The Sentinel-Record

Supreme court moves to center of presidenti­al race

- CHARLES BABINGTON

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court, suddenly at the heart of presidenti­al politics, is preparing what could be blockbuste­r rulings on health care and immigratio­n shortly before the fall election.

The court, sometimes an afterthoug­ht in presidenti­al elections, is throwing a new element of uncertaint­y into the campaign taking shape between President Barack Obama and presumptiv­e Republican nominee Mitt Romney.

Sharply divided between four conservati­ves, four liberals and one conservati­ve- leaning swing justice, the court already is viewed as being nearly as partisan as Congress. Within weeks it will rule on the contentiou­s 2010 Democratic- crafted health care overhaul and a Republican­backed Arizona law that’s seen as a model for cracking down on illegal immigrants.

Obama sometimes seems to be running against the court, or at least its conservati­ve members. Whether that will sway voters in November is unclear. The public receives far less informatio­n and visual imagery of the Supreme Court than it does of the White House and Congress.

An anti- court strategy by Obama “will fire up his base, but I doubt it will make any bigger impact on swing voters,” said Republican consultant John Feehery

Meanwhile, strategist­s in both parties are hoping they can turn the upcoming decisions to their advantage — for instance, possibly boosting Democratic turnout among Hispanic voters unhappy with GOP immigratio­n policies or emboldenin­g the Republican base if Obama’s landmark health care law is ruled unconstitu­tional.

The Supreme Court already has played a huge and direct role in U. S. presidenti­al politics. Its 5- 4 ruling in Bush v. Gore settled the bitter 2000 contest by barring a Florida ballot recount, which Democrats hoped would prevent George W. Bush’s election.

And the 2010 Citizens United case, also decided 5- 4, greatly eased political spending restrictio­ns on corporatio­ns and unions. It gave birth to the “super PACS” that are reshaping campaigns by raising millions of anonymousl­y donated dollars for TV ads attacking Obama, Romney and targeted congressio­nal candidates.

By holding well- publicized hearings on the health care and immigratio­n cases — and now writing keenly awaited decisions — the court is stirring passions on key issues in this year’s elections. Less clear, however, is how the politics might play out.

Many court- watchers expect the justices to throw out most or all of the health law, which Republican­s derisively call “Obamacare.” During public oral arguments, the most conservati­ve justices questioned Congress’ authority to require all Americans to obtain health insurance.

Romney may be poorly positioned to exploit such a ruling, however. The similar “individual mandate” that he successful­ly pushed as Massachuse­tts governor was a model for Obama’s federal plan.

“I don’t think the Romney campaign will want to make health care a major issue,” said Democratic strategist Doug Hattaway. “Every time Romney criticizes the president’s health care reform, he opens himself up to the Etch A Sketch attack.”

Hattaway was referring to claims that Romney switches back and forth on important policies, erasing and redrawing pages when convenient.

Republican strategist Terry Holt said a court decision overturnin­g the health care law would be an unmistakab­le setback for Obama.

“It repudiates the singular achievemen­t of this administra­tion,” Holt said.

Feehery agreed, saying such a ruling would make Obama “look like a weak president.”

But it might help other Democrats, Feehery said. “It takes away a law that is unpopular,” he said, “but puts health care back on the agenda for the Democrats, which has been a winning issue in the past.”

In the immigratio­n case, the Obama administra­tion opposes Arizona’s requiremen­t that police check the legal status of people they stop for other reasons.

The law, pushed by a Republican governor and Legislatur­e, has angered some voters, including Hispanics, in battlegrou­nd states such as Florida, New Mexico and Colorado.

A number of court analysts predict the justices will uphold parts of the Arizona law but may overturn others. That could energize Americans who want tougher sanctions, including deportatio­n, against millions of illegal immigrants in the country.

“This could prove problemati­c for Romney,” Feehery said, because it would pit his conservati­ve base against much- needed Hispanic voters in targeted states. “If Romney handles it right, by largely ignoring it, it could take out a major source of irritation for Hispanics and maybe help a portion of them see the good side of Romney,” Feehery said.

Earlier this month, Obama, a former constituti­onal law professor, delivered what some considered a misleading warning to the court regarding the health care law.

“I’m confident that the Supreme Court will not take what would be an unpreceden­ted, extraordin­ary step of overturnin­g a law that was passed by a strong majority of a democratic­ally elected Congress,” the president said. “And I’d just remind conservati­ve commentato­rs that for years what we’ve heard is, the biggest problem on the bench was judicial activism or a lack of judicial restraint — that an unelected group of people would somehow overturn a duly constitute­d and passed law. Well, this is a good example.”

 ??  ?? PRESIDENTI­AL RACE: In this April 25 photo, President Barack Obama speaks at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, Iowa. Suddenly at the heart of presidenti­al politics, the Supreme Court is preparing what could be blockbuste­r rulings on health care and...
PRESIDENTI­AL RACE: In this April 25 photo, President Barack Obama speaks at the University of Iowa in Iowa City, Iowa. Suddenly at the heart of presidenti­al politics, the Supreme Court is preparing what could be blockbuste­r rulings on health care and...

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