The Supreme Court will not be a major political issue in the presidential election between Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney. That is the important secondary implication of Chief Justice John G. Roberts’ surprising decision to join with the court’s liberal bloc in upholding Obama’s signature domestic policy achievement, the Affordable Care Act, even as he rejected its premises on two counts as unconstitutional and un-American.
Whether or not that was Roberts’ motivation, he has enough political savvy to recognize the effect and enough concern about the court’s institutional standing to be glad of it. Roberts’ vote to keep the health-care law essentially intact answers the politicians and pundits who, along with a growing number of Americans, saw the court as overtly partisan, toeing a Republican line.
Before saving Obamacare, however, Roberts sided with Republican politicians, libertarian legal scholars, and the conservative commentariat in criticizing it. The individual health insurance mandate, Roberts said, amounted to “cradle to grave regulation” by a government of supposedly limited powers. “This is not the country the Framers of our Constitution envisioned,” he snapped.
Unconstitutional as well was the way that the Democratic-controlled Congress and the Democratic president decided to expand the federal-state Medicaid program to ensure health care for more of the nation’s poor. The federal government would be paying for the expansion, but Roberts said the provision allowing the government to withhold Medicaid funds from any state that did not go along was unconstitutionally coercive. “A gun to the head,” he termed it.
With those two passages, Roberts put himself on the side of that part of public opinion reflexively opposed to mandates and Washington. He also established, thanks to the votes of his four fellow conservatives in dissent, important legal markers for the future.
The federal government’s powers to regulate interstate commerce, we now know, cannot extend to forcing people to buy health insurance – or cars or broccoli. It is hard to imagine the next case where this will be important, but putting the fanciful broccoli analogy into U.S. Reports amounts to a signal victory for the libertarians who dreamed it up.
More importantly, Roberts and six other justices, including liberals Stephen G. Breyer and Elena Kagan, established an outer limit to the federal government’s Spending Clause power to use federal money to get states to go along with federal policies. The Court had never before found a federally imposed condition on federal money to be unconstitutional. That once-theoretical possibility is now real and as lawyer Kevin Russell pointed out on SCOTUSBlog could cast a shadow over federal anti-discrimination laws that threaten states with loss of federal money if they do not comply.
With these legal victories, it is no wonder that conservatives and libertarians view their glass as at least half full. “Lose the battle, win the war,” wrote Jonathan Adler, law professor at Case Western Reserve University, also on SCOTUSBlog’s free-for-all after the decision was announced. In like vein, Ilya Shapiro, editor in chief of the Cato Supreme Court Review, proclaimed, “We won everything but the case.”
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg spoke for all four liberals in complaining that Roberts’ disquisition on the Commerce Clause was unnecessary if he was going to uphold the individual mandate as a constitutionally valid tax. Roberts’ response is singularly unconvincing. He explained that he would not have been forced to construe the act’s penalty as a tax but for finding its major rationale invalid.
Once construed as a tax, however, the “exaction” from the relatively small number of Americans who do not have insurance but can afford it is clearly within Congress’s power. As Roberts noted, the Court’s precedents make clear, for example, that the federal government can tax a lottery even if it has no power to run one.
The political consequences of declaring the insurance mandate to be a tax can only add to its unpopularity. “ObamaCare Taxes the American People and the House Will Repeal It,” House Republican Leader Eric Cantor declared in the press release announcing the scheduled July 11 vote on scrapping the bill altogether. The release is good short-term politics even if the move is doomed to fail in the Democratic-controlled Senate – and in any event would be vetoed by Obama.
For many legal scholars, Roberts is also unconvincing in rejecting the individual mandate as an exercise of Congress’s Commerce Clause power. Ginsburg recapitulated the argument that the “shared responsibility” provision forces health care customers to prepay for care through insurance rather than risk imposing the cost of unforeseen and uncompensated care on others. Roberts conceded that states could impose the requirement through their police power; Ginsburg countered that Congress has powers commensurate with the nationwide nature of the problem.
Roberts’ tie-breaking vote to uphold the law takes the court out of the political cross-hairs of Democrats and progressives. The indignant denunciations from some conservatives will soon be forgotten, especially when Roberts returns next term as the conservative leader of a conservative Court. For the moment, however, Roberts took one for the team the Court even if none of his colleagues thanked him for it.
Friday, June 29, 2012
Sunday, June 24, 2012
Roberts Court Unmasked by Anti-Union Ruling
  The Supreme Court has been getting bad press recently for an ideological divide that exactly corresponds to the justices’ political backgrounds: five Republican-appointed conservatives versus four Democratic-appointed liberals. In an end-of-term wrap-up, however, one of the best of the current Supreme Court advocates suggested that the critique was overblown, that the court’s rulings this year have shown surprising unanimity in some difficult and seemingly contentious cases.
  The suggestion from Paul Clement, the former Republican U.S. solicitor general and go-to lawyer for conservative causes, had enough substance for a possible column. Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. as the Great Conciliator, the headline might say. Roberts was finally fulfilling his confirmation promise, the column would say, to work for more unanimity on the court by deciding cases narrowly with scrupulous regard for precedent.
  Clement had examples to prove his point, and others can be seen in a review of the past year’s decisions. But before the column could be written, Roberts and his fellow conservatives threw the thesis for a loop. In a remarkable display of conservative activism, the court last week (June 21) issued a precedent-bending decision on one of the most politically contentious issues of the past year: the political influence of public employee unions.
  The decision, Knox v. Service Employees International Union, stems from a politically charged episode in California in 2005. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger had called a special election in November to vote on two ballot measures that would curb public employee unions’ political clout and trim pay and benefits for state government workers. Public employee unions mobilized to fight the measures, which in fact the voters rejected, somewhat soundly.
  To raise money for the “Fight Back Fund,” SEIU and other public employee unions imposed a special assessment. The assessment notice went to all employees covered by the union’s collective bargaining contract, union members and non-members alike. But it did not include the notice, required for regular assessments under a Supreme Court precedent, that non-union members could opt out of paying any portion of the assessment allocated to the union’s political activities.
  The earlier Supreme Court decision, Teachers v. Hudson (1986), balanced the interests of public employee unions in financing their collective bargaining activities and non-union members who might object to the union’s political work. Unions were allowed to charge non-union members for representing them in labor negotiations. But the court recognized a constitutional right for non-union members to avoid being forced to subsidize “ideological activity” to which they objected.
  The procedural safeguard established the so-called Hudson notice does not sit well with public employee unions, but they have lived with it. In hindsight, SEIU made a mistake in not sending such a notice when it issued the special assessment in 2005. Seven justices agreed on that point, which was all that was necessary to decide the present case.
  The Roberts Court’s conservative bloc went further. In an opinion dripping with anti-union animus, Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr. depicted the existing legal rules as “a remarkable boon” for unions. SEIU’s “aggressive use of power to collect fees from nonunion members” he termed “indefensible.” And the remedy for the future was not simply to require a Hudson opt-out notice for special assessments, but to establish an opt-in requirement that prevents unions from imposing any part of a special assessment unless the non-union member “affirmatively consents.”
  The existing rule already imposes “a significant burden for employees,” Alito wrote. “[T]he burden would become insupportable if unions could impose a new assessment at any time, with a new chargeability determination to be challenged.”
  As Justice Stephen G. Breyer pointed out in dissent, that passage casts doubt on a precedent accepted as settled for a quarter-century. More troublingly, the conservative majority reached out to take sides in political disputes now raging in state capitals: think Wisconsin. “There is no good reason for the Court suddenly to enter the debate,” Breyer wrote, “much less now to decide that the Constitution resolves it.”
  Breyer spoke for all four liberal justices on the point: Elena Kagan joined his dissent, while Sonia Sotomayor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg rejected the new opt-in requirement even while agreeing with the majority on the result in the case. “I cannot agree with the majority’s decision,” Sotomayor wrote, “to address unnecessarily significant constitutional issues, well outside the scope of the questions presented and briefing.”   The decision came on the same day that the court neatly finessed another highly contentious issue: broadcast indecency. In a unanimous ruling, the court in FCC v. Fox Televisions Stations threw out findings that Fox and ABC violated indecency rules by fleeting expletives (in Fox’s case) and fleeting body parts (in ABC’s) but left it up to the FCC to consider changing its policy in the future.   Credit Roberts perhaps with helping fashion unanimity on an issue that had divided the justices in argument. But credit him too with the activist, 5-4 ruling on public employee unions that would have lacked a majority without his vote. Side by side, the two rulings exemplify the Roberts Court’s dual personalities alternating between judicial restraint and politically-tinged activism. With major rulings due this week on President Obama’s health care law and Arizona’s immigration law, the nation waits to see which of the court’s personalities will win out as a momentous term ends.
  Breyer spoke for all four liberal justices on the point: Elena Kagan joined his dissent, while Sonia Sotomayor and Ruth Bader Ginsburg rejected the new opt-in requirement even while agreeing with the majority on the result in the case. “I cannot agree with the majority’s decision,” Sotomayor wrote, “to address unnecessarily significant constitutional issues, well outside the scope of the questions presented and briefing.”   The decision came on the same day that the court neatly finessed another highly contentious issue: broadcast indecency. In a unanimous ruling, the court in FCC v. Fox Televisions Stations threw out findings that Fox and ABC violated indecency rules by fleeting expletives (in Fox’s case) and fleeting body parts (in ABC’s) but left it up to the FCC to consider changing its policy in the future.   Credit Roberts perhaps with helping fashion unanimity on an issue that had divided the justices in argument. But credit him too with the activist, 5-4 ruling on public employee unions that would have lacked a majority without his vote. Side by side, the two rulings exemplify the Roberts Court’s dual personalities alternating between judicial restraint and politically-tinged activism. With major rulings due this week on President Obama’s health care law and Arizona’s immigration law, the nation waits to see which of the court’s personalities will win out as a momentous term ends.
Monday, June 18, 2012
Guantanamo Prisoner Trapped in Fog of Law
  The Supreme Court knows how to ride herd on federal appeals courts. Just ask the Federal Circuit Court of Appeals, which has seen any number of its patent law rulings flushed down the judicial toilet in recent years. Or the Ninth Circuit, which the justices regularly use as a punching bag when it rules in favor of a suspect, criminal defendant or state prisoner.
  For reasons known only to the justices, however, the Supreme Court is taking a hands-off policy toward the D.C. Circuit in Guantanamo habeas corpus cases. The conservative majority on the D.C. Circuit has consistently rejected efforts by Guantanamo prisoners to challenge the government’s grounds for holding them. The Supreme Court has stayed its hand even as the lower court judges, in at least one ruling, mocked the court’s landmark decision that guarantees detainees a “meaningful opportunity” to challenge the government’s case against them.
  The justices’ inaction became official last week (June 11) when the court rejected petitions for certiorari filed by seven Guantanamo prisoners seeking review of D.C. Circuit rulings upholding their detention. The justices had taken their time to consider the cases over six conferences stretching back to February. But when the court’s orders list was released on Monday morning, reporters found nothing but the standard listing for cert denials: no dissenting statements explaining why the court should have accepted any of the cases, no replies explaining why the D.C. Circuit got the cases exactly right.
  The seven rulings left standing by the Supreme Court include one of particular importance. In Latif v. Obama, the D.C. Circuit established an evidentiary rule that limits a prisoner’s ability to contest intelligence reports based on interviews conducted in theater-of-war conditions hardly conducive to scrupulous accuracy. Under the 2-1 ruling, an intelligence report compiled in the Afghanistan war zone is entitled to the same “presumption of regularity” that normally attaches to official government records, like a tax receipt, prepared in normal workday conditions.
  The petitioner in the case, Adnan Latif, was turned over to U.S. forces during the Afghanistan war in 2001 and has been held at Guantanamo since 2002. The Yemeni national contends that he was charged with supporting al Qaeda and the Taliban based on a misunderstanding of his statements to U.S. interrogators as translated by an interpreter. As Latif tells it, he was in Afghanistan seeking medical care, unavailable in Yemen, for injuries from an auto accident in 1994.
  Writing for the majority, Judge Janice Rogers Brown acknowledged that the report was “prepared in stressful and chaotic conditions, filtered through interpreters, subject to transcription errors, and heavily redacted for national security purposes.” Even so, Brown said courts have to accept the report with incriminating statements attributed to Latif as an accurate account of what he said unless he could convincingly refute the report’s “presumption of regularity.”
  The ruling prompted a sharp dissent by Judge David Tatel, the lone Democratic appointee on the panel. Tatel quoted the majority’s critique of the report and added complaints of his own. The report, he wrote, “was produced in the fog of war by a clandestine method that we know almost nothing about.” Why, he asked, should a court have to presume that it is accurate?
  Latif’s version of events was enough to satisfy U.S. District Court Judge Henry Kennedy, who ordered him released “forthwith” in July 2010. Kennedy acknowledged inconsistencies in Latif’s stories, but concluded that the government had failed to prove that he was associated with al Qaeda or the Taliban.
  On appeal, Brown and fellow Republican appointee Karen LeCraft Henderson ruled that Kennedy should have accepted the intelligence report as an accurate account of what Latif said after his capture. The ruling sent the case back to Kennedy, a Clinton appointee, to reconsider the evidence as instructed.
  In her opinion, Brown was not content with criticizing Kennedy. She criticized the Supreme Court as well for its 2008 ruling, Boumediene v. Bush, that requires the Guantanamo prisoners be provided “meaningful access to a judicial forum.” The ruling’s “airy suppositions,” Brown wrote, “have caused great difficulty for the Executive and the courts.” In his dissent, Tatel complained that his colleagues were thumbing their noses at the high court. “It is hard to see what is left,” Tatel wrote, “of the Supreme Court's command in Boumediene that habeas review be ‘meaningful.’”
  The ruling prompted sharp criticism at the time among the small number of observers following the D.C. Circuit’s habeas decisions carefully. Peter Marguiles, a professor at Rhode Island University School of Law who has represented Afghan detainees, complained of the majority’s “excessive deference” to the government. Benjamin Wittes, an expert at the Brookings Institution who has been supportive of the government’s detention and interrogation policies, called the ruling “wrong.” Today, Wittes calls it “an outlier.”
  The Supreme Court, however, saw no reason to lift a finger either in behalf of Latif or in defense of its own precedent. Latif, now 35, has spent most of his adult life at Guantanamo in what he called in a letter “a wild nightmare.” There he will remain, having been captured in the fog of war and held ever since in the fog of law that the Supreme Court has failed to clear up.
Monday, June 11, 2012
Dissing the Court Bears a Poisonous Fruit of Distrust
  Alex Kozinski had served as chief judge of the U.S. Court of Claims in Washington for two years in 1984 when he decided he wanted a change of jobs and locations. So he wrote to his friend, White House counsel Fred Fielding, who had initially recommended Kozinski to President Ronald Reagan for the judgeship, to request appointment to the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals out in California.
  Kozinski had personal reasons for moving to California: his family and his wife’s both lived there. And he thought he had earned favorable consideration, in his words, by “leading the Claims Court through a very difficult time in its history, without dissension or controversy.” But to cinch the argument, Kozinski emphasized what he described as the Nitnth Circuit’s “need of judges with a conservative judicial philosophy.” If appointed, Kozinski vowed, “I promise to do my very best there so that you and the President can be proud of me.”
  Kozinski’s letter, which recently surfaced as part of the Reagan White House archives, raises eyebrows three decades later for its matter-of-fact promise from a sitting judge to serve the president's agenda if elevated to a higher court. But it is hardly surprising to learn that Reagan had an agenda in his judicial appointments, just like two other notable Republican presidents: Richard M. Nixon before him and George W. Bush after.
  The fruits of the more than 40 years of politicization of the courts by the Republican Party may now be reflected in a new poll that shows confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court at an historic low level. The New York Times/CBS News poll, published last week (June 8), found that only 44 percent of those responding approved of the way the Supreme Court is doing its job. As the Times account noted, approval of the court was as high as 66 percent in the 1980s and remained above 50 percent even after the controversial Bush v. Gore decision in 2000.
  More disturbingly, more than three-fourths of those polled – 76 percent – say the justices “sometime let personal or political views influence their decisions.” And a majority 55 percent say that the justices’ decision later this month on President Obama’s health care law will be “mainly based on personal or political views,” not on legal analysis (13 percent).
  The court’s sagging approval rating comes at a time when Congress’s numbers are dismally low in the 10 percent range. Presidential approval ratings have been increasingly volatile for the past two decades. Americans are in a sour mood, politically. So it is perhaps not surprising that the court would also feel the sting of the public’s ingratitude.
  Still, as University of Southern California political scientist Lee Epstein told the Times, the poll calls into question the conventional wisdom that the court can stay somehow above the transient winds of public opinion even as it rules on contentious issues of the day. If the court now finds itself in the political thicket, is there blame to be laid?
  One is tempted to lay the blame on both major political parties. After all, President Obama and leading Democratic senators have laid into the Roberts Court for the past three years for what they see as an anti-democratic activism wielded often in behalf of corporate interests. But a longer historical perspective makes clear that it is the Republican Party that has politicized the Supreme Court, deliberately and wantonly, with little if any regard for the potential damage to the court’s long-term ability to maintain public confidence.
  Nixon started the rhetorical attacks on the court that are now standard fare from Republican politicians and that morphed into the more strident attacks on the court’s legitimacy from Tea Party types. Nixon also started the practice of picking justices based more on conservative ideology than judicial temperament.
  Among the 15 Supreme Court nominations by GOP presidents starting with Nixon, all but three were markedly more conservative than the justices they were to replace. The three exceptions resulted from unique circumstances: President Gerald Ford picked John Paul Stevens to try to calm the post-Watergate climate; Reagan nominated Anthony M. Kennedy only after the failed nomination of conservative ideologue Robert Bork; and President George H.W. Bush picked David H. Souter out of an instinct for bipartisanship.
  Bork was one of three failed nominations; Nixon’s two rejected nominees Clement Haynesworth and G. Harrold Carswell insulted the court’s dignity. Some of the successful nominations also lacked respect for the court’s stature. Reagan’s elevation of William H. Rehnquist to be chief justice and selection of Antonin Scalia for Rehnquist’s seat amounted to a conservative poke-in-the-eye to bipartisanship. The first Bush’s description of the inexperienced Clarence Thomas as “the best qualified” candidate for the court was laughable.
  Today, the court is for the first time in history divided along an ideological fault line that corresponds exactly to the justices’ partisan background: five Republican-appointed conservatives, four Democratic-appointed liberals. A public now conditioned to the politicization of Supreme Court appointments by GOP presidents may naturally think that it is all politics not “all law,” as Sonia Sotomayor promised in her confirmation hearing. The court’s lowered esteem is a burden that the court carries as it confronts issues that are hard enough legally without the added challenge of rendering a decision that can win respect in a politically polarized era.
  Kozinski had personal reasons for moving to California: his family and his wife’s both lived there. And he thought he had earned favorable consideration, in his words, by “leading the Claims Court through a very difficult time in its history, without dissension or controversy.” But to cinch the argument, Kozinski emphasized what he described as the Nitnth Circuit’s “need of judges with a conservative judicial philosophy.” If appointed, Kozinski vowed, “I promise to do my very best there so that you and the President can be proud of me.”
  Kozinski’s letter, which recently surfaced as part of the Reagan White House archives, raises eyebrows three decades later for its matter-of-fact promise from a sitting judge to serve the president's agenda if elevated to a higher court. But it is hardly surprising to learn that Reagan had an agenda in his judicial appointments, just like two other notable Republican presidents: Richard M. Nixon before him and George W. Bush after.
  The fruits of the more than 40 years of politicization of the courts by the Republican Party may now be reflected in a new poll that shows confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court at an historic low level. The New York Times/CBS News poll, published last week (June 8), found that only 44 percent of those responding approved of the way the Supreme Court is doing its job. As the Times account noted, approval of the court was as high as 66 percent in the 1980s and remained above 50 percent even after the controversial Bush v. Gore decision in 2000.
  More disturbingly, more than three-fourths of those polled – 76 percent – say the justices “sometime let personal or political views influence their decisions.” And a majority 55 percent say that the justices’ decision later this month on President Obama’s health care law will be “mainly based on personal or political views,” not on legal analysis (13 percent).
  The court’s sagging approval rating comes at a time when Congress’s numbers are dismally low in the 10 percent range. Presidential approval ratings have been increasingly volatile for the past two decades. Americans are in a sour mood, politically. So it is perhaps not surprising that the court would also feel the sting of the public’s ingratitude.
  Still, as University of Southern California political scientist Lee Epstein told the Times, the poll calls into question the conventional wisdom that the court can stay somehow above the transient winds of public opinion even as it rules on contentious issues of the day. If the court now finds itself in the political thicket, is there blame to be laid?
  One is tempted to lay the blame on both major political parties. After all, President Obama and leading Democratic senators have laid into the Roberts Court for the past three years for what they see as an anti-democratic activism wielded often in behalf of corporate interests. But a longer historical perspective makes clear that it is the Republican Party that has politicized the Supreme Court, deliberately and wantonly, with little if any regard for the potential damage to the court’s long-term ability to maintain public confidence.
  Nixon started the rhetorical attacks on the court that are now standard fare from Republican politicians and that morphed into the more strident attacks on the court’s legitimacy from Tea Party types. Nixon also started the practice of picking justices based more on conservative ideology than judicial temperament.
  Among the 15 Supreme Court nominations by GOP presidents starting with Nixon, all but three were markedly more conservative than the justices they were to replace. The three exceptions resulted from unique circumstances: President Gerald Ford picked John Paul Stevens to try to calm the post-Watergate climate; Reagan nominated Anthony M. Kennedy only after the failed nomination of conservative ideologue Robert Bork; and President George H.W. Bush picked David H. Souter out of an instinct for bipartisanship.
  Bork was one of three failed nominations; Nixon’s two rejected nominees Clement Haynesworth and G. Harrold Carswell insulted the court’s dignity. Some of the successful nominations also lacked respect for the court’s stature. Reagan’s elevation of William H. Rehnquist to be chief justice and selection of Antonin Scalia for Rehnquist’s seat amounted to a conservative poke-in-the-eye to bipartisanship. The first Bush’s description of the inexperienced Clarence Thomas as “the best qualified” candidate for the court was laughable.
  Today, the court is for the first time in history divided along an ideological fault line that corresponds exactly to the justices’ partisan background: five Republican-appointed conservatives, four Democratic-appointed liberals. A public now conditioned to the politicization of Supreme Court appointments by GOP presidents may naturally think that it is all politics not “all law,” as Sonia Sotomayor promised in her confirmation hearing. The court’s lowered esteem is a burden that the court carries as it confronts issues that are hard enough legally without the added challenge of rendering a decision that can win respect in a politically polarized era.
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Narrow Ruling on DOMA May Be What Gay Advocates Need
The federal
appeals court that struck down the key part of the federal Defense of Marriage
Act (DOMA) threaded a needle to find legal precedents for ruling that the law
improperly discriminates against gays and lesbians. The narrowness of the
decision may make it easier for the Supreme Court to come to the same
conclusion in an appeal likely to reach the justices in their next term.
The
decision by the First U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Massachusetts
v. U.S. Dep’t of Health and Human Services (May 31) struck down the
section of the 1996 law that denies to same-sex couples any federal benefits
normally provided to opposite-sex couples — for example, the ability to file
joint instead of separate federal income tax returns. Lawyers from the Boston-based
Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders (GLAD) represented legally married
couples and widowers from Massachusetts in challenging the law as a violation
of equal protection principles.
The lawyers
had two main arguments, either of which could doom not just DOMA but also all
of the state bans on same-sex marriages. They argued, first, that sexual
orientation is a “suspect classification” that triggers the highest level of
constitutional review: “strict scrutiny.” DOMA fails that test, they argued,
because the law does not advance any “compelling” government interest nor is
“narrowly tailored” to serve any such interest.
At the other end of the
constitutional spectrum, the lawyers argued that DOMA cannot survive even the
minimal “rational basis” standard of constitutional review. The law does not
advance any legitimate governmental interest whatsoever, the lawyers contended.
The
three-judge panel — consisting of two Republican and one Democratic appointee —
rejected both of those positions. Writing for the panel, Judge Michael Boudin
explained that the First Circuit had refused three years ago to recognize
sexual orientation as a suspect classification and that the panel was bound by
that precedent. Boudin added that creating a new suspect classification would have
“far-reaching implications” by casting doubt on marriage laws “in a huge majority
of individual states.”
Applying
the standard rational-basis test, the panel found that DOMA passes
constitutional muster, if barely. The 1996 Congress claimed that DOMA would
save the federal government money – by limiting benefits or tax preferences to
opposite-sex couples only. Boudin said Congress was entitled to deference on
that issue even though experts today say that recognizing same-sex marriages
could actually save money for the federal government.
Seemingly
out of nowhere, however, Boudin found a different level of constitutional
review to apply to DOMA—a standard that it fails, badly. Boudin said that
the Supreme Court, in several cases, had engaged in “a closer than usual
review” of laws that affected a “historically disadvantaged or unpopular group”
and that had “thin, unsupported, or impermissible” justification.
In one of
those cases, U.S. Dep’t of Agriculture v. Moreno (1973), the
court struck down a law denying food stamps to households containing unrelated
individuals. The court said the law denied food stamps to many needy households
and appeared to be motivated solely by a “desire to harm a politically
unpopular group.”
A decade
later, the court in City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living
Center (1985) overturned a local ordinance denying a special permit
for a group home for the mentally disabled. As in Moreno,
the court said the justification for the ordinance seemed thin and the
motivation appeared to be “negative attitudes” toward an unpopular group.
Even
without creating a new suspect classification, Boudin acknowledged that gays
and lesbians “have long been the subject of discrimination.” The Supreme Court’s
somewhat overlooked precedents dictate a “more careful assessment” than usual
of laws that disadvantage them, as DOMA does.
Boudin then went through and
rejected each of four possible justifications for DOMA offered by former
solicitor general Paul Clement on behalf of the House Republican leadership
seeking to uphold DOMA. (At President Obama’s direction, the Justice Department
is not defending the law.) Saving the
federal government money would be an impermissible justification even if true,
Boudin said.
As to the other three rationales,
Boudin found no evidence that the law promotes child-rearing in “stable”
marriages since it extends no benefits to opposite-sex couples and cannot
prevent same-sex couples from bearing or adopting children. Moral disapproval
of homosexuality is now recognized as an impermissible justification, Boudin
continued. And the final supposed rationale — to “freeze” the marriage issue for
further debate — makes no sense, Boudin said, because the law has no expiration
date.
In a final point, Boudin noted that
marriage has traditionally been a state prerogative. Acknowledging
Massachusetts’ role as plaintiff in one of the consolidated cases, Boudin said
the state can insist that a federal law interfering with its marriage policies
have some particular federal interest—and DOMA has none.
The appeals court stayed its ruling
pending the inevitable appeal to the Supreme Court, which seems likely to get
the case in time for a decision by June 2013. The high court has been slow to
take on cases touching on gay marriage. The DOMA case gives the justices a
chance to take on this issue with a small bite. And the First Circuit’s ruling
charts a path that steers clear of creating new precedents. Gay rights
advocates may not get exactly what they want out of this case. But they may
just get what they need.