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boutons_deux
04-02-2014, 09:39 AM
Supreme Court Strikes Down Two-Year Donation Caps In Landmark Campaign Finance Case
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/supreme-court-mccutcheon-decision-campaign-contributions-2014-4#ixzz2xjwhiWp5

boutons_deux
04-02-2014, 09:49 AM
"Today's Court decision in McCutcheon v FEC is an important first step toward restoring the voice of candidates and party committees and a vindication for all those who support robust, transparent political discourse," Republican National Committee Chair Reince Priebus said in a statement.

http://www.businessinsider.com/supreme-court-mccutcheon-decision-campaign-contributions-2014-4#ixzz2xjzKEyiE

:lol

Winehole23
04-02-2014, 10:08 AM
http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/13pdf/12-536_e1pf.pdf

pgardn
04-02-2014, 10:17 AM
Another 5-4 split like expected.

And Thomas did not think it went far enough...

So individual donors are going to be tracked even further. Hopefully it gets outrageous enough that there is a backlash against candidates that are deemed to be in the hip pocket of wealthy individuals.

boutons_deux
04-02-2014, 02:29 PM
Roberts wrote:


Spending large sums of money in connection with elections, but not in connection with an effort to control the exercise of an officeholder’s official duties, does not give rise to quid pro quo corruption. :lol

Nor does the possibility that an individual who spends large sums may garner “influence over or access to” elected officials or political parties. :lol

This twisted legal logic was then used by Roberts to create a narrow rationale allowing the Court’s conservative majority to throw out the contribution caps.

The Government argues that the aggregate [contribution] limits further the permissible objective of preventing quid pro quo corruption. The difficulty is that once the aggregate limits kick in, they ban all contributions of any amount, even though Congress’s selection of a base limit indicates its belief that contributions beneath that amount do not create a cognizable risk of corruption. The Government must thus defend the aggregate limits by demonstrating that they prevent circumvention of the base limits, a function they do not serve in any meaningful way.


Roberts then tossed the ball back to Congress, asserting that while this part of its 2002 law was unconstitutional, Congress could try again to write better rules.

There are multiple alternatives available to Congress that would serve the Government’s interest in preventing circumvention while avoiding “unnecessary abridgment” of First Amendment rights. Such alternatives might include targeted restrictions on transfers among candidates and political committees, or tighter earmarking rules.


These lines of reasoning are a classic case of Supreme Court justices who either don’t understand how politics works—or understand it all too well—and want to shift the balance of power in Washington by undermining Congress’s ability to regulate elections and increasing the power of political parties and their biggest contributors.

http://www.alternet.org/tea-party-and-right/chief-justice-john-roberts-shreds-another-campaign-finance-law-individuals-may?akid=11669.187590.7_kAx9&rd=1&src=newsletter977918&t=3 (http://www.alternet.org/tea-party-and-right/chief-justice-john-roberts-shreds-another-campaign-finance-law-individuals-may?akid=11669.187590.7_kAx9&rd=1&src=newsletter977918&t=3)

99% Human-American disenfranchised, 1% Human-Americans votes count 100x.

The damage the Repugs done will last for decades.

And if they get get control of Exec and Congress, the destruction will be 10x worse.

Repugs fuck America and make it unfuckable.

Thanks, ST Repug voters!

boutons_deux
04-02-2014, 02:39 PM
this fucked up legal "reasoning" echoes Kennedy in C-U

"The appearance of influence or access, furthermore, will not cause the electorate to lose faith in our democracy."

:lol

what a bunch of right-wing extremist activist corrupt clowns

Thanks, Repugs! I bet y'all don't even miss Robert Bork! :lol

"just callin balls n strikes!" :lol

you betcha!

TSA
04-02-2014, 04:49 PM
Supreme Court Strikes Down Two-Year Donation Caps In Landmark Campaign Finance Case
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/supreme-court-mccutcheon-decision-campaign-contributions-2014-4#ixzz2xjwhiWp5





Unfortunate decision.

DUNCANownsKOBE
04-02-2014, 07:00 PM
Unfortunate decision.

I thought less government was a good thing in America?

TSA
04-02-2014, 07:06 PM
I thought less government was a good thing in America?

Sometimes it is, sometimes it isn't.

Th'Pusher
04-02-2014, 07:11 PM
Sometimes it is, sometimes it isn't.

Solid analysis with excellent support to back up your assertion.

TSA
04-02-2014, 07:44 PM
Solid analysis with excellent support to back up your assertion.

I'll be sure to add more when I'm done golfing and give a shit.

DUNCANownsKOBE
04-03-2014, 05:19 AM
Sometimes it is, sometimes it isn't.

That kinda flies in the face of what your boy Breitbart thinks :lol

TSA
04-03-2014, 09:45 AM
That kinda flies in the face of what your boy Breitbart thinks :lol

Attempts to pigeonhole me will be fruitless as I don't affiliate myself with any political party.

russellgoat
04-03-2014, 12:42 PM
Supreme Court Strikes Down Two-Year Donation Caps In Landmark Campaign Finance Case
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/supreme-court-mccutcheon-decision-campaign-contributions-2014-4#ixzz2xjwhiWp5



Good. Get a real job if you want to donate...

boutons_deux
04-03-2014, 12:53 PM
the people who will now dominate buying politicians don't have jobs, they have mega wealth

Winehole23
04-03-2014, 01:54 PM
David Bernstein takes on Breyer's dissent:


In 1927, Justice Brandeis penned an extraordinarily influential concurrence supporting constitutional protection for freedom of speech in Whitney v. California. Consistent with his Progressivism, Brandeis defended freedom of speech primarily on the instrumental ground that it promoted free and rational public discussion, essential for the American people to govern themselves. By focusing on the social interest in democratic self-government, Brandeis attempted to differentiate freedom of speech from individualist rights such as liberty of contract and other traditional assertions of natural rights against the government.


By segregating speech rights from other rights protected by the so-called Lochner era Supreme Court, and narrowing the potential scope of such rights–Brandeis, for example, didn’t think much of corporate exercise of political speech rights–Brandeis helped ensure that constitutional protection for freedom of speech survived the sweeping constitutional changes that the New Deal and Franklin Roosevelt’s appointees to the Court put in motion. Indeed, with encouragement from the Roosevelt Administration and the elite bar, freedom of speech became a “preferred freedom” and the first and most important arrow in the post–New Deal Court’s civil libertarian quiver.


The Warren Court in its heyday happily moved beyond Brandeis’s relatively narrow notion of freedom of speech to protect cultural radicals and others who engaged in speech disapproved of by local or national majorities. Meanwhile, a new (and better) implicit justification for freedom of speech took hold, much more in line with American tradition: the government cannot be trusted to be a censor, deciding which speech is worthy of protection and which must be suppressed. It’s not only too easy for majorities to use the government to suppress minority expression, it’s far too easy for the government itself to use power over expression to benefit incumbent legislators and the interest groups who support them, leading to an ossified status quo, both cultural and political. Moreover, speech was once more seen as an individual right, transcending the marketplace of ideas rationale.


It’s therefore not all that surprising that when the Supreme Court decided Buckley v. Valeo in 1976, affirming some limits on campaign contributions to avoid corruption, but holding that political donations receive substantial First Amendment protection, the opinion was written by liberal stalwart William Brennan, and was thought too weak by the ACLU.




Since then, opposition to First Amendment protection of campaign donations has become a significant “cause” on the liberal left. It’s not hard to see why: the legacy mainstream media, Hollywood, academia, publishing, the legal profession, the mainline churches, and the arts, i.e., almost all of the leading opinion-making areas of American life, are dominated by liberals (though conservatives dominate talk radio, evangelical churches, and have Fox News). The one place where the playing field is more or less level is in campaign spending. Limit campaign spending, and left-leaning opinion-makers utterly dominate American political discourse.


But how can liberals, who so expansively interpret other constitutional provisions, narrow the First Amendment so that campaign finance no longer gets protection?


Justice Breyer’s dissent today shows the way, as he revives the old Progressive conception of freedom of speech as serving instrumental purposes (which he calls “First Amendment interests”), rather than protecting individual rights or reining in potential government abuses. And once we identify those “First Amendment interests,” we must limit freedom of speech to ensure that they are advanced.


Thus, Justice Breyer, writes, “Consider at least one reason why the First Amendment protects political speech. Speech does not exist in a vacuum. Rather, political communication seeks to secure government action. A politically oriented ‘marketplace of ideas’ seeks to form a public opinion that can and will influence elected representatives.” Just to make sure he’s not being too subtle, Breyer goes back to the source, Justice Brandeis, citing his opinion in Whitney for the proposition that freedom of speech is protected because it’s ”essential to effective democracy.”


Further showing off his affinity for the Progressive statism of a century ago (noted by Josh Blackman and me here (http://www.concurringopinions.com/archives/2011/07/op-ed-oliver-wendell-breyer.html#more-48006)), Breyer turns constitutional history on its head, by declaring that the purpose of the First Amendment was not to prevent government abuses, but to ensure ”public opinion could be channeled into effective governmental action.” As Tim Sandefur points out (http://sandefur.typepad.com/freespace/2014/04/wow-talk-about-getting-it-backwards.html), “Actually, the framers devised the constitutional structure to prevent public opinion from being channeled into effective government action. One cannot honestly read The Federalist without understanding that the system was designed in order to ensure that public opinion would only be translated into government action when it had been sufficiently challenged, weighed, and considered for its correspondence to principles of justice.”
In any event, Breyer adds that “corruption,” by which he means individuals engaging in too much freedom of speech via campaign donations, ”derails the essential speech-to-government-action tie. Where enough money calls the tune, the general public will not be heard. Insofar as corruption cuts the link between political thought and political action, a free marketplace of political ideas loses its point.”


The danger of this argument is that analogous reasoning could be used to censor major media corporations such as the New York Times, Hollywood, and so on, to wit: ”When Hollywood spends billions of dollars each year advancing a liberal agenda, the general public will not be heard. Instead of a free marketplace of ideas, we get a marketplace in which major Hollywood moguls have hundreds of thousands of times the ‘speech power’ of the average American.” And given that almost everyone deems it appropriate to regulate the economic marketplace to counter inefficiencies and unfairness, why should the much-less-efficient (because it’s much more costly for an individual to make an error in his economic life than to have a mistaken ideology) marketplace of ideas be exempt from harsh regulation?


In short, once one adopts the Progressive view of freedom of speech as only going so far as to protect the public interest in a well-functioning marketplace of ideas, there is no obvious reason to limit reduced scrutiny of government “public interest” regulation of speech to campaign finance regulations. Nor is it obvious why the Court should give strict scrutiny to speech restrictions that don’t directly affect the marketplace of ideas, instead of just using a malleable test balancing “speech interests” versus other interests.


Not surprisingly, then, Breyer is the Justice who is least inclined to protect freedom of speech in a variety of contexts. And it’s troubling that his three liberal colleagues joined his opinion today. Josh Blackman and I wrote three years ago (http://www.concurringopinions.com/archives/2011/07/op-ed-oliver-wendell-breyer.html#more-48006), “Breyer’s apparent ascendance as doyen of the Court’s liberal wing threatens to roll back decades of pro-liberty precedents, and to destroy the consensus on the Court that freedom of speech and other essential rights must not be sacrificed to the shifting whims of legislative majorities.” I hope to be a failed prophet.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2014/04/02/breyers-dangerous-dissent-in-mccutcheon-the-campaign-finance-case/

boutons_deux
04-03-2014, 02:18 PM
"Limit campaign spending, and left-leaning opinion-makers utterly dominate American political discourse."

so? is there a problem?

America is fucked up now due to conservative/Repug/tea bagger/VRWC/corporate policies. Time to go back to liberal/progressive policies that actually helped the people, the country advance.

EVAY
04-03-2014, 05:22 PM
I have rarely been as saddened by a Supreme Court decision as I was with this one and with its earlier, similar "United" decision.

I honestly feel like this leaves American democracy in the dust. Oligarchs in the persons of the Kochs and the Soros' and the Bloombergs and the Adelman's will determine the elected officials of the future.

You and I, dear readers, can rant and rail to our hearts' contents, and it will amount to nothing more than sound and fury signifying nothing.

TeyshaBlue
04-03-2014, 08:18 PM
"Limit campaign spending, and left-leaning opinion-makers utterly dominate American political discourse."

so? is there a problem?

America is fucked up now due to conservative/Repug/tea bagger/VRWC/corporate policies. Time to go back to liberal/progressive policies that actually helped the people, the country advance.


Like an $8/gal fuel tax.:lmao:lmao

boutons_deux
04-03-2014, 10:03 PM
Like an $8/gal fuel tax.:lmao:lmao

yep, $8/gal.

TeyshaBlue
04-03-2014, 10:16 PM
Still a fucking stupid idea.

TeyshaBlue
04-03-2014, 10:19 PM
'Cause $12/gal gas is a real boon to the 99%. They'll love the shit outta that.
And before you say you can "fix" this idiotic regressive tax, please specify exactly how it could be "fixed".

Nbadan
04-04-2014, 01:06 AM
back on topic......Roberts like all rich snobs confuses money with free speech

Justice Roberts is Wrong. Money and Speech are not the Same.
From Ring of Fire:


Yesterday, the Supreme Court handed down its decision in McCutcheon v. Federal Elections Commission (McCutcheon) and decided to strike down the aggregate limits on campaign finance contributions. The reasoning, according to Justice John Roberts, who delivered the Court’s opinion along with Justices Scalia, Kennedy, and Alito, is that the right to spend money on elections is the same as the freedom to speak.

Justice Roberts is either naive or misguided and neither option is becoming of the nation’s highest legal authority.

The political landslide that has been won in the Court started with Citizens United, a case that, in the view of the nation, was horribly unpopular. This decision put the nation on a crash-course with the devastation that awaits unbridled and unchecked spending by corporations and private interests in our national discussions and elections.

In the words of the dissenting opinion in McCutcheon, delivered by Justice Breyer, along with Justices Ginsburg, Sotomayor, and Kagan, “Taken together with Citizens United…, today’s decision eviscerates our Nation’s campaign finance laws, leaving a remnant incapable of dealing with the grave problems of democratic legitimacy that those laws were intended to resolve.”

http://www.ringoffireradio.com/2014/04/justice-roberts-wrong-money-speech/

If money is 'speech,' then those with no money have no voice and If money and speech are the same thing then speech is not free.

boutons_deux
04-04-2014, 05:15 AM
"money = speech" will be repeated until the sheeple "know" that is exactly the "originalist" intent of the FFs, much like "shall not be infringed" is repeated to pervert the 2nd Amendment.

boutons_deux
04-04-2014, 12:41 PM
Ruling’s Breadth Hints That More Campaign Finance Dominoes May Fall

The sweeping language and logic of Wednesday’s Supreme Court decision (http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/03/us/politics/supreme-court-ruling-on-campaign-contributions.html) on campaign finance may imperil other legal restrictions on money in politics.

The 5-to-4 decision, which struck down overall limits on contributions by individuals to candidates and parties, was the latest in a series of campaign finance decisions from the court led by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. that took an expansive view of First Amendment rights and a narrow one of political corruption. According to experts in election law, there is no reason to think that the march toward deregulating election spending will stop with the ruling in McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission (http://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/13pdf/12-536_e1pf.pdf).

“Those who support limits see the court right now as the T. rex from ‘Jurassic Park,’ ” said Justin Levitt, a law professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles. “What’s next? ‘Just don’t move. He can’t see us if we don’t move.’ ”

For now, federal law bars corporations from making contributions to candidates, though they can spend what they like independently to support or oppose candidates.

Contributions from individuals to candidates are capped at $2,600 per election. Individual contributions to political parties are capped, too. Public financing of elections is allowed.
All of those limits may be vulnerable under the reasoning of the McCutcheon and Citizens United decisions, as well as the “soft money” ban, which limits individual contributions to political parties even if the money is to be spent on activities unrelated to federal elections.

The next case may arrive soon. At their private conference on Friday, the justices are scheduled to consider whether to hear Iowa Right to Life Committee v. Tooker (http://www.jamesmadisoncenter.org/cases/files/irtl-tooker/cert-petition.pdf), No. 13-407, a petition from James Bopp Jr., one of the lawyers on the winning side in the McCutcheon case. It challenges an Iowa law that bans contributions from corporations but allows them from unions.

Mr. Bopp said he had scoured Chief Justice Roberts’s controlling opinion in the McCutcheon case for hints and clues. “I didn’t see any real blatant signals about what they would entertain in the future,” he said. “On the other side, this is the latest in a series of cases from a five-member majority that is very friendly to the First Amendment.” :lol

( friendly? :lol the right-wing Repug JINO politicians PERVERT the 1st to the the VRWC advantage. money is speech is bullshit)

Mr. Bopp made both narrow and broad arguments in the Iowa case. The distinction the law makes between corporations and unions violates equal protection principles, he told the justices. In any event, he added, “banning corporate political contributions violates the First Amendment.”

The Supreme Court may announce on Monday whether it will hear the case.

“The real question after McCutcheon,” said Nathaniel Persily, a law professor at Stanford, “is whether the ban on corporation and union contributions or the limits on individual contributions are vulnerable.”

“I think that a majority on the court would like to strike both down, but that the backlash from Citizens United may prevent Roberts from moving too quickly on this,” he said. “The corporate ban is more likely to fall sooner, in part because it is hard to justify a complete ban, rather than limits, following Citizens United.”

In his dissent in the McCutcheon case, Justice Stephen G. Breyer said the majority had left the campaign finance system in tatters.

“Taken together with Citizens United (http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/08-205.ZS.html),” he wrote, “today’s decision eviscerates our nation’s campaign finance laws, leaving a remnant incapable of dealing with the grave problems of democratic legitimacy that those laws were intended to resolve.”

On the issue of soft money, the Supreme Court upheld the ban in 2003, in McConnell v. F.E.C. (http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/02-1674.ZS.html), reasoning that

large contributions to parties

“are likely to create actual or apparent indebtedness on the part of federal officeholders” and

“are likely to buy donors preferential access to federal officeholders.” :lol

:lol no shit! blind squirrels :lol

On Wednesday, Chief Justice Roberts seemed to reject that thinking. “Government regulation,” he wrote, “may not target the general gratitude :lol a candidate may feel toward those who support him or his allies, or the political access such support may afford.” :lol :lol

In 2010, the Supreme Court affirmed without comment (http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/06/29/supreme-court-affirms-ruling-on-soft-money-ban/) a ruling upholding the soft money ban, which was challenged by the Republican National Committee. Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony M. Kennedy and Clarence Thomas voted to hear the case.

The lower court had seemed to issue its ruling (http://www.fec.gov/law/litigation/rnc_opinion_3judge.pdf) reluctantly. The argument in favor of allowing soft money contributions “carries considerable logic and force,” Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh wrote for a three-judge panel of the Federal District Court for the District of Columbia.

“Under current law, outside groups — unlike candidates and political parties — may receive unlimited donations both to advocate in favor of federal candidates and to sponsor issue ads,” Judge Kavanaugh wrote. But he added that the arguments about a disparity that “discriminates against the national political parties in political and legislative debates” should be directed to the Supreme Court.

Richard H. Pildes, a law professor at New York University, said the logic of the McCutcheon decision may cause the court to return to the question, adding that a larger role for political parties would be a welcome development.

“Particularly with the court’s greater recognition, expressed in the McCutcheon oral arguments, that its own law has weakened the parties and encouraged the rise of outside groups,” he said, “McCutcheon could pave the path for the fourth vote needed for the court to reconsider this issue.”

Heather Gerken, a law professor at Yale, said she feared that the court would build on its 2011 decision in Arizona Free Enterprise Club v. Bennett (http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/10-238.ZS.html), which struck down an Arizona law that provided escalating matching funds to candidates who accepted public financing. But it left more straightforward systems intact.

“My fear is that the court’s next target is the most revered pillar of campaign finance: public financing,” Professor Gerken said. “The lines are in the water, and we’ll see if the Roberts court bites.”

She added that the court sometimes seemed blind to the real-world consequences of its rulings. :lol (not blind at all, the JINO whores see EXACTLY what they are doing)

“We want judges to be shielded from politics,” she said, “but we don’t want them to be naďve about politics.”

http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/04/04/us/politics/ruling-hints-more-campaign-finance-dominoes-may-fall.html?from=homepage (http://mobile.nytimes.com/2014/04/04/us/politics/ruling-hints-more-campaign-finance-dominoes-may-fall.html?from=homepage)

Winehole23
04-04-2014, 02:36 PM
US currency finally achieves universal suffrage

http://www.theonion.com/video/landmark-supreme-court-decision-lets-americans-cra,35707/

Winehole23
04-04-2014, 03:05 PM
lagniappe: http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Pommer%27s_Law#Pommer.27s_Law

Nbadan
04-04-2014, 09:12 PM
Unintended consequences...

Mega-Donors Are Now More Important Than Most Politicians
by Peter Beinart at the Atlantic


"SNIP.....................

It’s time the press starts behaving accordingly. The media, for the most part, still treats elected officials as the key players in our political process. They get most of the scrutiny. Mega-donors, by contrast, are permitted a substantial degree of anonymity. Now that must change. If Adelson or the Koch brothers or their liberal equivalents can single-handedly shape presidential campaigns and congressional majorities, their pet concerns and ideological quirks deserve more journalistic attention than do those of most members of congress. It’s no longer enough to have one reporter covering the “money and politics” beat. Special correspondents should be assigned to cover key mega-donors, and should work doggedly to make their private influence public.

What Mother Jones proved by exposing Mitt Romney’s now-infamous 47 percent comment in 2012, and Huffington Post proved by revealing Barack Obama’s “cling to guns or religion” line in 2008, is that politicians offer their benefactors a candor they would never offer the public at large. This gap between the private and public campaigns must be closed. Every time a mega-donor hosts a fundraiser for a politician, journalists should do everything they legally and ethically can to find out what transpired. When television stations and op-ed pages give Beltway pseudo-scholars a platform, they should identify the mega-donors who pay their salaries. It’s relevant that Adelson, who helps fund the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies—a hawkish think tank whose scholars say new sanctions will help avert war with Iran—has called for nuking that country. It’s relevant that the Koch brothers fund some of the country’s fiercest climate-change deniers while Koch Industries ranks among the nation’s top air polluters.

Big donors will likely fund all this publicity unpleasant. Most would rather shape public policy in private. But the press has an obligation to follow power, to explain how our political system actually works, not to hew to a civics-class fantasy that less and less resembles reality. Since the Roberts Court is dismantling the legal obstacles that prevent America’s 0.1 percent from purchasing politicians, the press should erect cultural obstacles in their place. Our best hope now is massive scrutiny, and, hopefully, some measure of shame.

http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/04/mega-donors-are-now-more-important-than-most-politicians/360192/?google_editors_picks=true

TSA
04-04-2014, 09:41 PM
It’s time the press starts behaving accordingly. The media, for the most part, still treats elected officials as the key players in our political process. They get most of the scrutiny. Mega-donors, by contrast, are permitted a substantial degree of anonymity. Now that must change. If Adelson or the Koch brothers or their liberal equivalents can single-handedly shape presidential campaigns and congressional majorities, their pet concerns and ideological quirks deserve more journalistic attention than do those of most members of congress. It’s no longer enough to have one reporter covering the “money and politics” beat. Special correspondents should be assigned to cover key mega-donors, and should work doggedly to make their private influence public.



:tu

boutons_deux
04-07-2014, 04:56 PM
http://www.alternet.org/files/styles/large/public/jen_sorensen.png

Nbadan
04-08-2014, 01:33 AM
http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e325/pjd777/johnroberts_zpsb5cd4fa6.jpg

boutons_deux
04-08-2014, 05:16 AM
Can't We Just Say the Roberts Court Is Corrupt?

The case was about what constitutes a bribe, how big that bribe has to be, and whether an electoral system can be corrupt even in the absence of a legally demonstrable cash payment to an office holder or candidate for an explicitly specified favor.

The Roberts court, or five of its nine members, adopted the misanthrope's faux-naďve pose in ruling that private money in politics, far from promoting corruption, causes democracy to thrive because, money being speech, the more speech, the freer the politics.

Anatole France mocked this kind of legal casuistry by saying "The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread."

James Fallows has reminded us that during Chief Justice John Roberts' confirmation hearing, the nominee described his own judicial approach as "Humility. Modesty. Restraint. Deference to precedent. 'We're just calling balls and strikes.' "

Fallows goes on to say that that Roberts is cynical for adopting that pose to get through the hearing. It is true that he is cynical, no doubt in the same way that prostitutes are cynical women, but I don't think that term quite captures the key quality that makes Roberts decide legal cases the way he does. Nor does his cynicism differentiate him from his jurisprudential clones named Thomas, Scalia, Alito and Kennedy.

Roberts knows he was appointed to be a Supreme Court justice for one reason: to decide relevant cases on behalf of corporate interests.

Roberts perceived the deeper dynamic beneath the ideological posturing over ACA, and that is why he had to be the deciding vote of a divided court to save the act.

Roberts threw a valuable bone to the Republicans by vitiating the Medicaid mandate to the states. This made it harder to implement the law and permitted Republican governors and legislatures to work all manner of mischief.

We now have an algorithm to crack the Enigma Code of the Supreme Court.

Once there are five members of the court who accept as self-evidently valid the 19th century concept of "freedom of contract," other issues become subsidiary.

This framework explains hundreds of cases before the court and clarifies the seeming anomalies like ACA. It explains the court's position in Vance v. Ball State, which made it more difficult to sue employers for harassment, and Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., which barred remedy for pay discrimination (even Congress subsequently saw fit to redress the bias of the court’s decision).

In Wal-Mart v. Dukes, the court rejected a class-action suit of women denied raises and promotions. The Roberts court also took the side of corporations against consumers in Mutual Pharmaceutical Company v. Bartlett and AT&T Mobility v. Concepcion. The Roberts Court declared unconstitutional a 1988 law that subjected corporate officers to fraud charges if they could be shown to have deprived clients of honest services.


As Oliver Wendell Holmes stated in his dissenting opinion on the 1902 Lochner case, which established as virtual court theology the freedom of contract notion (without government restrictions), from which many subsequent pro-corporation decisions have flowed, the court's majority was basing its decision on economic ideology rather than constitutional interpretation.

Roberts is wise enough to know that and is wise enough to conceal his hand with occasional strategic references to the free speech or free exercise clauses in the first amendment.

http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/22942-cant-we-just-say-the-roberts-court-is-corrupt

boutons_deux
04-10-2014, 10:59 AM
As if the Repug JINOs didn't already know why the Repugs put them in SCOTUS, Preibus makes it clear:

RNC Chair Complains That The Supreme Court Hasn’t Done Enough To Let Rich Donors Give The GOP Money (http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2014/04/09/3424735/rnc-chair-complains-that-the-supreme-court-hasnt-done-enough-to-help-rich-donors-give-the-gop-money/)

according to Priebus, is a problem. During his interview with Hewitt, the RNC chair claimed that we should not “have caps at all” — so if Adelson wants to write a single $100 million check to the RNC he should have the right to do so. And then Adelson went after one of the few remaining categories of campaign finance laws that were explicitly endorsed byCitizens United and McCutcheon — disclosure laws. According to Priebus,


You’ve got now groups that are targeting people viciously, both businesses and individuals, because their names are disclosed. I mean, you want to be for disclosure. But when you start to see some of the cases out there where people are targeted, and businesses are targeted and picketed and threatened for political contributions, then now you’re suppressing free speech through disclosure.


Priebus’s decision to tell tales of donors being harassed for their political donations is not exactly surprising. The Citizens United opinion held that a campaign finance disclosure law “would be unconstitutional as applied to an organization if there were a reasonable probability that the group’s members would face threats, harassment, or reprisals if their names were disclosed.” So Priebus is prying on a crack that the justices already created for him.

In the world Priebus seems to be advocating for, however, Adelson could not just write a $100 million check to the RNC, he could do so anonymously.

http://thinkprogress.org/justice/2014/04/09/3424735/rnc-chair-complains-that-the-supreme-court-hasnt-done-enough-to-help-rich-donors-give-the-gop-money/