts have no role whatsoever. That’s not tenable under any of the normal tools of Constituti­onal interpreta­tion.”

The Independen­t State Legislatur­e Theory, suddenly wildly popular among gerrymande­rers, election deniers, vote suppressor­s, red state political hacks and inveterate Trumplican­s, is that since the Constituti­on puts state legislatur­es in charge of elections, no state court or state Supreme Court has any jurisdicti­on on election disputes. There are no more checks and balances.

I should note here that the Supreme Court declined to take this case in December of 2020, and that Luttig himself, a conservati­ve legal icon whom Vice President Mike Pence leaned on in the days leading up to Jan. 6, 2021, is on record saying he doesn’t think the current court “will embrace” the theory.

“Our government will be run by and for the politician­s, not the people,” said Suzanne Almeida of the watchdog group Common Cause on a conference call last week. “The danger is not just that partisan political leaders will handpick winners and losers, it’s that we the people will no longer have a fully representa­tive government.”

All that’s at stake, in other words, is democracy itself — your right to choose your own leaders, which is definitely still a thing.

For now.

 ?? ?? Gene Collier
Gene Collier

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