So, what do I make of the recent spate of Supreme Court decisions? A mixed bag, some not so bad, some truly alarming, some important and some unimportant. I generally share the view that they decided against Trump on small things and for him on the things that matter. But let's dive in.
Watson v. Republican National Committee.
This decision upheld a statute (in Mississippi) that allowed mail-in ballots that arrive up to five days after the election to be counted so long as they are postmarked by election day. Our side is celebrating this as a big victory. I honestly don't think it is all that important. Nice to have, sure, but not all that essential. Many states require mail-in ballots to be postmarked by election day, and their elections seem to work well enough. Allowing late-mailed ballots to be counted is a major factor in California's delays in counting votes. Yes, I know Republicans' claims of fraud are in bad faith, and that if California counted its votes faster, they would just find some other excuse. But the long delays in knowing election outcomes in California really is a problem. If I could trade this decision going Trump's way for some other decision going against him, I would gladly do it.*
The Supreme Court declined to hear Trump's appeal of the civil verdict against Trump accusing him of rape. On the one hand, this seems like a small matter. On the other hand, the Supreme Court has already given Republican Presidents and all-out license to crime. I suppose we should be glad it has at least declined to immunize them from civil liability, at least for actions before they were elected. Let's be grateful for small favors.
The Supreme Court stayed the removal of Lisa Cook from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve. It did not permanently bar her removal, merely kept her in office pending determination. It held that (1) the government had not shown it was substantially likely to prevail on the merits; (2) the requirement that removal must be "for cause" does not mean that "for cause" is within the President's absolute and unreviewable discretion; (3) they declined to define "for cause" except to say that the national bank must be shielded from political influence; (4) staying removal pending determination of whether sufficient cause exists is necessary to shield the Fed from political influence; (5) some sort of (ill-defined) notice and opportunity is required to determine whether "cause" for removal exists; (6) the Constitution allows members of the national bank to be so shielded. They then kicked the case back to lower courts to determine whether removal was "for cause."
Look, if you want to be cynical -- and I do -- Supreme Court expansions of Presidential power should be read under two considerations (1) would they entrust this power to a Democratic President, and (2) would they entrust this power to the President if they believed no Democrat would ever hold the office again. If the answer is yes to both, the Supreme Court is holding open the possibility that a Democrat might be President again some day. If the answer is yes to one and to two, it means they are confident that Trump has rigged the system to lock in permanent power for Republicans and you should be alarmed. Something similar applies to restrictions on Presidential power. In this case, power to shape monetary policy looks like something the Supreme Court wants to deny to any President of either party. If the elective government can control monetary policy, the result is always the same. They will avoid difficult fiscal decisions by using monetary policy to finance expenditures -- in simply English, they will finance operations by printing money, with resulting inflation. The temptation applies even to Republicans who say they want massive cuts in spending but never seem to follow through.**
Upheld the rule that all persons born in the US are citizens, even if their parents are temporarily or unlawfully present, with the exception of children of foreign diplomats or other people present as agents of a foreign government. Chief Justice Roberts defended this position by saying it is a longstanding rule of common law. (Conservative jurists traditionally see common law as something sacred an inviolable, though apparently they make an exception in this case). This ruling merely upholds a longstanding rule that has been around longer than anyone alive today, but man, oh man, oh man, oh man, right wingers are freaking out about this one. They appear to be taking the defeat on ballot counting in reasonably good grace, but their freakout over upholding a longstanding rule on birthright citizenship is a wonder to behold! I can only assume it is an attempt to intimidate. It also makes clear just how much bigotry underpins much of Trump's following.
This one has not attracted all that much attention. It has been mentioned as attention as the others, although it has occasionally been mentioned as a victory for privacy advocates. But actually, thinking it over, it may be the thin end of a very large wedge. The amount of data tech companies can sweep in on basically anyone, any time, is by itself alarming. But at least tech companies don't have the power to arrest you and engage in the other types of coercion available to the state. We need rules constraining government's use of all that data out there, and we need it in a hurry. The first step in that direction was apparently the case of Carpenter v. US, holding that tracking cell phone location is a search requiring a warrant. Chatrie expanded that rule to so-called "geofence location" -- a request for information on which cell phone were within a certain radius of a certain location within a certain timeframe. Police seeking to use this technique to solve a crime (in this case, a bank robbery) follow a three-step process. First they get a geofence warrant for anonymous information about who was in the area of the crime around the time of the crime. Next, the police seek more extensive, but still anonymous, information about a subset of the phone signals collected. Finally, they narrow the information down to a small number of suspects and ask for their personal information.
The Court held that all of this was a "search" requiring a warrant, and that the limited duration of time did not make it any less of a "search." The owner of a cell phone does not waive the right of privacy by sharing location information with a third party (the service provider). But searches are not banned by the Fourth Amendment, only "unreasonable" searches. In this case, after all, there was a clear crime, and a warrant. The Supreme Court punted on that issue and sent it back to the Court of Appeals to determine what sort of warrant meets the standard of "reasonable."
But the point is, they decided that there does have the be a specific crime, a warrant, some sort of individual and particularized suspicion and not a general dragnet. Compare that to overall ICE trawling operations. Maybe, just maybe, this gives us a tool to fight back.
Next up: Decisions for Trump, also in ascending order of importance.
*There may be thin end of the wedge arguments here, that the Supreme Court would use requiring ballots to arrive on election say as preliminary to a general attack on voting by mail.
**The cuts that have been made so far, though extremely damaging to specific programs do not touch the actual bulk of the budget -- Social Security, Medicare, and military spending -- and therefore do not cut spending in any meaningful way.














