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The Right Should Be Relieved SCOTUS Rejected Judicial Activism In Texas v. Pennsylvania: Conservatives must rediscover their opposition to judicial overreach
The Federalist ^ | 12/15/2020 | Adam Carrington, Hillsdale College

Posted on 12/15/2020 7:03:59 AM PST by SeekAndFind

The Warren Court holds a special place of derision within the conservative imagination. The term refers to the 1953-1969 timeframe when Chief Justice Earl Warren held sway over the U.S. Supreme Court. The right has understood this court as inaugurating and modeling the modern iteration of “judicial activism.”

Conservative critics of the Warren Court period hold that, through a series of heavy-handed interventions, it undermined essential elements of American government, including the rule of law, popular sovereignty, and federalism. The right’s evolution toward working-class populism should only increase antipathy toward the Warren Court and its rule by elitist judicial fiat.

This makes the case of Texas v. Pennsylvania all the more strange. Texas’s motion against Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Georgia sought to enjoin certification of their presidential election results and essentially to require each one’s legislature to choose its slate of electors.

Notably, Texas did not act alone in its petitioning. The litigation became a kind of litmus test within the GOP, with supporting briefs from 17 state attorneys general, 126 members of the U.S. House of Representatives, and the president of the United States.

Yet even Earl Warren himself would have hesitated at so brazen a petition. If the Warren Court engaged in judicial activism, these petitioners asked the current Roberts Court to inaugurate judicial hyper-activism.

Resisting Judicial Hyper-Activism

Texas’s invitation to hyper-activism started with its request that SCOTUS hear the case. Numerous restrictions exist on when, why, and how courts adjudicate litigation. Here, the justices refused to take the case Texas’s “for lack of standing.”

Standing limits who can bring a claim to court. A litigant must assert a concrete, particular wrong done to himself, one directly traceable to the person he sues, and about which a court possesses the tools to address.

White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany attacked the Supreme Court for rejecting Texas on these grounds, saying “they hid behind procedure.” President Trump made the same critique, tweeting that the justices “chickened out” in saying they could not hear the case. The court did no such thing.

For starters, calling standing merely procedural misses an enormous component of judicial overreach. Many who speak of judicial activism think only of what the court decides regarding contested issues like school prayer, abortion, and marriage.

But another side to such activism exists, one regarding whether and when the court takes cases at all. Judges should not decide every point of contention in our social and political life. Nor should the Supreme Court take on all exercise of judicial power, thereby circumventing state and other federal judges.

The doctrines attached to standing seek to restrain judges against these tendencies. The judicial power engages in legal interpretation only to resolve disputes — cases and controversies. Standing helps ensure real disputes exist by requiring litigants to show both their own injury and how the person they sue did the injuring. Judges must do so on matters of law that courts hold the capacity to determine well. Standing guards this area, too, setting aside “political questions” better left to the elected branches.

Instead of punting, the Supreme Court resisted Texas’s temptation to greatly erode these restraints. Texas started with a kernel of truth, namely the Article II requirement that “Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct” their allotted electors. While this clause could elicit a valid suit by some persons in some circumstances, this one was not it.

The Threat to Federalism

Texas’s claim to injury by the sued states proved exceptionally weak. In how they conducted their elections, these states allegedly injured Texas as a state regarding who would serve as vice president and thus break the Senate’s tied votes. It moreover hurt its residents by “diluting” or “debasing” their votes by potentially inaccurate results.

But these claims did not come close to fulfilling requirements for standing. Both were too vague as well as too general for Texas to claim particular and concrete injury. Any state could do so. Voters, too, could do so themselves if Texas was correct, undermining further the standing claim.

The implication should be clear. If states could sue on these grounds, then they could sue on any grounds. If so, then the Supreme Court could find grounds to take nearly any suit. Doing so would massively expand its reach, not only over citizens and the political branches but over other courts as well. It could build ever-easier routes to judicial legislating under the guise of legal interpretation.

The temptation on standing greased the wheels for another form of hyper-activism: undermining federalism. Federalism divides delegations of the people’s power between national and state governments. This allocation makes the exercise of governmental power both safer and more effective.

It makes power safer by denying to any entity all governing authority; and thus, provides both states and the federal government the capacity to check each other. Federalism creates more effective government power by properly dividing tasks; states address local concerns to which they are most fitted, and the federal government takes on issues of national scope.

The right attacks the courts, especially the Warren one, for subverting federalism by imposing its will on the states. Therein, the local becomes national as the popular becomes judicial.

On this point, Texas’s motion spoke fluent Warrenism. Ironically, this undermining of federalism would occur with states’s help. Under Texas’s motion, states could sue each other for any perceived shortcomings in the conduct of other states’s elections. Therefore, in asking to de-certify, Texas petitioned the court to exercise an unprecedented level of supervision over the states. This supervision could only bring dictated uniformity.

In going directly to the Supreme Court, moreover, Texas sought circumvention of state courts regarding the interpretation of state laws. The court would grab power from its judges, too. SCOTUS already acts too much as a body of legislators. They need not add election supervisors to the resume.

Finally, this judicial hyper-activism asks the Supreme Court to undercut popular will. When the court voids a law the right thinks constitutional, conservatives rail against “unelected judges” ruling over and against the people’s representatives. These efforts were a core sin of the Warren period. Here, Texas asked the court to go a step farther, negating the certified action of the people themselves.

Affirming ‘We, the People’

When asked for similar relief in other 2020 lawsuits, courts have noted just how extraordinary this request is. To un-certify state results and throw the choice back on state legislatures has no parallel in a past presidential election. To request doing so by judicial act only heightens its astonishing quality.

Judicial action so unprecedented, if ever legitimate, must stem from proof equally so. We need smoking guns of magnitude and certitude that would follow an artillery barrage. No such proof has emerged. We cannot rule out all voter fraud. Yet the expansive claims regarding electronic voting systems or reporting errors have been dispelled. Many smaller assertions regarding Sharpies or dead persons voting have not played out as accused, either.

Perhaps most telling, however, is that when actually in court instead of at a press conference or in a tweet, lawyers for the president have generally refused to claim fraud. This refusal includes the recent Wisconsin case that got past standing to the actual merits, although still did not yield a result in the president’s favor. Judges overturning the official, certified results on such evidence would not affirm rule by “We, the People.” Instead, it would pave the ground for judicial oligarchy.

In rejecting Texas’s petition, the Supreme Court wisely refused these temptations. It thereby denied taking yet another step toward a judiciary capable of reaching all, conforming all, ruling all. We certainly must assess our election system in the aftermath of 2020. We must be open to reform where needed. But, after Texas v. Pennsylvania, conservatives need to rediscover their justified antagonism towards judicial overreach. A Warren Court of the right is no answer.


Adam Carrington is Assistant Professor of Politics at Hillsdale College.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: bs; conservatism; pennsylvania; scotus; texas
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1 posted on 12/15/2020 7:03:59 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

This was not “judicial overreach,” this was high treason by the chief justice of the United States.


2 posted on 12/15/2020 7:06:59 AM PST by Pilgrim's Progress (http://www.baptistbiblebelievers.com/BYTOPICS/tabid/335/Default.aspx D)
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To: SeekAndFind

They didn’t even consider the case, which is an activism all its own.

And is coming back to bite all of us because of the anger it created.

Hear it, send it back to the states if the justices feel that it’s outside of their competence because of standing or other issues. But at least pretend to care.


3 posted on 12/15/2020 7:08:57 AM PST by livius
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To: livius

Agreed. That would have been the appropriate thing to do.


4 posted on 12/15/2020 7:09:47 AM PST by AFB-XYZ (Option 1 -- stand up. Option 2 -- bend over.)
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To: SeekAndFind

I love Hillsdale and all but this guy is like 3 weeks behind.


5 posted on 12/15/2020 7:10:54 AM PST by ecomcon
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To: All

HURR DURR - Lurgitimate Federal Judicial actions between the states is ACTIVISM.

Morons.

You KNOW it was a legitimate case because the court had to hide behind the nonsensical “you aint got standin”.

The same federal court that says illegal immigrants have standing against the federal government - but not actual citizens or, it seems, the STATES.


6 posted on 12/15/2020 7:12:28 AM PST by Skywise
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To: SeekAndFind

Why I feel and believe that the US Supreme Court miserably failed the majority of the American public by not upholding the law.

By: Saintgermaine

How so ?

In the past the US Supreme court was always ready and quick to jump in to action when it came to any civil right violation. Not to mention good old Ruth Bader Ginsburg, bless her heart and may she rest in peace, always one of the first in line to make it so and speak her piece.

We just experienced one of the greatest most monumental civil rights violations in American history perpetrated and orchestrated by a bunch of misguided and crooked actors in the background, by some referred to as deep state who were assisted by some ignorant and dumb, only too willing pawns in the foreground who thought that by helping to pull off this fraudulent voter scheme they were doing a great job and doing this nation a favor.

Along here it may be worth mentioning, considering hat there always may be some doubting Thomas’s around hat it certainly doesn’t take an MIT graduate to come to the conclusion that the results of the election were based on industrial strength fraud.

Why have Civil Rights been violated on a grand scale?
Fortunately there is still a majority of good and intact portion of the American public who believes in fair, square and just elections, with the accent on majority, may these be socialists-liberals or conservatives, as even a substantial number of socialists admits that this election was rigged. By doing so the rights of the other halve of the public who played by the rules and believed in just elections was violated on the grandest scale imaginable and by refusing to get involved either directly or indirectly our irreproachable Supreme Court cowardly shirked its responsibilities it was entrusted and paid to do by the American public.

As one recent story was passed along and reported by one of the law clerks who apparently overheard a heated discussion by the Supreme Court justices from behind closed doors, when the rest of them were told by chief justice Roberts in so many words to forget about it as it may lead to an unbelievable amount of riots.

Well that may be true, but the cowardly alternative was, that our Supreme Court decided it was OK to violate and infringe upon the civil rights of the majority of the American public. At the same token the Supreme Court could have told the American public ‘Folks a little cheating goes a long ways, but this has gone a little too far, so lets try this again and if need be under military supervision’

Let us hope that the Supreme Court may yet come to its senses and recognize the difference between right and wrong and do the job it was entrusted with. There is an old adage which states in so many words ‘ Fools never change their minds’ Before long we will find out if the Supreme
Court lived up to its purpose or if it failed this nation miserably when it needed it most.


7 posted on 12/15/2020 7:13:53 AM PST by saintgermaine (THE TIME TRAVELLER )
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To: SeekAndFind

I guess even Hillsdale hires a dud and a dope every now and then. Unfortunately, this particular Carrington knucklehead went public with his incompetence.


8 posted on 12/15/2020 7:14:32 AM PST by Honest Nigerian
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To: SeekAndFind
> To un-certify state results and throw the choice back on state legislatures has no parallel in a past presidential election.

Federal law says the election results are supposed to be completed by the end of election day.

The several states who were sued broke that law.

The mercurial nature of the Supreme Court has been laid bare for all to see.

9 posted on 12/15/2020 7:14:34 AM PST by SecondAmendment (This just proves my latest theory ... LEFTISTS RUIN EVERYTHING)
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To: SeekAndFind
Wonder how the author feels about the SCOTUS after their latest ruling?
10 posted on 12/15/2020 7:16:01 AM PST by Bratch
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To: SeekAndFind

Caution is definitely warranted, but at least there should have been an opinion.

It is difficult to see how on the one hand, the courts have made repeated interventions in recent years striking down voter ID, redrawing Congressional districts, and approving consent agreements to destroy the state legislatures’ provisions in appointing electors, and yet on the other hand The Court Must Stay Out Of Elections when it helps a Republican.

Without an opinion, the Court has made clear that this question can in fact be relitigated in ten years in favor of a Democrat candidate without even the pretense of reversing precedent.

No, by avoiding the issue, the Court has firmly voted For Biden, and not in service of any higher ideal.


11 posted on 12/15/2020 7:16:46 AM PST by cmj328 (We live here.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Absolutely.
Only the Left can use Judicial Activism. The Right should bend over an take it.
/sarc

Jerkwads like this have not figured out that the Left is an existential threat and that we need to use any weapon that comes to hand as ruthlessly as we can.


12 posted on 12/15/2020 7:19:50 AM PST by Little Ray (The Left and Right no longer have anything in common. A House divided against itself cannot stand.)
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To: SecondAmendment

The electors have one day to vote

The people that state legislators allow to appoint the electors have as much time as their state legislators choose.


13 posted on 12/15/2020 7:21:44 AM PST by Brian Griffin
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To: SeekAndFind

Judges opened cans of worms.

Other judges should have stuffed the worms back into their cans.


14 posted on 12/15/2020 7:24:12 AM PST by Brian Griffin
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To: SeekAndFind

Setting aside the few Democrats I have known to be Reagan Democrats . . .

The remaining Democrats - leftists, liberals, progressives, and socialists - have proven by themselves, to be virulent threatening bullies.

California’s Senator Feinstein is an example.

Bush’s John Roberts is an example.

However such “leaders” are described as being compromised, they will - instead of defying their bullies - join with their bullies and blame, bully, and turn virulent toward other people.

The “other people” being those who hold up a mirror for these “leaders” to reflect in, and upon such “leaders” actions.

Always, it seems the easier path for such “leaders” to attack anywhere . . . but where the leftists are the actual threat.

Liberals were divided, and enough still used to fondly describe their ideal of individualism up into the early 1970’s; but the other liberals increased in pack animal number - becoming larger gangs of projectionists.


15 posted on 12/15/2020 7:25:29 AM PST by linMcHlp
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To: SeekAndFind

The Supreme Court has the power to adjudicate all legal matters arising from the Constitution.


16 posted on 12/15/2020 7:26:12 AM PST by Brian Griffin
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To: SeekAndFind

Oh, blank off!

Damn cowardly so-called “conservatives”.


17 posted on 12/15/2020 7:28:07 AM PST by Chainmail (Remember that half the people you meet are below average intelligence)
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To: SeekAndFind

bookmark


18 posted on 12/15/2020 7:28:26 AM PST by GOP Poet (Super cool you can change your tag line EVERYTIME you post!! :D. (Small things make me happy))
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To: SeekAndFind

Section 11 of the Pennsylvania constitution states all courts are open.


19 posted on 12/15/2020 7:28:46 AM PST by Brian Griffin
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To: SeekAndFind
I/m surely in the minority here on FR, but while I was disappointed in the SCOTUS for not taking the case I understood exactly why they didn't take it. And after Texas filed the lawsuit I predicted right away that the "standing" issue would be the biggest hurdle for them.

Let's look at this differently ...

Suppose Pennsylvania carried out their election in such a way that black voters were somehow completely disenfranchised -- i.e., that the governor and/or secretary of state effectively imposed an election procedure designed to ensure that turnout among black voters was 0.

Would this be an issue that warranted a remedy in a court of law? Absolutely.

Would this be an issue that would give the State of Texas the legal standing to file a lawsuit against the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania? Absolutely NOT.

In this hypothetical scenario, those who had the legal standing to challenge the results of the election would be the voters who were disenfranchised, not another state government.

That's basically what the U.S. Supreme Court said here.

20 posted on 12/15/2020 7:29:47 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("There's somebody new and he sure ain't no rodeo man.")
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