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- <text id=91TT1432>
- <title>
- July 01, 1991: Justice:Right Face!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- July 01, 1991 Cocaine Inc.
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 20
- JUSTICE
- Right Face!
- </hdr><body>
- <p>In the final stretch of a momentous term, a conservative majority
- solidifies its hold on the Supreme Court and prepares an assault
- on the Warren legacy
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD LACAYO -- Reported by Julie Johnson/ Washington and
- Andrea Sachs/New York
- </p>
- <p> The former Supreme Court Justice William Brennan used to
- tell his clerks, "Five votes can do anything around here." That
- was in the days when Brennan regularly stitched together a
- narrow liberal majority on a high bench that was delicately
- balanced between left and right. Those days are over. Five votes
- can still do anything. But now it's the court's increasingly
- assertive right wing that usually has them -- and sometimes
- more.
- </p>
- <p> As the court heads toward the conclusion of its latest
- term, it has finally completed its decades-long transformation
- from the liberal bastion of former Chief Justice Earl Warren
- into an aggressively conservative body -- one that seems poised
- to alter some of the major rulings of the past. To fellow
- conservatives, the right-wing majority may look like the cavalry
- galloping to the rescue. Battered liberals are more apt to see
- them as the ravaging horsemen of the Apocalypse. The only
- question is how far they will go in undoing the liberal legacy
- in such areas as church-state relations, individual liberties,
- the rights of criminal defendants and abortion.
- </p>
- <p> The new majority, led by Chief Justice William Rehnquist,
- has been building in slow motion. In the early 1970s, during
- Rehnquist's first few terms on what was still a liberal-leaning
- bench, he was so isolated that his clerks took to calling him
- the Lone Ranger. These days he no longer rides alone: he
- routinely joins a group that includes Reagan appointees Antonin
- Scalia, Anthony Kennedy, Sandra Day O'Connor and Bush appointee
- David Souter. Having written only a few rulings since joining
- the court this term, Souter remains something of an enigma; yet
- he has clearly provided the right wing -- spearheaded by
- Rehnquist and Scalia -- with a crucial fifth vote in a number
- of important cases in which his predecessor Brennan would almost
- certainly have been on the opposing side.
- </p>
- <p> Nor are the conservatives strictly limited to those five
- votes. Byron White is likely to join them on some cases, often
- those involving criminal law and police powers. Even John Paul
- Stevens supports them on many free-speech issues. That leaves
- Thur good Marshall and Harry Blackmun, both 82, the oldest
- members of the court, as its only unbudging liberals. "The swing
- Justices no longer control the outcome," says Duke University
- law professor Walter Dellinger. "There's no swing Justice,
- really."
- </p>
- <p> For years the court spared lawmakers the hard task of
- resolving difficult issues like abortion and school
- desegregation by imposing solutions in a constitutional
- wrapping. The new court is far more likely to toss such
- explosive matters back to state legislatures and Capitol Hill.
- "We're playing a rearguard action just trying to keep what we
- have," says California Democrat Don Edwards, who chairs the
- House Judiciary Subcommittee on Civil and Constitutional Rights.
- "Congress has to do the work we had counted on the court to do."
- </p>
- <p> In its next term, which begins in October, the court will
- probably have a clear opportunity to overturn the 1973 Roe v.
- Wade ruling that granted women the constitutional right to have
- an abortion -- just as the presidential election season gets
- under way. Last week both houses of the Louisiana legislature
- overrode Governor Buddy Roemer's veto of a bill that would
- prohibit virtually all abortions, except to save the life of the
- mother or in some cases of rape or incest. The new law was
- rushed before a federal judge in New Orleans, who will hold a
- hearing next month on its constitutionality, the first step on
- the road to the Supreme Court, where antiabortion laws from
- Pennsylvania, Utah and Guam are also headed.
- </p>
- <p> Any of those laws could provide the court with an
- opportunity to overturn Roe -- a prospect that seemed nearer
- than ever after last month's decision in Rust v. Sullivan. In
- that case, by a 5-to-4 vote in which Souter sided with the
- conservatives, the court ruled that doctors, nurses and other
- care providers at clinics that accept federal funds cannot even
- mention abortion to their patients. "I've never had much hope
- for this court," says Colleen O'Connor, public-education
- director for the A.C.L.U. "But I was never as dispirited as when
- it came down with the Rust decision. In some ways, it's not safe
- to bring a civil-liberties case to this court."
- </p>
- <p> Making the court unsafe for all kinds of cases is part of
- the conservative agenda. A sampling of last week's rulings
- gives a good indication of the court's current rightward tilt:
- </p>
- <p> -- In a 5-to-4 vote, the Justices made it more difficult
- for inmates to win lawsuits to improve their prison living
- conditions. Now they must prove that prison administrators had
- acted with "deliberate indifference" to basic human needs.
- </p>
- <p> -- In another 5-to-4 decision, the court ruled last week
- that states and local governments may ban nude dancers in bars
- and other adults-only establishments. The decision was narrow
- in its effects -- G-strings and pasties make the dancing O.K.
- under the Indiana ban -- but Rehnquist's defense of the law may
- open the way to other stricter laws governing sexual conduct.
- </p>
- <p> -- Voting 6 to 3, the Justices decided that police may
- search a bus passenger's baggage if he agrees, even if they have
- no warrant or probable cause to suspect him of any crime.
- "Working the buses," as the police call it, has become a common
- method of interrupting the interstate flow of drugs. Last week's
- ruling followed a string of recent decisions that gave police
- the power to conduct searches without warrants. The court also
- decided during this term that suspects who were arrested without
- warrants may be held for up to 48 hours before police press
- charges.
- </p>
- <p> The conservative sway is by no means absolute; the liberal
- wing can still claim an occasional victory. Last week the
- Justices ruled 6 to 3 that the 1965 Voting Rights Act applied
- to the election of state and local judges. That gives blacks and
- other minorities an opportunity to bring lawsuits to change
- voting methods in the 41 states where some judges are chosen by
- ballot. In an important victory for women's rights, the court
- ruled unanimously in March to disallow so-called
- fetal-protection policies that bar fertile women from jobs that
- might pose dangers to an unborn child.
- </p>
- <p> Rehnquist and his fellow conservatives moved aggressively
- this term to capitalize on their majority -- even to the point
- of deciding issues that had not been formally raised before
- them. For example, they ruled that coerced confessions were not
- automatically barred from use as trial evidence, though the case
- at hand did not require them to pronounce on that question. In
- another case, involving the rights of crime victims, they have
- asked both parties to reargue a Burger Court ruling that neither
- side had questioned.
- </p>
- <p> A court that approves challenges to settled law tends to
- invite more of them. To anyone unhappy with the legacies of the
- old Supreme Court, the new Supreme Court appears to be sending
- this message: come up and see me sometime. With several of the
- Justices scornful of court-imposed restrictions on church-state
- relations, new attempts to restore school prayer are likely, as
- well as laws that approve the use of government funds for
- parochial schools.
- </p>
- <p> After decades of waiting to reverse the liberal court
- trend, Rehnquist's impatience is almost palpable. Conservatives
- often used to accuse the Warren Court of taking decisions out
- of the hands of Congress and state legislatures. But even as his
- court is kicking some issues back to lawmakers, the Chief
- Justice has been willing to do some of his own legislating from
- the bench. A revealing case in point is his persistent effort
- to streamline capital punishment. For years Rehnquist urged
- Congress to pass a law that would prohibit death-row inmates
- from repeatedly filing so-called habeas corpus petitions
- requesting that their verdicts or sentences be reconsidered in
- court. Rehnquist complained that they needlessly dragged out
- death sentences and crowded the court with mostly frivolous
- petitions.
- </p>
- <p> But legitimate habeas corpus petitions have been crucial
- to death-row inmates whose lawyers, many of them lacking
- experience in complex capital cases, often miss crucial issues
- at the trial level. Some 40% of all death sentences are
- overturned because a federal judge agrees there was some
- constitutional error in the verdict or sentence. Much of the
- legal profession was therefore pushing for a compromise that
- would reduce such petitions while guaranteeing that indigent
- Defendants could obtain more competent attorneys when they were
- tried for capital crimes.
- </p>
- <p> But Rehnquist would not relent. When both federal judges
- and Democratic leaders in Congress resisted his efforts to
- expedite executions, he moved to achieve the same result from
- the high bench this term. His vehicle was a Georgia case,
- McCleskey v. Zant. Though it meant going further than the case
- required, the persuasive Chief Justice fashioned a 6-to-3
- majority in favor of setting up procedural obstacles to repeated
- habeas corpus requests.
- </p>
- <p> If Rehnquist is the muscle behind the present conservative
- majority, Scalia provides the intellect. Despite his affable
- manner, Scalia can be intense in debate and uncompromising in
- his rulings. As the only present court member who was once a
- full-time law professor, he is prone to lecture his colleagues
- -- sometimes in injudicious terms. In a 1988 concurring opinion,
- for example, he called one of O'Connor's arguments "irrational"
- and said of another that "it cannot be taken seriously."
- </p>
- <p> Scalia's strongly held legal principles and unyielding
- manner prevent him from playing the role of court politician
- that was a specialty of William Brennan, who could adroitly
- adjust his written opinions to attract the votes of his wavering
- fellow judges. "When Scalia states his view in the strongest
- terms, often the other conservative Justices drop a footnote
- saying they don't necessarily agree," says Joseph Grano, a law
- professor at Wayne State University in Detroit. But the hard
- edge of Scalia's writings is the very thing that has made him
- especially influential with judges in the lower federal courts,
- where they appreciate the clear guidance he offers as to how
- they should apply Supreme Court precedents.
- </p>
- <p> One article of faith among conservative jurists is that
- the courts are no place for resolving questions better left to
- the legislative branch. The Supreme Court is already taking
- that to heart. During this term it agreed to hear arguments in
- just 125 cases, down sharply from 170 two years ago. One reason
- for the decline is that since two-thirds of all current federal
- judges are Reagan or Bush appointees, Rehnquist and his
- like-minded colleagues are seeing fewer lower-court rulings with
- which they sharply disagree. The high court's conservative
- majority has also been handing down decisions, such as the one
- last week on inmate lawsuits, that make cases more difficult to
- bring to trial and to win. "The argument that has the greatest
- effect nowadays is for judicial economy," says Columbia
- University law professor Vincent Blasi. "They're working very
- hard to cut down on opportunities for litigation."
- </p>
- <p> At the same time, liberal groups are steering clear of the
- federal courts, fearing defeat at the lower levels or worse at
- the top, where their cases might be seized upon as an
- opportunity to overturn important liberal precedents. They
- haven't given up litigating, however. Organizations such as the
- NAACP Legal Defense Fund and the A.C.L.U. have been turning more
- often to the state courts. Though state judges were once
- regarded as cracker-barrel reactionaries, these days some state
- constitutions have been interpreted by the courts to provide
- more specific guarantees of individual liberties than the
- federal Bill of Rights.
- </p>
- <p> What hope do liberals have now that the tide is running
- against them on the Supreme Court? One recourse is to turn to
- Capitol Hill. When the high bench acts to interpret
- congressional legislation, Congress can vote to overrule the
- Justices -- if that vote can survive a presidential veto. That's
- a big if. House and Senate committees both have approved
- legislation intended to overturn Rust v. Sullivan, but Democrats
- in Congress doubt they will have the two-thirds majority
- necessary to override an almost certain veto. The same is true
- in the bruising fight over a new civil rights act -- the one
- Bush labels a quota bill -- that was introduced to overturn a
- string of Supreme Court rulings that made it harder for
- minorities and women to sue employers for discrimination.
- </p>
- <p> Liberals can take heart in the tendency of some Justices
- to shift views during their years on the bench. Blackmun moved
- to the left from his first days on the court. On the whole,
- O'Connor has drifted toward the center. Souter, who voted the
- same way as O'Connor in dozens of cases this term, may yet do
- the same. But the possibility of gradual leftward movement is
- cold comfort to liberals who realize their two aging champions,
- Marshall and Blackmun, may eventually be replaced by George Bush
- appointees. And that would almost certainly turn the
- conservative bloc into a juggernaut that will dominate the court
- well into the next century.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-