AP
December 1, 2015
The Supreme Court's lineup of new cases is fit for an election year.
Affirmative
action, abortion and another look at the Obama health care law all are
before the court, and they could well be joined by immigration, giving
the justices
a run of cases that reads like a campaign platform.
Also coming; disputes involving public-sector labor unions, the death penalty and the way electoral districts are drawn.
Decisions
in these high-profile cases almost certainly will split the court along
ideological lines, mirroring the country's stark partisan split. What's
more, the most
contentious issues won't be resolved until late June, barely four
months before the 2016 presidential election.
What
started as a somewhat sleepy term — especially following major
decisions last June on health care and same-sex marriage — has become
much more interesting, says University
of Pennsylvania law dean Theodore Ruger.
"This is a court that remains very assertive in its role in declaring what the law is," Ruger said.
The
accumulation of wrenching social issues and pointed policy disputes at
the Supreme Court at this moment is mostly a matter of chance. A legal
fight over the regulation
of abortion clinics in Texas has been underway for two and a half
years. President Barack Obama's plan to shield from deportation millions
of immigrants who are living in the country illegally was rolled out a
year ago and almost immediately challenged in
court. Faith-based groups that say they are forced to be complicit in
providing objectionable birth control to women covered under their
health plans have been challenging the Obama administration for more
than three years.
It is still is possible the immigration dispute will not be heard until next fall, if at all.
Now
that the cases are at the marble courthouse atop Capitol Hill, the
justices' decisions could feed campaign rhetoric that already has been
heated on abortion and immigration,
to name just two issues.
In
June 2012, Chief Justice John Roberts provided the decisive vote that
saved Obama's health care overhaul in the midst of the president's
campaign for re-election.
A
short time later, Republican candidate Mitt Romney proclaimed that as
president he would do what the high court failed to do that June — get
rid of the health care law.
Obama won re-election, and the law survived.
Ruger said the chief justice wrote a nuanced opinion that appeared to show some sensitivity to the looming election.
"I
think Roberts recognized this was going to be an issue in front of the
voters," Ruger said. The electorate ultimately would decide the health
care law's fate, he said.
Court
decisions close to an election, especially when they produce big
changes in the law, also can increase attention paid to those issues.
This
is part of what Texas A&M University political scientist Joseph Ura
called the court's agenda-setting effect. Ura pointed to Brown v. Board
of Education's outlawing
of racial segregation in public schools and Lawrence v. Texas' ban on
state anti-sodomy laws as examples of past decisions that altered "the
existing arrangement of material or symbolic benefits in our political
system." Researchers found that those decisions
"led to a large, sustained increase in the media's attention" to those
issues, Ura said.
Last
term's big rulings on health care and same-sex marriage already have
prompted criticism of the court, and of Roberts and Justice Anthony
Kennedy in particular, from
several Republican presidential candidates. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, for
example, has said that putting Roberts on the court was a mistake, even
though Cruz endorsed his nomination in 2005.
The
court's 2010 decision in Citizens United that led to a flood of what
critics call "dark money" in political campaigns remains controversial,
and Democratic candidates
have pledged to try to undo it.
The
Roe v. Wade decision in 1973 that established a woman's right to an
abortion produced a backlash that eventually showed up in election
returns, said Sara Benesh, a
political scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. "A lot of
scholars say (President Ronald) Reagan got elected because of Roe v.
Wade. Pro-life forces really got him moving in his campaign," Benesh
said.
But
there is little evidence that the court itself will become an issue in
the campaign, except perhaps on the margins, she said.
The
court and the justices are little known to the public. "It seems to me a
long, drawn-out relationship between any decision the court might make
and any decision an
individual might make in the voting booth," Benesh said.
Every
four years, interest groups across the political spectrum try to make
that connection for voters. Elections matter, they say, because the
winner may get to choose
justices who will serve for the next quarter century or longer.
Indeed,
with four justices in their late 70s or early 80s, and the court so
closely and fiercely divided, any appointment could dramatically change
the court's direction.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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