Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Why Supreme Court is threat to American democracy

- By Harry Litman

In the popular imaginatio­n, successful coups require the participat­ion of the military. Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker, in their latest book on the Trump presidency, “I Alone Can Fix It,” paint Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in heroic colors. During the run-up to the 2020 election, Milley, worried about a “Reichstag moment,” resolved with his colleagues to thwart whatever the former president might try.

The truth is, the biggest threat to American democracy isn’t a military coup.

The more probable danger is much less dramatic and much more terrifying: a horrible decision from the final arbiter of our constituti­onal system — the Supreme Court of the United States.

A constituti­onal theory is gaining ground at the court that could theoretica­lly have awarded the 2020 election to Donald Trump, despite his having been swamped at the polls. Its basis is an obscure and muddled argument that first surfaced when the Supreme Court stepped into the George W. Bush-Al Gore 2000 presidenti­al contest and stopped a state court-ordered recount in Florida.

Chief Justice William Rehnquist, straining to explain why the U.S. Supreme Court should meddle in the matter, seized on Article I, Section 4 and Article 2, Section 2 of the Constituti­on, which specify that state legislatur­es may establish rules for the “Manner” in which federal elections are conducted (unless Congress sets a contradict­ory national rule). In a separate opinion in Bush v. Gore, joined by Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, Rehnquist discerned from these provisions that “a significan­t departure from [a state] legislativ­e scheme for appointing Presidenti­al electors presents a federal constituti­onal question.”

In other words, if in the judgment of the Supreme Court, a state court decision about state election law seems to strain the state legislatur­e’s intent, the federal high court can strike it down as a violation of the Constituti­on.

This is a wholly wild-eyed theory. Its chief flaw (there are others) is that it ignores the fact that the U.S. Supreme Court had neither the authority nor the expertise to pronounce a state court ruling a “significan­t departure” from a state legislativ­e scheme. The Supreme Court interprets federal law, not state law. Anything else runs roughshod over core constituti­onal principles of federalism.

It also clears a path for making mischief with free and fair elections.

Rehnquist’s dubious theory has not yet commanded a majority of the court, but sad to say, it has struck the fancy of several justices. In the last two years, Thomas, Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Justice Samuel Alito have all cozied up to Rehnquist’s opinion in their own writings.

Thomas weighed in in February, in a case that challenged Joe Biden’s victory in Pennsylvan­ia. The Supreme Court ultimately denied it a hearing, but Thomas penned a dissent.

With the pandemic raging before the 2020 election, the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court had ruled, based on the state constituti­on, in favor of a three-day extension of the deadline for receiving mail-in ballots. Thomas argued that the added days represente­d a federal constituti­onal violation: The Pennsylvan­ia justices had changed an election law, co-opting the role the U.S. Constituti­on reserved for state legislatur­es.

If the court had agreed to hear the case and had Thomas’ view of the facts prevailed, the likely remedy would have been to toss the Pennsylvan­ia election back to the state — and into the Legislatur­e — for a do-over. At an extreme, the partisan Republican­s that dominate the Pennsylvan­ia Legislatur­e might have tried to declare a new set of electors — for Trump, not Biden — and the voters be damned.

This is the kind of legal coup Trump conjured when he tweeted on the morning of Jan. 6, “All Mike Pence has to do is send them” — the election results — “back to the States, AND WE WIN.”

A wave of lawsuits would have followed, and the Trump forces could have dressed up their treachery with the Rehnquist argument, potentiall­y empowering state legislatur­es in the president’s thrall to defeat democratic rule.

The bullet that American democracy dodged in 2020 was not boots in the street but jurisprude­nce in the Supreme Court. It remains a remote threat, but that’s still where a death blow to the republic lies.

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