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Supreme Court is Useless - Creating mass confusion by contridictory rulings. The beginning of the end.
Supreme Court Looking Less Conservative
In blockbuster rulings on affirmative
action and gay rights and in less heralded decisions this term, a Supreme Court dominated by conservative jurists
looked less conservative than it has in years.
"On vitally important issues to social
conservatives, they suffered serious defeats this term," said Thomas Goldstein, a Washington lawyer who specializes
in the Supreme Court. "There was not a single victory to balance it out."
Serendipity plays a role in the mix of
cases the court hears in a given year, and it can be misleading to look at any one year in isolation.
Still, the 2002-2003 session will be remembered
for its exceptions to the conservative rule, lawyers and law professors said.
In the term that ended last week, the high
court bolted from a decade of rulings striking down or limiting racial formulas, and upheld the continued use of
race as a factor in university admissions.
The justices also made an about-face on
the question of whether gay men and women can be prosecuted for what they do in the privacy of their bedrooms.
That caused one of the court's core conservatives, Justice Antonin Scalia, to sputter that his colleagues had "taken
sides in the culture war."
No less a conservative stalwart than Chief
Justice William H. Rehnquist led the majority this spring in departing from the court's march to increase state
rights at the expense of federal control in a case about family leave for state workers.
The court also upheld a legal aid financing
program for the poor that political conservatives called an unconstitutional government assault on private property.
"These decisions were not as conservative
as might have been expected," said Emory University law professor Robert Schapiro. "The affirmative action
ruling is one I'll be teaching for many years to come."
The court's work left Douglas Kmiec, a
Pepperdine University constitutional law professor and former legal adviser to Republican presidents, shaking his
head.
"In affirmative action, federal-state
relations, and, after the sodomy case, basic - and I do mean very basic - principles of constitutional interpretation
have been tossed aside, not conserved."
That is not to say the court abandoned
its conservative leanings.
A string of law-and-order rulings strengthened
government powers to go after suspects and punish criminals. For example, the court upheld the nation's strictest
"three-strikes" law, ruling that a California man's 50-years-to-life sentence for stealing videotapes
was not unconstitutionally harsh.
Those tough-on-crime rulings were in keeping
with the court's rightward shift under Rehnquist's leadership, a path that has taken the court far from its progressive
stance under the Civil Rights era stewardship of Chief Justice Earl Warren.
It is a mark of the current court's fundamentally
conservative outlook that all nine justices voted to allow Michigan to cancel family visits for prisoners caught
with drugs, and that a six-member majority said Congress can require public libraries to block objectionable material
on their Internet terminals or lose federal money.
Rehnquist and fellow conservative Justices
Scalia and Clarence Thomas still held sway in a large percentage of the 73 cases decided this term. The three usually
vote together and prevail when they can attract one or both of the court's center-right justices, Reagan appointees
Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony M. Kennedy.
It was O'Connor who joined more liberal
justices to preserve affirmative action. That vote was 5-4. It was Kennedy who provided the crucial vote in the
sodomy case.
In that case, the court set out a constitutionally
protected right to adults' private sexual conduct. The government has no business peeping in bedroom windows, the
court said in a ruling written by Kennedy.
O'Connor also voted to strike down a Texas
sodomy ban, making the overall ruling 6-3, but she would not go nearly as far as Kennedy and her more liberal colleagues.
Religious broadcaster Pat Robertson was
among many conservatives who condemned the decision, which he said would take the nation "down into a moral
sewer."
The nine justices closed their term without
any announcement of an impending retirement.
An opening on the court had been hotly
anticipated on Capitol Hill and elsewhere, since it would give President Bush his first opportunity to name a Supreme
Court justice.
The anticipation peaked with release of
the court's final opinions Thursday, the day the court most disappointed political and social conservatives with
its gay rights ruling.
"No justice may have retired physically,
but a number managed to retire intellectually," Kmiec said.
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