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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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To: Alberta's Child

The “way” of establishing the process is exactly the process that was violated. In each of the named states, judicial or executive decisions were used to violate the actual laws. By doing so, those states explicitly violated the process agreed to that the rules were to be enacted by the legislatures alone.

It is not that the voting/counting processes were wrobg or bad, but rather that they were established in contravention of the constitutionally prescribed manner for doing so.


61 posted on 12/15/2020 8:50:46 AM PST by MortMan (Shouldn't "palindrome" read the same forward and backward?)
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To: MortMan
I'll go back to Post #46 and ask the same question:

Why haven't the LEGISLATURES of those states done anything to deal with this situation?

62 posted on 12/15/2020 8:54:57 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("There's somebody new and he sure ain't no rodeo man.")
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bump


63 posted on 12/15/2020 9:02:34 AM PST by foreverfree
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To: Alberta's Child

In a case like this, they certainly should have done that. Thomas and Alito said the same thing.

I don’t know if you recall the ACB hearings, but one of the questions she was asked (and I don’t remember by whom) was whether she would recuse herself, since Trump was nominating here, if a question came up about the elections. She waffled a bit, but she obviously did the equivalent thereof in this case.

The other thing this question indicates is that the Dems knew in advance that this would not be a legitimate election. Even Nancy Pelosi boasted “[Trump] will never get elected, we have plans.”


64 posted on 12/15/2020 9:02:35 AM PST by livius
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To: Alberta's Child
Why the hell did those state legislatures allow this to happen, and why aren't THEY the ones contesting the elections?

For the same reasons Congress lets the Supreme Court decisions alter the Constitution, because they want it that way and that is the only way they can get to their destination. The people would never stand for most of it if they were given a choice, so don't let them have one. Simple.

65 posted on 12/15/2020 9:07:49 AM PST by itsahoot (The ability to read auto correct is necessary to read my posts understanding them is another matter.)
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To: Alberta's Child
The difference here is that the legal objections should really be coming from the state legislatures themselves, not the AG of another state.

Except in this case the State is the culprit.

66 posted on 12/15/2020 9:11:36 AM PST by itsahoot (The ability to read auto correct is necessary to read my posts understanding them is another matter.)
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To: ClearCase_guy

Ditto...
Especially since those state legislatures are “REPUBLICAN”...

Something is afoot... More than meets the eye or ear...


67 posted on 12/15/2020 9:13:49 AM PST by trfree98 (Words have meaning but values and actions define character and real time outcomes.)
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To: Alberta's Child

In PA, IIRC, the legislators sued to overturn the judicial rewrite of the mail-in ballot law. The state supreme court, which authorized that rewrite dismissed the suit stating that the legislature hadn’t sued in time (it was after the election), despite the judicial rewrite occurring only a short time before the election.

The legislatures wrote the rules, the executive and judicial branches changed them, and the legislature was denied relief to reimpose the original rules because they “didn’t react fast enough”.

In GA, there were not one but apparently two separate “secret” consent decrees between the executive branch and the democrat party. Neither was publically announced until shortly before the election, IIRC. Neither had as a party the legislature, so the legislature was not informed until too late.

In both PA and GA, as well as a couple of other states, the legislatures voted alternate slates of electors. in MI, which did the same, the executive branch tried to intimidate and prevent those electors from voting their alternate slate.

I am unclear whether a state legislature can sue its executive and/or judicial state branches in federal court, much less at SCOTUS. SCOTUS has original jurisdiction in disputes between states, but has (rightfully, IMHO) refused to participate in most intra-state squabbles.

The sad conclusion, to me, is that the legislatures set up their rules, which were unconstitutionally changed just before the election, and nobody seems to have standing and/or jurisdiction to adjudicate the wrongs. The legislature could possibly simply order the seating of alternate electors, but the administration of these elections were assigned to the executive branch, trusting that they would follow the law as written.

The cheat, even when discovered, in this scenario cannot be resolved by peaceful means within the state governments. The side that cheated, in most cases, controls the apparatus appointed to ensure proper administration of the legislature-defined rules for the election.

What specific actions would you have those legislatures take?


68 posted on 12/15/2020 9:14:46 AM PST by MortMan (Shouldn't "palindrome" read the same forward and backward?)
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To: livius

... and ...
We didn’t have a constitution in 1776 either...


69 posted on 12/15/2020 9:16:45 AM PST by trfree98 (Words have meaning but values and actions define character and real time outcomes.)
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To: Alberta's Child
If a court doesn't think a plaintiff is eligible for relief then it shouldn't hear the case, period.

On this we agree on everything else you defended, not so much. Would have been better for Thomas and Alito to have said nothing than what they said. Their no vote was sufficient to show dissaproval.

70 posted on 12/15/2020 9:20:42 AM PST by itsahoot (The ability to read auto correct is necessary to read my posts understanding them is another matter.)
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To: Alberta's Child
There's no question that I have all the legal standing to contest this election on the basis of my legitimate votes not being counted.

What you seem unable to grasp is that an illegal vote accomplishes the same thing as not counting your vote. Apparently the Supremes can't grasp it either so you are in good esteemed company.

71 posted on 12/15/2020 9:24:42 AM PST by itsahoot (The ability to read auto correct is necessary to read my posts understanding them is another matter.)
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To: MortMan
What specific actions would you have those legislatures take?

The legislatures should have convened and voted for their own separate slate of electors.

This was NOT done yesterday. The reports you saw about alternate slates of electors being assembled was done by the electors themselves and/or the state GOP organizations, not the legislatures.

72 posted on 12/15/2020 9:31:50 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("There's somebody new and he sure ain't no rodeo man.")
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To: SeekAndFind

I would normally find Mr. Carrington’s argument quite reasonable, except for one small detail: this is a federal election for the one nationwide elected office in the land. By Mr. Carrington’s assertion, I suppose Bush v. Gore would be illegitimate as well, since Florida should have had the sovereignty over that result instead of SCOTUS.


73 posted on 12/15/2020 9:44:28 AM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Hope is not a plan. -- Matthew Bracken)
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To: SecondAmendment

That is one of the points of the suit that I heard about on talk radio, say what you may about that particular source. The edicts allowing ballots to be received up to 9 days after election day effectively hurt all the voters in the other states that stopped the vote on election day. If the Supremes heard the case and ultimately invalidated those edicts, every ballot that could be proved to have been received after November 3 gets thrown out. That would presumably include all those truckloads of ballots that arrived at counting centers in the wee hours of November 4.

Such a ruling could have effectively tilted the victory away from Biden and toward Trump. And if it was impossible to separate the illegal ballots from the legal ballots, the court could have then ordered the state legislators to either re-do the election in those states or choose the electors themselves.

Like I said in a previous reply, Mr. Carrington’s arguments would be right on the mark IF the subject weren’t the FEDERAL election for the one nationwide elected office in the land.


74 posted on 12/15/2020 9:51:41 AM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Hope is not a plan. -- Matthew Bracken)
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To: Alberta's Child

Thank you for the direct answer. I have been somewhat sheltering from all of this for a while - my BP and anger level benefit from not reading all of the discussions - so I was unaware that the alternate slates were not official alternate slates.


75 posted on 12/15/2020 9:52:03 AM PST by MortMan (Shouldn't "palindrome" read the same forward and backward?)
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To: SeekAndFind

Roberts is a coward. He failed in his job and his duty for fear of a possible riot by the lawless. He failed his oath to uphold and defend the Constitution ... out of fear.

He is a coward. Let history record his cowardice for all to see.


76 posted on 12/15/2020 9:59:07 AM PST by taxcontrol (Stupid should hurt - Dad's wisdom)
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To: MortMan
You're welcome!

While the votes yesterday were not "official," they were absolutely necessary in order to ensure that a competing slate of electors had duly cast their votes IF any of the remaining legal challenges carry forward into January. The Constitution clearly states that the electors from all the states must convene on the same day ... which is one of the few non-negotiable directives the Constitution has about elections.

77 posted on 12/15/2020 10:36:42 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("There's somebody new and he sure ain't no rodeo man.")
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To: SeekAndFind

The writer suffers from an extreme case of Normalcy Bias, acting as gg by ings will be normal from a judicial POV once Biden-Harris packs the Court.

Threat to Federalism? Try on a one party nation for size, and see if intervening in that his case is worse.

What a short-sighted moron!


78 posted on 12/15/2020 10:53:38 AM PST by Ancesthntr ("The right to buy weapons is the right to be free." A. E. van Vogt, “The Weapon Shops of Isher”)
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To: SeekAndFind

I have not read the Hillsdale commentary.

My hope is that Hillsdale, located in Michigan, is not kowtowing to its huge donor base in Michigan, (some of whom could be Democrats or RINOrats) by writing this commentary.

Hillsdale has a strong reputation of being one of the very few conservative colleges in the USA.

But, money sometimes talks louder.

Hillsdale’s learned scholars could have written a very different report about what is happening in 2020.


79 posted on 12/15/2020 10:54:29 AM PST by Presbyterian Reporter
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To: SeekAndFind

The Author’s are obviously unaware of The Four Boxes.


80 posted on 12/15/2020 10:55:59 AM PST by Kickass Conservative (THEY LIVE, and we're the only ones wearing the Sunglasses.)
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