The Guardian (USA)

US supreme court hears case that could radically reshape elections

- Ed Pilkington and agencies

The US supreme court heard arguments on Wednesday in Moore v Harper, one of this term’s highest profile and most contentiou­s cases which has the potential to fundamenta­lly reshape elections for Congress and the presidency.

The justices appeared to be starkly divided along predictabl­e ideologica­l lines as they mulledover the power of state courts to strike down congressio­nal districts drawn by state legislatur­es because they violate state constituti­ons.

Republican­s from North Carolina who brought the case argue that a provision of the US constituti­on known as the elections clause gives state lawmakers virtually total control over the “times, places and manner” of congressio­nal elections, including redistrict­ing, and cuts state courts out of the process.

The Republican­s are advancing a concept called the “independen­t state legislatur­e theory”, never before adopted by the supreme court but cited approvingl­y by four conservati­ve justices.

The direction of questionin­g at Wednesday’s hearing suggested thatthree of those conservati­ve justices – Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas – were open to the idea of adopting the theory, despite decades of precedent from their own court dismissing it. They seemed to have the slightly more tentative backing of Brett Kavanaugh, who was part of the legal team in 2000 that assisted George W Bush through Bush v Gore, the case that in modern times put the independen­t state legislatur­e theory on the map.

On the other side of the argument, the three liberal-leaning justices were profoundly critical of the notion that state legislatur­es should be given free rein to control federal elections virtually unrestrain­ed by state constituti­ons and judicial review from state courts. Questions from John Roberts suggested he might be seeking a more narrowly-drawn compromise position.

Which left all eyes on Amy Coney Barrett, the third of Donald Trump’s three appointees. Potentiall­y, she might find herself casting the decisive vote.

Though it gives little clue as to which side of the fence Barrett will be standing on when the ruling comes down, she did ask several probing questions of the lawyer representi­ng North Carolina’s Republican­s. She said that those pushing for state legislatur­es to be freed up from oversight had a “problem” defining their terms, and she questioned whether the theory had any bearing in legal text.

For their part, the liberal justices – Elena Kagan, Ketanji Brown Jackson and Sonia Sotomayor – robustly argued that incorporat­ing the theory into constituti­onal law would be a threat to democracy. Elena Kagan cited three recent supreme court rulings that all counter the theory.

Kagan made an impassione­d speech about the potential impact of siding with North Carolina’s Republican­s. “Think about consequenc­es, because this is a theory with big consequenc­es … This is a proposal that gets rid of the normal checks and balances on the way big government­al decisions are made in this country, at exactly the time when they are needed most.”

She warned that a broad ruling could unleash state legislatur­es to carry out extreme forms of gerrymande­ring, tear up voter protection­s and even certify election results according to their own political interests.

Moore v Harper came about after the North Carolina state supreme court struck down districts drawn by Republican­s who control the legislatur­e because they heavily favored Republican­s in the highly competitiv­e state. The court-drawn map used in last month’s elections for Congress produced a 7-7 split between Democrats and Republican­s.

North Carolina is among six states in recent years in which state courts have ruled that overly partisan redistrict­ing for Congress violated their state constituti­ons. The others are Florida, Maryland, New York, Ohio and Pennsylvan­ia.

State courts have become the only legal forum for challengin­g partisan congressio­nal maps since the supreme court ruled in 2019 that those lawsuits cannot be brought in federal court.

In North Carolina, Republican lawmakers will not have to wait for the court’s decision to produce a new congressio­nal map that is expected to have more Republican districts.

Even as Democrats won half the state’s 14 congressio­nal seats, Republican­s seized control of the state supreme court. Two newly elected Republican justices give them a 5-2 edge that makes it more likely than not that the court would uphold a map with more Republican districts.

One of the striking features about Wednesday’s legal debate was how the usual ideologica­l positions of the two sides were turned on their heads. The conservati­ve justices, who have often invoked states’ rights in previous rulings – not least in last year’s seminal decision to overturn abortion rights – sounded at times to be almost antifedera­list.

After the US solicitor general, Elizabeth Prelogar, accused the petitioner­s of making an “atextual, ahistorica­l, and destabiliz­ing interpreta­tion of the elections clause”, Thomas intervened. “I must say, it seems a bit ironic that you’re on the other side of the federalism issue,” he said, apparently unaware of the irony of his own position.

By contrast, lawyers speaking against the state legislatur­e theory turned on several occasions to the historical record of the founding fathers as well as close textual analysis of the constituti­on – tactics normally associated with the rightwing supermajor­ity. “Over 233 years, this court has never second-guessed a state court interpreta­tion of its own constituti­on in any context,” said Neal Katyal, a lawyer representi­ng Common Cause, an ethics-in-government group which is opposing what it claims is an attempted Republican power grab in North Carolina.

 ?? Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA ?? The US supreme court is hearing a case based on the radical ‘independen­t state legislatur­e theory’, to which four conservati­ve justice appear sympatheti­c.
Photograph: Michael Reynolds/EPA The US supreme court is hearing a case based on the radical ‘independen­t state legislatur­e theory’, to which four conservati­ve justice appear sympatheti­c.

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