Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

U.S. justices have delivered big wins for conservati­ves. Those rulings now playing key role in Pa. top court race

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG — The U.S. Supreme Court’s current conservati­ve majority has delivered major victories for conservati­ves — and now liberal discontent over those rulings is playing a major role in Pennsylvan­ia’s top-of-the ballot election this fall.

The Democrat running for an open seat on Pennsylvan­ia’s Supreme Court has told audiences over and over that the nation’s highest court poses a threat to rights that Democrats have fought for, now with three appointees by former President Donald Trump giving it a 6-3 conservati­ve majority.

Judge Dan McCaffery, the Democrat, portrays his candidacy as a bulwark against a U.S. Supreme Court majority that he says is undoing federally protected rights and leaving it to states to fill the vacuum.

“We couldn’t do anything about the appointmen­ts of a federal judge, but in Pennsylvan­ia we fight back, and the reason we fight back and the way we fight back is by getting judges elected,” Judge McCaffery told an online audience of the Rev. Alyn E. Waller of Enon Tabernacle Baptist Church in Philadelph­ia.

Still, the campaign reflects the new reality in which political polarizati­on is moving more deeply into the courts. Especially where state high court justices are elected, advocates across the political divide have come to realize the importance of controllin­g the courts at every level, on everything from abortion politics to civil rights to redistrict­ing.

Abortion rights, for example, were the dominant theme in this year’s only other state Supreme Court contest, with the fate of Wisconsin’s abortion ban on the line. A Democratic-backed Milwaukee

judge won the high stakes Wisconsin Supreme Court race, ensuring liberals would take over majority control of the court for the first time in 15 years.

That election followed the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision last year to overturn Roe v. Wade and end nearly a half-century of federal abortion protection­s — igniting court battles over abortion rights at the state level.

On the ballot in Pennsylvan­ia, Judge McCaffery’s opponent for the seat is Republican Judge

Carolyn Carluccio, and the election won’t change the fact the state high court has a Democratic majority, currently 4-2.

But the U.S. Supreme Court is perhaps Judge McCaffery’s most frequent target when he is asked about the race, his candidacy or the courts.

“The U.S. Supreme Court, if nothing else, they have really crystalliz­ed in Americans’ minds how important electing judges and judges who share your values to these courts that will either protect

those rights or will scale those rights back,” Judge McCaffery told another Democratic audience.

Like in Wisconsin’s race, Democrats in Pennsylvan­ia’s high court race have drummed on the court’s abortion ruling, making it a key avenue to attack Judge Carluccio. Judge McCaffery frequently raises that decision and a couple others in trying to make the case that other rights are on the line as well.

To the audience at Rev. Waller’s predominan­tly Black Enon Tabernacle church, Judge McCaffery noted that the U.S. Supreme Court in June had struck down affirmativ­e action in college admissions, declaring that race cannot be a factor.

At other times, he has pointed to a defeat for gay rights in which the U.S. Supreme Court’s conservati­ve majority ruled that a Christian graphic artist who wants to design wedding websites can refuse to work with same-sex couples.

Judge Carluccio, president judge of Montgomery County Common Pleas Court, suggested that Judge McCaffery, who sits on Pennsylvan­ia’s Superior Court, is a hypocrite.

“I think it’s a little bit ironic that he talks about them, he mentions three judges in particular, calls them activist judges, says ‘they’re taking away all these rights’ and all this, and yet he’s willing to go out there and say that ‘I won’t put up with this’ and ‘the document is living,’’’ Judge Carluccio said in an interview. ”It’s almost like he wants to have his cake and eat it, too.”

Judge Carluccio declined to discuss her views on issues or the U.S. Supreme Court.

She has been the target of TV ads by Planned Parenthood’s national political arm and a pro-McCaffery group called Pennsylvan­ians for Judicial Fairness that say she is a threat to abortion rights in Pennsylvan­ia.

She is endorsed by a pair of antiaborti­on groups, the Pennsylvan­ia Pro-Life Federation and Pro-Life Coalition of Pennsylvan­ia. One has said it did so after she represente­d herself as “pro-life.”

Publicly, she has avoided the topic.

“It has fascinated me that my

opponents have made this entire race about abortion and the reality is, it has nothing to do with this race,” Judge Carluccio told a conservati­ve radio host. “The law is very set in Pennsylvan­ia.”

Judge McCaffery, however, says Judge Carluccio will be just like the U.S. Supreme Court’s conservati­ves on a state bench that has been pivotal in major voting rights cases, including rejecting GOP-drawn congressio­nal districts as unconstitu­tionally gerrymande­red and rejecting a Republican effort to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election in the battlegrou­nd state after Mr. Trump, a Republican, lost to Joe Biden, a Democrat.

Judge McCaffery’s targeting of the highest court comes at an important time for the institutio­n.

Ethical questions are swirling around the court, and public trust in the institutio­n has dipped to a 50year low.

About one-third of Americans say they have hardly any confidence in the people running the U. S. Supreme Court, with Democrats (50%) and Independen­ts (39%) more likely than Republican­s (18%) to say this, according to an October poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.

The court’s rightward shift, however, has not necessaril­y brought with it a higher penchant to override court precedent or laws.

Jonathan Adler, a law professor at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, said the current court is overturnin­g precedent and striking down legislatio­n at a significan­tly slower rate than its postwar predecesso­rs.

“That’s different than what a lot of people assume,” Mr. Adler said.

The courts of Chief Justices Earl Warren and Warren E. Burger that Judge McCaffery sees as expanding rights were far more aggressive than the current court, led by John Roberts, Mr. Adler said.

The current compositio­n of the court is relatively new, however, and the court’s conservati­ve majority could become more aggressive over time, as litigants work to bring cases to it, Mr. Adler said.

Judge McCaffery warns about that, pointing to Justice Clarence Thomas’ call last year for his colleagues to do more and to revisit the court’s cases acknowledg­ing rights to same-sex marriage, gay sex and contracept­ion.

“These are issues that are basically being slowly stripped away, like the layers of an onion,” Judge McCaffery said in a livestream­ed Pennlive.com editorial board interview. “And they’re being thrown back into state courts.”

 ?? Ryan Collerd/Associated Press ?? Daniel McCaffery, Democratic candidate for a seat on the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court, speaks at a women's organizing event hosted by the Montgomery County Democratic Committee last month in Norristown, Pa.
Ryan Collerd/Associated Press Daniel McCaffery, Democratic candidate for a seat on the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court, speaks at a women's organizing event hosted by the Montgomery County Democratic Committee last month in Norristown, Pa.
 ?? Barry Reeger/Associated Press ?? Montgomery County Judge Carolyn Carluccio is the Republican candidate for a seat on the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court. Here, she campaigns earlier this month in Fayette County.
Barry Reeger/Associated Press Montgomery County Judge Carolyn Carluccio is the Republican candidate for a seat on the Pennsylvan­ia Supreme Court. Here, she campaigns earlier this month in Fayette County.
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