SCOTUS 2018: Major Decisions and Developments of the US Supreme Court
By David Klein and Morgan Marietta
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About this ebook
Each year, the Supreme Court of the United States announces new rulings with deep consequences for our lives. This inaugural volume in Palgrave’s new SCOTUS series describes, explains, and contextualizes the landmark cases of the US Supreme Court in the term ending in 2018, covering issues such as gay rights, religious liberty, public sector unions, coerced speech, digital privacy, voting rights, and the Trump travel ban. Bringing together notable scholars of the Court in one volume, the chapters in Scotus 2018 present the details of each ruling in its specific case, its meaning for constitutional debate, and its impact on public policy or partisan politics. Finally, SCOTUS 2018 offers a big-picture look at Justice Neil Gorsuch’s first full term in office, the legal and political legacy of former Justice Anthony Kennedy, and the controversial nomination and confirmation of Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
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SCOTUS 2018 - David Klein
© The Author(s) 2019
David Klein and Morgan Marietta (eds.)SCOTUS 2018https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-11255-4_1
1. Introduction: The 2017–2018 Term at the Supreme Court
Morgan Marietta¹
(1)
Department of Political Science, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell, MA, USA
Morgan Marietta
The Court addressed an array of contentious constitutional questions, including gay rights versus religious liberty, public sector unions and coerced speech , digital privacy , voting rights , and, of course, the Trump travel ban. Some rulings focused on constitutional principles—their existence and application—while others focused on social facts , or the prevailing circumstances the Court must recognize in order to apply constitutional principles, especially when those facts are in contention. The changes in the membership of the Court may be the most important events of this year, with the arrival of Justice Gorsuch and the departure of Justice Kennedy. The disturbing confirmation hearings of Brett Kavanaugh as Anthony Kennedy’s replacement were the final chapter of an eventful year. In the chapters that follow, noted scholars on constitutional law and American politics discuss the seven major decisions of the year, followed by three concluding discussions of Justice Gorsuch ’ future, Justice Kennedy’s legacy, and the confirmation of Justice Kavanaugh.
To summarize this year’s major rulings in the briefest way possible, they
1.
Allow for greater presidential power over U.S. borders and immigration,
2.
Provide greater protection for religious belief as a basis for denying service to LGBT citizens (though the decision is narrow, leaving the extent of those protections an open question when they conflict with the dignity of other citizens),
3.
Recognize the right of public sector employees to not pay fees to unions they do not wish to support,
4.
Protect the privacy of cell phone location data from government search without a warrant,
5.
Allow states to levy sales tax on Internet companies who do business with state residents, regardless of the geographic location of the company,
6.
Allow states to purge voter rolls of infrequent voters, and
7.
Allow state legislatures to gerrymander legislative districts in a way that creates partisan disparities, outside of the oversight of the Court.
This introduction begins to identify the constitutional concepts and controversies underlying those rulings, while the chapters to follow provide more detailed discussion and perspective.
Dignity
One of the most anticipated rulings of the year responds to competing claims of gay rights and religious liberty. When a same-sex couple in Colorado attempted to order a custom wedding cake, the baker refused on religious grounds. The Colorado Civil Rights Commission found him in violation of the state law banning discrimination in public accommodations. The political or partisan meaning of the controversy is clear: greater respect and public acceptance of LGBT citizens (which liberals and Democrats favor) or greater regard for public religiosity and the liberty of religious believers to dissent from participation in secular institutions (which conservatives and Republicans favor). But the constitutional meaning of the controversy in regard to citizen rights and government powers is more complex.
The couple asserts the right of dignity, which is both powerful and difficult to define. It is not found in the Constitution itself, but is found in influential precedents of the Court on abortion , gay rights , capital punishment, and religious liberty. As Stephen Engel of Bates College argues in the chapter on Masterpiece Cakeshop, the ruling illustrates the limits to the doctrine of dignity championed by Justice Kennedy and the growing focus of the Court on the protection of freedom of religious expression, also as a reflection of dignity as well as an explicit constitutional right.¹ In this dispute, the Justices must also deal with the distinction between claims of rights against the state and claims of rights against fellow citizens. The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment applies to government action alone; the Constitution contains no explicit guarantee that citizens must treat each other equally or without discrimination.² The state must do so, but citizens are more free, especially when a recognized liberty to religious exercise justifies their actions.³ Is dignity —rather than rights that are clear in the text of the Constitution—a strong foundation for disputed claims to constitutional protection?
Rights in Commerce
Masterpiece Cakeshop and several of the other cases this year raise another core question: do rights shift when citizens engage in commerce? When a citizen clearly holds a right that would be protected while they were in their own home or even out in the public square, does that right lessen or yield to the interests of others when that same citizen engages in commerce? In other words, do commercial relations with fellow citizens shift rights?
It is important to remember that the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which outlawed racial segregation in restaurants and hotels, was upheld under the Interstate Commerce Clause of the Constitution. Congress does not have the direct power under Article I, or even under the Equal Protection Clause , to order individual citizens to treat others equally. The Court ruled that federal regulation of race relations was allowed because segregation impeded commerce, which Congress can regulate under the Commerce Clause . While the power of Congress and of state legislatures rises when commerce occurs, this does not mean that citizens no longer hold rights when they engage in commerce or that the need for economic regulation automatically overrides the assertion of a right.
Perhaps the best way to understand the debate is to focus on the crucial distinction between government powers and individual rights. For government to act at all, it must have that power (and the Constitution explicitly assigns and limits government powers); then that action must not violate a right of citizens (and the Constitution recognizes many specific and broad rights). Sometimes, a government power is clear, as in the power of Congress to levy taxes (assigned in Article I, Section 8), while sometimes a power is uncertain, as in President Truman’s claim during the Korean War that he could nationalize the steel industry under presidential war powers as Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy (assigned in Article II, Section 2). The Court determined that executive war powers do not extend to seizing industries so far from the theater of war.⁴ Under different circumstances—like wartime, or in this case, commerce—government powers may rise. However, even if government does possess the requisite power, a citizen still may hold a right that cannot be violated. In the case of segregation, there is no citizen right to discriminate recognized by the Constitution, so any claim against government powers is weak. But what about circumstances in which a clear right of citizens does exist, yet overlaps with their engagement in commerce over which government has legitimate powers?
A famous recent example is the Hobby Lobby case (mentioned in footnote 1). The owners of the store are practicing Christians and publicly intend to run the store grounded in religious principles (including being closed on Sundays). But given that they hire employees in an open economy, are their religious rights limited by that engagement? Justice Ginsburg argued that one person’s right to free exercise must be kept in harmony with the rights of her fellow citizens.
⁵ Hence, religious rights only apply to religious organizations, but not to those that engage in the exchange of goods or services for money beyond nominal amounts.
⁶ Justice Kennedy disagreed, arguing that free exercise of religion includes the right to express those beliefs and to establish one’s religious (or nonreligious) self-definition in the political, civic, and economic life of our larger community.
⁷ In Kennedy’s view, rights are not lessened by economic connections with fellow citizens. The majority of Justices agreed with Kennedy, arguing that protecting the free-exercise rights of corporations protects the religious liberty of the humans who own and control those companies.
⁸
The profit motive and other motives can either be conjoined or the one precludes the other. Can rights be asserted only if they are the primary objective, or are rights maintained when a citizen engages in commerce? If First Amendment rights to religious liberty are left outside businesses, are free speech rights as well? What about Fourth Amendment rights against government search?
Cell phone companies can determine a phone’s location with relative accuracy over a long period of time. Can the company provide that information to law enforcement without the permission of the phone’s owner? If a citizen signed an agreement recognizing the company’s ownership of this information, does that limit a rights claim? The problem of rights in commerce is a part of the conflict in Carpenter v. U.S., this year’s cell phone case on digital privacy discussed in the next chapter.
Another case that reflects the dispute over rights in commerce is Janus, on the power of public sector unions to charge mandatory fees. Does engaging in work for the government (in the many public sector occupations in contemporary America, from actuaries to zoologists and every job description in between) mean that First Amendment rights become limited?⁹ Or do the same rights that citizens hold in other circumstances still apply when working for the state?
Coerced Speech and Reliance Interests
Public sector unions have been authorized by law in several states to compel non-members to pay union fees, a practice upheld by a long-standing precedent of the Supreme Court . In Janus v. AFSCME (a major union representing over a million state workers), employees who object to the union’s bargaining positions with the government—and especially to paying for the union’s financial support of political campaigns—claim that mandatory union payments are a violation of Free Speech . While we normally think of the First Amendment as protecting citizens from attempts by the government to silence them, it also protects citizens from attempts by the government to force them to speak against their will (or in this case to fund the speech of an organization claiming to speak for them). In Chapter 5, Brett Curry of Georgia Southern University discusses the implications of the doctrine of coerced speech .
As much as this case is about coerced speech , it is also about the standards for overturning precedent. Abood v. Detroit Board of Education has stood since 1977 as precedent for the constitutionality of mandatory service fees to unions. Justice Kagan begins the principal dissent by stating that "For over 40 years, Abood struck a stable balance between public employees’ First Amendment rights and government entities’ interests in running their workforces as they thought proper."¹⁰ In practice, the Court can overrule its own previous decisions whenever it chooses, but in principle, the rule of stare decisis , or following that which has been decided, suggests that the Court should have a clear and compelling reason for change. The precedents on overruling precedent suggest that the Court should only do so when the facts on the ground have changed, or the reasoning of the prior decision was clearly wrong, or the prior ruling has become unworkable. The Court ruled in Janus that all of these reasons apply, and hence "Abood was wrongly decided and is now overruled.¹¹ The coerced speech inherent in mandatory payments to public sector unions
violates the First Amendment and cannot continue."¹²
One of the other major factors in the debate over the power of precedent is what are called reliance interests. When the legislature, in the public sphere, and citizens, in the private realm, have acted in reliance on the previous decision,
this is an additional reason to preserve the prior rule.¹³ As Justice Ginsburg phrased it in her dissent in Hobby Lobby , Justices should be mindful of the havoc the Court’s judgment can introduce.
¹⁴ In the Janus case, thousands of union contracts and tremendous amounts of union revenue rely on the Abood precedent. Both sides agree that the loss of payments from nonmembers may cause unions to experience unpleasant transition costs in the short term, and may require unions to make adjustments in order to attract and retain members,
but they disagree on the constitutional meaning of this change in decades of labor practices.¹⁵ While Justice Kagan sees the Court’s decision to overrule Abood and uphold individual First Amendment rights as "a radically wrong understanding of how stare decisis operates,"¹⁶ the majority of Justices see free speech principles as dominant over precedent and reliance interests as holding lesser importance than constitutional violations.
Digital Privacy and the Third Party Doctrine
The Carpenter decision on digital privacy is an example of how the Constitution and the Court deal with new situations that raise unanticipated questions of rights and powers. In Chapter 2, David Klein of Eastern Michigan University discusses the questions surrounding the use of cell phone records by law enforcement to track a citizen’s location. Is the location of a cell phone something that is private and protected by the Fourth Amendment from search without a warrant, or are the electronic data that indicate a person’s location owned by the phone company? In an era when citizens routinely use digital devices of several kinds to communicate and store personal information, photos, videos, emails, and even inadvertent information like their location, what aspects of these new electronic bits of data fall under the protections of the Bill of Rights and which do