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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: taxcontrol

They don’t call the GOP the Surrender Party for nothing. Dems fight for every inch every single day of the year. The GOP useful idiots can’t wait to waive the white flag and get back to doctrine discussions while sitting in their comfy armchairs. Meanwhile, Dems thank them for their support while burning 240 years of our American Heritage to the ground.


81 posted on 12/15/2020 10:59:57 AM PST by lodi90
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To: Alberta's Child

“””Here’s a problem with this case that nobody has even mentioned: Do you know for sure that TEXAS conducted the election in full compliance with the protocols established by the state legislature?”””


Fine. Let Pennsylvania countersue Texas. And before they go to Court to argue the suit and countersuit, the Judge orders each party the Rights of Discovery to depose witnesses and inspect relevant documents.


82 posted on 12/15/2020 11:05:30 AM PST by Presbyterian Reporter
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To: Presbyterian Reporter
Have you ever been involved in a civil lawsuit?

The process you just described there would take a minimum of two years to complete even under an expedited Supreme Court trial calendar.

Who is President from January 2021 to January 2023?

83 posted on 12/15/2020 11:14:47 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("There's somebody new and he sure ain't no rodeo man.")
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To: Alberta's Child

Article 7 shows that the Constitution, which guarantees a “Republican form of government, is a compact between the states. Where the matter at issue is “who is going to be the President who will exercise Article 2 powers,” and when the actions of one state at least might possibly violate “republican” principles and thereby affect who becomes POTUS, then arguably there IS standing. A Presidential election is NOT a purely internal matter for each state - each is linked and dependent upon the others.


84 posted on 12/15/2020 11:38:42 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: Alberta's Child

All this talk about “law” is really funny. You mean the law that says they can kill babies or force you to have healthcare? Since when is that about the law? It’s obviously not about the law. The Constitution protects our rights if the Supreme Court would follow it. The whole freaking world knows the Demonrats stole this election. Hell, the media won’t even let it be reported if they can
censor it. The Supreme Court tossed the Texas case aside like a McDonald’s wrapper even though our Republic may be lost. They are evil traitors of the worst kind.


85 posted on 12/15/2020 11:43:00 AM PST by Cowgirl
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To: Alberta's Child

Nonsense! First, if PA had a case against TX, that would be a separate case, not something that would somehow negate the TX claim. Second, the TX claim is that PA’s violation (and those of the other 3 defendant states) of it’s own law had a sufficient enough effect to change the results of the single national election that we have under the Constitution. It is beyond absurd to claim that a single ballot violation of TX law had such an effect. You’re really reaching here.


86 posted on 12/15/2020 11:57:11 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: Alberta's Child

Who knows, but the legislatures are not the only aggrieved parties, so who cares?


87 posted on 12/15/2020 11:58:24 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: Ancesthntr
I'm not a lawyer but I know the process well enough to understand how these cases are adjudicated in the U.S. court system.

1. Look up the term "Entire Controversy Doctrine." It's a principle of common law that requires the parties in a legal dispute to assert ANY claims related to the underlying matter between them in the same case. This is why almost every civil lawsuit I've been involved in (mostly in a professional capacity) included counterclaims that had little or no basis in fact but had to be filed in order for the defendant to protect their rights under the Entire Controversy Doctrine. If you are a defendant in a lawsuit and you don't file a counterclaim in your initial response, it's rare for a court to let you amend you filings and file a claim later.

2. Then look up the "Unclean Hands Doctrine." Again, it's based in English Common Law and applies to situations where the plaintiff in the lawsuit is trying to sue defendants over something that the plaintiff is guilty of practicing itself. If your business partner defrauds you in a business matter, for example, you can't sue him for damages if he can prove that you had also defrauded him in the same business relationship. A plaintiff who has "unclean hands" is barred from pursuing claims for the same matter in a court of law.

These two items explain why Pennsylvania (and the other three states) would have immediately asserted counterclaims against Texas if the case had been allowed to proceed.

88 posted on 12/15/2020 2:05:00 PM PST by Alberta's Child ("There's somebody new and he sure ain't no rodeo man.")
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To: Alberta's Child
Do you know for sure that TEXAS conducted the election in full compliance with the protocols established by the state legislature?

I know for sure that Texas did not. For one, the governor issued an order allowing early voting to begin six days earlier than provided by the legislature. Well over 400,000 votes were cast before the statutory beginning of early voting in Harris County alone.

Harris County also operated several "drive through" early-voting sites that also violated the law provided by the legislature. Over 127,000 votes were cast that way, give or take a thousand or two because there was a discrepancy. I know that one through personal experience, because I spent part of Election Day watching a second download of those votes because they did the first one with no poll watchers or clerks present.

There is also a potential Equal Protection argument, because Harris County allowed drive-through early voting while no one else did.

So yes, if PA or the other defendants could defend the case on the basis that Texas also did not follow the manner directed by its legislature, PA would have no problem proving that defense.

Now, each of these issues was, in fact, litigated all the way to the Texas Supreme Court, and the all-Republican Texas Supreme Court ruled against the Republican Party and Republican candidate plaintiffs on the merits each time. But of course, the same could be said of the issues in Pennsylvania, Georgia, and the other states.

I will point out that Pennsylvania and the other states would not be able to assert a "clean hands" defense regardless, because that requires the party asserting the defense to prove that it "has been seriously harmed and the wrong complained of cannot be corrected without the application of the doctrine." Pennsylvania cannot prove such harm for the same reason Texas could not, which is why the Supreme Court properly denied the petition for lack of Article III standing.

89 posted on 12/15/2020 3:43:58 PM PST by The Pack Knight
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To: Ancesthntr

By the standards of Texas’s own argument in its lawsuit, Texas had about half a million illegal ballots cast in Harris County alone. They were illegal because they were cast in violation of the manner directed by the legislature, and because some of them, by Texas’s argument, also violated Equal Protection. So if Pennsylvania’s election must be voided, then so must Texas’s on a counterclaim by Pennsylvania (if either state had standing, which they do not).


90 posted on 12/15/2020 3:52:16 PM PST by The Pack Knight
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To: Ancesthntr; Alberta's Child

Some better info: In Harris County, about 628,000 in-person votes were cast before the time for early voting as authorized by the Texas legislature. I don’t have the numbers for the full period state-wide, but 2.63 million voted state wide between 10/13 and 10/15, and I’m pretty sure at least another million voted by 10/18. The first date for early voting as authorized by the legislature was 10/19. Trump’s margin state-wide was about 631,000, barely more than the number of illegal early votes cast in Harris County alone (and that does NOT count the also-illegal drive-through votes, at least 127,000, cast in Harris County).

I can tell you that based on what I’ve directly observed of early-vote counting, I am pretty sure we cannot segregate the illegal pre-10/19 votes from the legal early votes. It is absolutely possible that invalidating those pre-10/19 votes would have swung Texas to Biden.


91 posted on 12/15/2020 4:13:52 PM PST by The Pack Knight
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