SCOTUS Term 25-26

Aardvark86

All-Conference
Oct 12, 2021
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Decisions today - first up is First Choice Women's Resource center - a first amendment case relating to disclosure of donors by nonprofits, but the real issue was standing. Unanimous opinion by Gorsuch that the organization has standing to challenge the subpoena prior to actual enforcement.
 

Aardvark86

All-Conference
Oct 12, 2021
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Yikes...and Callais!!!!! By Alito. In the absence of necessary race base districts to comply with the VRA, race based districts are unconstitutional. And as significantly, 'necessity' under the VRA is limited to remedies for intentional racial discrimination (not disparate impact). This is what Desantis, and others, were likely waiting for. While I'm not sure i buy it, FLA will argue that the clarification in law is the basis for redrawing the districts rather than state prohibited politics.

Surprisingly, only three opinions, one of which is just two pages. I have a feeling reading them is going to devolve pretty quickly into angels dancing on heads of pins.

Bottom line is that you may see some southern states reexamine maps on the theory that their districts were based on mistaken assumptions about when race-based districts were permissible or required
 
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BigPapaWhit

All-American
Jun 15, 2014
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Yikes...and Callais!!!!! By Alito. In the absence of necessary race base districts to comply with the VRA, race based districts are unconstitutional. And as significantly, 'necessity' under the VRA is limited to remedies for intentional racial discrimination (not disparate impact). This is what Desantis, and others, were likely waiting for. While I'm not sure i buy it, FLA will argue that the clarification in law is the basis for redrawing the districts rather than state prohibited politics.
Wonder what bearing if any this might have on the latest rounds of SC redistricting. Whether it was to protect Jim Clyburn or protect the 1st district from flipping again, I suspect there will be challenges coming forth.
 

Aardvark86

All-Conference
Oct 12, 2021
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Just wow. Took a quick spin thru the two opinions. The court has indeed gutted the vra by effectively requiring that a plaintiff prove that a map can only be explained by current, intentional discrimination (and not by other permissible factors like politics). Without going into too much detail regarding the new standards of proof, the one that really jumps out is that the plaintiff must control for party Affiliation, which may well be impossible given the coherence of black voting patterns when compared with whites. In essence, a plaintiff must now “prove the negative”

Kagans dissent may well be the best of her career, which is saying something, and is well worth a read. It really does describe just what the majority actually did.

there is a part of me that thinks that the time had come - societally and otherwise - for this opinion, but it frankly reads not unlike the worst of left leaning activist scotus diktats of the 60s, with a sprinkling of sophistry in the reasoning. That’s particularly troubling given that this was a statutory case.
 

BigPapaWhit

All-American
Jun 15, 2014
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there is a part of me that thinks that the time had come - societally and otherwise - for this opinion, but it frankly reads not unlike the worst of left leaning activist scotus diktats of the 60s, with a sprinkling of sophistry in the reasoning. That’s particularly troubling given that this was a statutory case.
Correct me where I am wrong, please. Are you saying that the VRAs time had past? However, the opinion by the majority is problematic and will cause more issues than it solves?
 

fatpiggy

Heisman
Aug 18, 2002
24,070
22,601
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The map in dispute. District 6 is the green district.

I like the ruling because the goverment needs to get out of the business of race. Stop seeing us as Black Americans, White Americans, Brown Americans, and start seeing us all as Americans. Race should not be a legal reason to gerrymander any more than race should be allowed in hiring decisions (i.e DEI). The Civil Rights Act should ensure everyone is treated equally under the law.

Get the government out of the race business, and this is a good start.


1777480855370.png
 

FLaw47

All-Conference
Dec 23, 2010
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The map in dispute. District 6 is the green district.

I like the ruling because the goverment needs to get out of the business of race. Stop seeing us as Black Americans, White Americans, Brown Americans, and start seeing us all as Americans. Race should not be a legal reason to gerrymander any more than race should be allowed in hiring decisions (i.e DEI). The Civil Rights Act should ensure everyone is treated equally under the law.

Get the government out of the race business, and this is a good start.


View attachment 1275836

But partisan gerrymandering is totes fine....
 

Aardvark86

All-Conference
Oct 12, 2021
1,355
2,347
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Correct me where I am wrong, please. Are you saying that the VRAs time had past? However, the opinion by the majority is problematic and will cause more issues than it solves?
Sorta-kinda. We are, in fact, a long way from the 1960s in terms of electoral participation, economic and social mobility, empowerment and the like, so to the extent this reins in a lot of the 'historical effects-based' stuff (which doesn't really have a definable temporal endpoint and eventually just devolves into naked proportionality as a governing principle), I'm actually kinda ok with that.

Obviously, intent-based stuff is never acceptable, and so we still need VRA. (And of course, the VRA has lots of continuing relevance outside the redistricting context.) My concern with the majority opinion is that it's made it virtually impossible to make out the intent-based redistricting case in that not only must there be 'current' intentional discrimination, but that the plaintiff must 'prove the negative' that neutral factors didn't predominate. Sorta like saying that "a little" discrimination is ok, which is awfully weird and uncomfortable.

(OTOH, flipping the coin, there's a practical paradox here from a state defense perspective as well. Because of the incredible correlation of black voting and Democratic affiliation, which is really unlike anything else in American politics by orders of magnitude, it becomes awfully difficult for a state to "disprove" a racial inference with respect to actions that may in fact be politically motivated. And I am in the camp of thinking that Rucho was more right than wrong in allowing partisan considerations to justify map drawing.)
 
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