LEGAL
Supreme Court seems poised to reject robust
reading of ‘independent state legislature’ theory
John Roberts, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett
are the key justices to watch in a case that could allow state legislatures to
bypass courts on election rules.
Republican North Carolina legislators led by House
Speaker Tim Moore have asked the high court to toss out court-drawn maps,
advancing a once-fringe legal idea called the “independent state legislature”
theory.
By ZACH
MONTELLARO
12/07/2022
10:02 AM EST
Updated: 12/07/2022
01:41 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/12/07/supreme-court-independent-state-legislature-theory-00072713
The Supreme
Court struggled to find consensus Wednesday with a legal theory that could
strip state courts’ ability to review election laws passed by legislatures,
with a critical bloc of justices seemed likely to reject the most robust
version of that theory that could mark a dramatic change in how states oversee
elections.
The case —
Moore v. Harper — surrounds North Carolina’s congressional map. There, the
state Supreme Court tossed the maps drawn by the GOP-controlled Legislature as
an illegal partisan gerrymander, with court-drawn maps ultimately being used
for the 2022 election.
Republican
legislators asked the U.S. Supreme Court to toss out those court-drawn maps,
advancing a once-fringe legal idea called the “independent state legislature”
theory, which argues that an interpretation of a clause in the U.S.
Constitution leaves little — or no — room for state court review of election
laws.
The
spotlight for Wednesday’s oral arguments was focused on three of the high
court’s six conservative justices: Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate
Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh.
Those three
justices will likely serve as the deciding factor in any decision. The court’s
three liberals are were extremely hostile to the theory during oral arguments,
while the three other conservative jurists have signaled sympathy for a muscular
version of the theory, both in previous writings and during arguments in front
of the court on Wednesday.
That left
Roberts, Barrett and Kavanaugh as the justices who would likely be the backbone
of any controlling opinion out of the court.
Questioning
from Roberts to David Thompson, who was representing the Republican
legislators, showed hostility to the theory.
“Vesting
the power to veto the actions of the legislature significantly undermines the
argument that it can do whatever it wants,” Roberts said, citing a 1930s
Supreme Court case that found that the U.S. Constitution didn’t prohibit
governors from vetoing a congressional map passed by legislatures.
Kavanaugh
and Barrett’s questioning to Thompson was less revealing than Roberts. But
Kavanaugh seemingly suggested that the version of the independent state
legislature theory advanced by the North Carolina lawmakers was going too far.
He noted that North Carolina is trying to go farther than a then-Chief Justice
William Rehnquist’s concurrence in the 2000 case Bush v. Gore, which is the
origin of the theory that state courts have overstepped their role and that
they could be hemmed in in some way.
Kavanaugh
also raised a brief from the Conference of Chief Justices, a collection of
chief jurists from the states, asking how to square their writing about the
history of state courts applying state constitutions to federal elections, with
the independent state legislature theory. Barrett, meanwhile, also seemed
skeptical at times of the argument that Thompson was advancing, noting that
state constitutions could be amended.
But later,
Roberts’ questioning to Neal Katyal, who represented the groups that challenged
the initial legislatively drawn maps, showed how some of the court’s swing
conservative justices could still potentially rule in favor of the GOP
lawmakers without embracing a robust interpretation of the independent state
legislature theory. Roberts seemed to be potentially probing for a way to
constrain state courts in some way, particularly on what could be decisions
based off broad constitutional provisions.
“Do you
think the phrase fair and free elections is providing standards and
guidelines?” he asked Katyal, who responded affirmatively. And both Kavanaugh
and Barrett questioned Katyal on the Rehnquist concurrence — with Katyal
arguing that the federal judiciary should only intervene to second-guess a
state court ruling on its own constitution at a “sky-high” standard.
The court’s
liberal justices raked Thompson over the coals. At one point, Justice Sonia
Sotomayor accused the GOP legislators of trying to “rewrite history” of early
state constitutions in an effort to support their point.
And Justice
Elena Kagan, saying she wanted to “step back a bit and think about
consequences,” said this theory would get “rid of the normal checks and
balances on the way big governmental decisions are made in this country.”
Meanwhile,
the court’s more conservative triumvirate — Justices Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch
and Clarence Thomas — all broadly seemed more likely to endorse a more robust
reading of the independent state legislature doctrine. But even among those
conseratives there was some ambivalence to the arguments put forward by the
Republican legislators, who advocated for a reading of the theory that would
remove nearly all of state courts’ jurisdiction. Beyond that, there is the
broader challenge of winning over two of the three other conservatives, who did
not seem to accept the broader interpretation.
“There’s
been a lot of talk about the impact of this decision on democracy. Do you think
it furthers democracy to transfer the political controversy about districting
from the legislature to elected supreme courts where the candidates are
permitted by state law to campaign?” Alito asked at one point.
Wednesday’s
oral arguments will have ramifications far beyond just North Carolina’s
congressional lines, which have been redrawn several times over the course of
the last decade.
A robust
adoption of the independent state legislature theory by the court could grant
state legislatures significantly more power in setting the rules of the road
for elections. A particularly muscular version of the theory would prevent
state courts from weighing in on disputes over everything from voter ID to last
minute polling place adjustments, and could even imperil voter-passed
referendums on things like independent redistricting commissions.
There are
also significant questions on how, if at all, Wednesday’s case could affect the
rules surrounding the selection of presidential electors. Some of the most
strident proponents of the theory have raised connections to presidential elections
in briefs, but many legal experts — including those who oppose the independent
state legislature theory — do not believe this case will have much
ramifications on presidential elections.
Presidential
electors were not raised during oral arguments on Wednesday.
The Moore
case is the second significant election law case that the Supreme Court heard
this term. In early October, the Supreme Court heard arguments in another
redistricting case, where Alabama argued for a “race neutral” reading of the
federal Voting Rights Act, the landmark civil rights law that has led to more
minority representation in politics. The court seemed unlikely to adopt that
interpretation, but seemed likely to rework the legal test used to determine if
minority communities’ voting power is being diluted, likely making it harder to
bring challenges.
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