OPINION
THE
EDITORIAL BOARD
This Case Should Never Have Made It to the
Supreme Court
Dec. 9,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/09/opinion/supreme-court-moore-v-harper.html
By The
Editorial Board
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
“The most
important case for American democracy” in the nation’s history — that’s how the
former appeals court judge J. Michael Luttig described Moore v. Harper, an extraordinary
lawsuit that the Supreme Court considered in oral arguments Wednesday morning.
Judge Luttig, a conservative and a widely respected legal thinker, is not one
for overstatement. Yet most Americans aren’t paying attention to the case
because it involves some confusing terminology and an arcane legal theory. It
is essential that people understand just how dangerous this case is to the
fundamental structure of American government, and that enough justices see the
legal fallacies and protect our democracy.
First, the
back story on the case: In 2021, North Carolina lawmakers redrew their
congressional maps. The state had 13 districts at the time, and its voters were
more or less evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans. But the
Republicans who are in control of North Carolina’s legislature didn’t want fair
maps; they wanted power. In one of the most egregious gerrymanders in the
nation, they drew 10 seats intended to favor themselves.
The North
Carolina courts were not amused. A panel of three trial judges found that the
2021 maps were “intentionally and carefully designed to maximize Republican
advantage” — so much so that Republicans could win legislative majorities even
when Democrats won more votes statewide. The State Supreme Court struck down
the maps, finding they violated the North Carolina Constitution’s guarantees of
free elections, free speech, free assembly and equal protection.
That should
have been the end of it: A state court applying the state Constitution to
strike down a state law. But North Carolina’s Republican lawmakers appealed,
arguing that the U.S. Constitution does not give state courts authority to rule
on their congressional maps — even though the legislature had passed a law
authorizing the courts to review redistricting plans like these. Instead, the
lawmakers are relying on an untested theory that asserts that state
legislatures enjoy nearly unlimited power to set and change rules for federal
elections.
In 2000 the
chief justice at the time, William H. Rehnquist, proposed the idea in his
concurring opinion on Bush v. Gore, and the independent state legislature
theory has been floating around the fringes of right-wing legal circles ever
since.
To be clear,
this is a political power grab in the guise of a legal theory. Republicans are
trying to see if they can turn state legislatures — 30 of which are controlled
by Republicans — into omnipotent, unaccountable election bosses with the help
of the conservative supermajority on the Supreme Court. The theory has no basis
in law, history or precedent. The idea that state lawmakers exist free of any
constraints imposed by their constitution and state courts makes a mockery of
the separation of powers, which is foundational to the American system of
government. By the North Carolina lawmakers’ logic, they possess infinite power
to gerrymander districts and otherwise control federal elections. It is a
Constitution-free zone where no one else in the state — not the governor, not
the courts, not the voters through ballot initiatives — has any say.
On
Wednesday morning, Justice Elena Kagan rejected the theory out of hand, saying
it “gets rid of the normal checks and balances on the way big governmental
decisions are made in this country. And you might think that it gets rid of all
those checks and balances at exactly the time when they are needed most.”
In
practice, the theory that the petitioners in the case are seeking to use would
turn hundreds of state constitutional provisions into dead letters in federal
elections. For instance, 48 states affirmatively guarantee a right to vote in
their constitutions. (The federal Constitution still does not.) Most state
constitutions guarantee free, fair, equal or open elections. Even the secret
ballot — so fundamental to American democracy — is a creature of state
constitutions. If the justices accept the most aggressive version of the
independent state legislature theory that the petitioners want them to and even
if they accept a weaker version, provisions like these could become invalid
overnight, because the theory holds that state constitutions have no authority
to impose any regulations on federal elections. (The Constitution and federal
law remain supreme, so challenges to state legislative actions could still be
brought in federal courts.)
Some of the
justices insist that they don’t — they can’t — pay attention to the real-world
outcomes of their rulings. They’re just interpreting law. By that logic, this
case should be rejected on its merits.
First, the
theory is based on bad legal interpretation. The Constitution uses the word
“legislature” in describing who has the power to regulate federal elections.
Because of this word, the theory’s supporters claim, state legislatures have
nearly unlimited power in that realm. But as Judge Luttig has noted, the theory
has “literally no support” in the Constitution. To the contrary, the framers
who wrote the Constitution were concerned that state legislatures had too much
power, not too little. The text they wrote makes many references to the powers
of those legislatures and of Congress, but it never says or implies that they
are immune to review by the judicial branch.
Second, the
theory is based on bad history. The best evidence its supporters offer is a
two-century-old document that has long been known to be fraudulent. Written in
1818 by Charles Pinckney of South Carolina, a founding father, it is purported
to be a replica of the plan for government that he introduced three decades
earlier at the Constitutional Convention. But what he submitted in 1818 was not
the real deal. James Madison suspected this immediately, as have virtually all
historians to examine it in the years since.
When the
theory’s supporters sought to claim that the practices of early state
legislatures proved that their side should win, Justice Sonia Sotomayor
responded, “Yes. If you rewrite history, it’s very easy to do.”
Third, if
the Supreme Court accepts this theory, it will create a logistical nightmare in
states across the country. That’s because the theory applies only to federal
elections, not state elections, in which state courts unquestionably have a
role to play. As a result, there would be two sets of rules operating at the
same time, one for federal elections and one for state elections. Chaos and
confusion would reign.
Most
important, the Supreme Court has already implicitly rejected the theory many
times over. In precedents stretching back decades, the court has made clear
that state courts have the power to set limits on what lawmakers can do when it
comes to federal elections. As recently as 2019, the court rejected a plea for
it to stop the extreme partisan gerrymandering in North Carolina and other
states. In doing so, Chief Justice John Roberts explained that this is exactly
the role that state courts should play. “Provisions in state statutes and state
constitutions can provide standards and guidance for state courts to apply,” he
wrote.
At
Wednesday’s argument, Justice Samuel Alito appeared to reject that premise. He
accused elected state court judges, like those in North Carolina, of being
political actors themselves. “There’s been a lot of talk about the impact of
this decision on democracy,” said Justice Alito, who has given openly partisan
speeches to outside groups and voted consistently in alignment with Republican
policy priorities. “Do you think that 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 on the issue
of districting?”
Another way
to appreciate the absurdity of the theory is to consider who has come out for
and against it. On one side, a large and bipartisan group of judges, government
officials, former lawmakers, leading historians and constitutional scholars
from across the political spectrum have rejected it. These include a co-founder
of the right-wing legal group the Federalist Society, the chief justices of all
50 states, multiple Republican former governors and secretaries of state and
civil rights organizations.
On the
other side, you will find a far smaller and less bipartisan cast of characters
— among them, the Republican National Committee, a group of Republican state
attorneys general and John Eastman, a former law professor last seen helping
Donald Trump plan an illegal and unconstitutional coup to stay in office (an
act that has exposed Mr. Eastman to a real risk of criminal prosecution).
That so
many justices would take the theory seriously is bad enough. Three of them —
Justices Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas — appear to favor the
independent state legislature theory, as they suggested in an opinion in an
earlier stage of the case. Justice Brett Kavanaugh has also indicated his
openness to it. It’s worse when the public trust in and approval of the court
have fallen to historic lows, thanks largely to aggressively partisan recent
opinions, as this board has argued.
There’s an
old saying that only close cases make it to the Supreme Court. If they weren’t
close, they would have been resolved in the lower courts. But Moore v. Harper
isn’t a remotely close case. A ruling for the North Carolina lawmakers would
flood the federal courts with election litigation that normally plays out in
the states, upending the balance of federalism that defines American
government. That’s not a conservative result; it’s a dangerously radical one.



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