Supreme Court Could Become Partisan
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The Supreme Court's new term begins today. For the first time in
memory there could be a
partisan divide
on the Court. Now there has
been an ideological divide for years but not a partisan one. An
ideological split pits liberals vs. conservatives. A partisan split
pits Democrats vs. Republicans. They are not the same thing. When
Barack Obama took office in 2009, two members of the Court,
John Paul Stevens and David Souter were consistent liberals but were
appointed by Republican Presidents (Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush,
respectively).
As a consequence, it was hard to characterize any bitter 5-4 decision
as "Democrats vs. Republicans" because the "liberal" side always had
two Republicans (Stevens and Souter), two Democrats (Ruth Ginsburg and
Stephen Breyer) and sometimes Anthony Kennedy. Starting today, here is
the composition of the Court.
Ruth Ginsburg 77 |
Antonin Scalia 74 |
Anthony Kennedy 74 |
Stephen Breyer 72 |
Clarence Thomas 62 |
Samuel Alito 60 |
Sonia Sotomayor 56 |
John Roberts 55 |
Elena Kagan 50 |
Ruth Bader Ginsburg |
Clinton (D) |
1993 |
Columbia |
Jewish |
Widow |
77 |
Antonin Scalia |
Reagan (R) |
1986 |
Harvard |
Catholic |
Married |
74 |
Anthony Kennedy |
Reagan (R) |
1988 |
Harvard |
Catholic |
Married |
74 |
Stephen Breyer |
Clinton (D) |
1994 |
Harvard |
Jewish |
Married |
72 |
Clarence Thomas |
Bush 41 (R) |
1991 |
Yale |
Catholic |
Married 2x |
62 |
Samuel Alito |
Bush 43 (R) |
2006 |
Yale |
Catholic |
Married |
60 |
Sonia Sotomayor |
Obama (D) |
2009 |
Yale |
Catholic |
Divorced |
56 |
John Roberts |
Bush 43 (R) |
2005 |
Harvard |
Catholic |
Married |
55 |
Elena Kagan |
Obama (D) |
2010 |
Harvard |
Jewish |
Single |
50 |
As a consequence of this new composition, the first time Kennedy sides with the
conservatives, all the pundits are going to point out that now the Court has become
as politicized as Congress, with Democrats on one side and Republicans on the other.
It is hard to tell what the consequences will be if this happens regularly. It is possible
that public's respect for the Court will collapse if everyone comes to see the justices as
political hacks. It is also possible that Kennedy, sensing this, decides to side with
the liberals more often, simply to preserve the Court's reputation.
Another factor that could play a role is the presence of three women on the Court.
Studies
have shown that when the number of women in a decision-making body becomes substantial,
the tone of the discussions changes. The group becomes more cooperative and tries to
find a solution that pleases everyone rather than just a narrow majority. While some
members of the Court, especially Scalia and Thomas march to their own drummers and are
unlikely to be influenced much by the three women, there is every reason to believe
that all-important Anthony Kennedy will at least listen carefully to what they have to say, especially
if they are united.
Also noteworthy is that except for educational background, the all-Ivy-League Court is
more diverse than ever. For most of the Court's history, it consisted entirely of
married white Anglo-Saxon Protestant males. From the table above, it is clear such is
no longer the case. It is unprecedented that there are no Protestants on the Court now,
a factor that could play a role in separation-of-church-and-state cases.
While nobody is talking out loud about it, everyone in Washington knows that Ruth Ginsburg has had
colon cancer and pancreatic cancer. Although her pancreatic cancer was caught early,
in general, people with pancreatic cancer almost never survive 5 years. In her
case, the pancreatic cancer was probably a result of the colon cancer metastasizing.
Ginsburg absolutely does not want to be replaced by a Republican President and is thus
very likely to resign "for personal reasons" some time before Jan. 20, 2013, probably
well before it. If the Republicans capture the Senate, Obama may feel forced to
choose a fairly conservative replacement in order to get him or her confirmed. In truth,
it is surprising that Ginsburg, now 77, didn't resign this year so as to give Obama
more leeway in naming a successor.
Republican Outsiders Outspend Democratic Outsiders 7 to 1
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A Supreme Court Ruling this year allows corporations,
unions, and other outsiders to spend whatever they like supporting
or opposing candidates and they are wasting no time in doing so.
In 2006, outside groups not associated with candidates spent $16 million.
This year outsiders are
already up to $80 million
and the elections are still a month away. Republican-oriented groups are
outspending Democratic-oriented groups 7 to 1 this year. In many cases,
the groups doing the spending are new and their donors are unknown.
The consequence is that a few shadowy billionaires with some spare change
can have a huge effect on the political landscape.
But even in this new world there are limits. For example, groups organized under
section
501(c)(4)
of the internal revenue code are supposed to be involved with civic affairs
or social welfare--not politics. Sen. Max Baucus (D-MT) is
asking
IRS to investigate and see if some of these groups may be violating federal
tax law.
Angle Criticizes Republicans
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In a private conversation with the Tea Party senatorial candidate in
Nevada, Scott Ashjian, that has
leaked out
the Republican candidate, Sharron Angle, trashes the Republican Party.
If Angle and other tea party candidates win, a number of them may become
loose cannons and minority leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) may have a lot
of trouble controlling them.
Nov. 3 Election News Wrapup Already Available
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CQ Politics has already written its
news story
recapping the Nov. 2 election. In fact, it has already written three of them.
One for the case that the Democrats barely hold both chambers of Congress,
one for the case that they lose the House and hold the Senate and one for the
case they lose everything. Interesting reading.
Today's Polls: CO OH-01
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Colorado |
Michael Bennet* |
43% |
Ken Buck |
48% |
|
|
Sep 28 |
Sep 30 |
SurveyUSA |
OH-01 |
Steven Driehaus* |
41% |
Steve Chabot |
53% |
|
|
Sep 28 |
Sep 29 |
SurveyUSA |
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