The case heard by the Supreme Court Wednesday could upend electoral politics.
The case heard by the Supreme Court Wednesday could upend electoral
politics.
The Supreme Court is taking on the future of federal elections Wednesday, discussing a case that could upend electoral politics and encourage state legislatures to act without judicial oversight.
Supporters of the former president, Donald Trump used versions of the so-called independent state. Legislative doctrine during the effort to overturn the 2020 election. Now, North Carolina Republican lawmakers are asking the justices to adopt the long-dormant law. Theory in a fight over redistricting maps, saying it allows state legislatures to draw districts. To set rules in federal elections without any constraints by state courts or Other state authorities.
During
their attempts to rig the 2020 election, supporters of former president Donald
Trump relied on variations of the so-called independent state legislative
concept. In a dispute over redistricting maps, North Carolina Republican
lawmakers are urging the justices to accept the long-dormant legal theory,
arguing that it gives state legislatures the authority to set regulations for
federal elections without being constrained by state courts or other state
authorities.
Voting rights groups say the lawmakers’ position would lead
to state legislatures having absolute authority without judicial oversight,
thus choosing their desired election winners. They fear that if the court
adopts the theory, it would abolish necessary checks and balances, upend
states’ time-tested election systems, spawn litigation and require states to
conduct separate state and federal elections.
The dispute comes amid the recent explosion of litigation
surrounding voting rules. It also comes amid a renewed effort by Trump to
allege massive fraud at the polling place – a baseless claim rejected by
Democrats and Republicans alike.
As recently as last week, Trump called for the “termination
of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution”
in a social media post.
As things stand, Republicans currently control the majority
of state legislatures and have seen multiple proposed congressional legislative
maps struck down by state courts.
“There’s a lot that could be implicated in this decision if
the court were to say basically that the legislature of a state has free,
unchecked rein to decide federal elections,” said Abha Khanna, a lawyer for
Democratic voters in the case. “That would be a fundamental shift in how we
have always done business.” She stressed that it could impact not just claims
of partisan gerrymandering but other rules on issues such as voter ID and
absentee voting regulations.
Four conservative justices are interested in
the issue
On the surface, the case before the justices revolves
around a redistricting dispute out of North Carolina involving a lower court
decision that invalidated the state’s congressional map. The state Supreme
Court struck the map as an illegal partisan gerrymander and replaced it with a
temporary court-drawn map more favourable to Democrats.
Republican legislators raced to the US Supreme Court in
March 2022, asking the justices to freeze the decision by the state Supreme
Court.
They relied upon the Elections Clause of
the Constitution that provides that rules governing the “manner of
holding elections for Senators and Representatives” must be prescribed in “each
state by the legislature thereof.”
Under the independent state legislature theory, lawmakers
argue that state legislatures should be able to set rules without interference from
the state courts.
A 5-4 US Supreme Court declined to block the court-ordered
map on an emergency basis.
Justice Samuel Alito, writing for Justices Clarence Thomas
and Neil Gorsuch, said that he thought the lawmakers in the case would
ultimately prevail.
“If the language of the Elections Clause is taken
seriously, there must be some limit on the authority of state courts to
countermand actions taken by state legislatures when they are prescribing rules
for the conduct of federal elections,” he wrote.
Critically, Justice Brett Kavanaugh agreed with Alito that
the underlying Elections Clause questions were critical.
“The issue is almost certain to keep arising until this
Court definitively resolves it,” Kavanaugh wrote. Yet he ultimately voted
against the lawmakers, cautioning that it was too close to the impending
midterms to change the map.
All eyes will be on Justice Amy Coney Barrett during
arguments. She has not previously opined on the issue and did not join Alito’s
dissent back in March. While it only takes four justices to agree to hear a
case, five votes are necessary to decide it.
Inside the case
On Wednesday, the justices will review the opinion of the
North Carolina Supreme Court that ruled against the lawmakers, saying that
legislators do not have “unlimited power” to draw electoral maps.
The state court acknowledged that redistricting is
primarily delegated to the legislature but said it must be performed in
conformity with the state constitution. The court said the maps violated North
Carolina’s free elections, equal process, free speech and free assembly
clauses.
Traditionally, legislatures have set ground rules for
conducting an election but have not acted alone or with the final word.
Processes put in place have been subject to intervention from election
administrators and state courts.
But the strictest reading of the independent state
legislature theory says that state courts must stay out completely regarding
federal elections.
The Republican lawmakers argued in court papers that the
“text of the Constitution directly answers the question presented in this
case.” The Elections Clause provides “unambiguous language” concerning the
manner of federal elections and clarifies that the legislatures will draw the
rules.
“The North Carolina Supreme Court decreed that the 2022
election and all upcoming congressional elections in North Carolina were not to
be held in the ‘manner’ prescribed by the legislature,” David H. Thompson
argued on behalf of the lawmakers.
He argued that the lower court did not point to a specific
state constitutional provision when it struck down the congressional map but
instead seized on “vague and abstract state constitutional language.”
“The Constitution’s drafting history confirms that the
allocation of authority to regulate elections specifically to each State’s
legislature was a deliberate choice,” Thompson said.
John Eastman, the lawyer who served as a key architect of
the push to overturn election results for Trump, has filed a sweeping amicus
brief in favour of the lawmakers. Lawyers for the Republican National Committee
scaled back some of Eastman’s arguments, but they, too, want the justices to
adopt a version of the theory.
Democratic lawmakers generally oppose the
lawsuit.
Two former solicitors general of Democratic administrations
will argue in favour of voting rights groups and the state supporting the state
Supreme Court ruling. The current solicitor general of the Biden
administration, Elizabeth Prelogar, supports them.
Don Verrilli, who served as solicitor general during the
Obama administration, argued on behalf of the state in court papers. He pointed
out that in North Carolina, the General Assembly passed a law authorizing
judicial review of congressional redistricting to ensure that it complies with
state constitutional requirements.
He told the court they could resolve the case on that
factor alone, never wading into the independent state legislative doctrine.
“It is inconceivable that the founding generation would
have understood the Elections Clause to forbid state legislatures from
authorizing state courts to enforce the state constitution and remedy proven
violations,” Verrilli argued.
He urged the court not to entertain the independent state
legislature doctrine, warning it could create serious election administration
problems, upend time-tested systems, spawn protected litigation and possibly
require states to conduct separate state and federal elections.
Neal Katyal, who served as acting solicitor general for the
Obama administration, will argue on behalf of voting rights groups and
individual Democratic voters. Notably, J. Michael Luttig, a conservative legal
luminary who played a critical role in the run-up to the January 6th, 2021, US
Capitol attack advising then-Vice President Mike Pence’s legal team, is serving
as Katyal’s co-counsel.
“The independent state legislature doctrine was the
centrepiece of Trump’s effort to overturn the 2020 election,” Luttig said
in an interview with CNN. “I have believed since January 6th that I had a
responsibility to the country to explain why I rejected the theory in advising
the vice president,” he said.
In order to appeal to the more conservative judges,
Prelogar critiques the theory by drawing on the historical tradition.
“More than two centuries of practice confirm that state
legislatures are subject to state constitutional constraints” when they
exercise their authority under the Constitution, she told the justices in court
papers.
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