Liptak's Latest Odd NYTimes Attack on the Supreme Court Before a Crucial Decision
Another Tuesday, another out-of-nowhere attack by New York Times reporter Adam Liptak on the Supreme Court, as it waits to hear a case important to liberals. With a vital decision looming on Obama-care, Liptak last week wrote a front-page story on the results of an unusual poll question from the Times asking people what they thought of the Supreme Court. Liptak linked the public's alleged disdain of SCOTUS to two conservative decisions, including Citizens United, a free speech victory loathed by the left and in the Times that allowed corporations and unions to donate unlimited amounts to campaigns.
Liptak devoted his latest "Sidebar" to another judicial side issue involving liberal opposition to the Citizens United decision: "Unsigned Opinions, And Citizens United."
At their private conference, the justices of the Supreme Court are scheduled to decide Thursday whether and how to take a second look at the Citizens United campaign finance decision.
The usual odds that the Supreme Court will agree to hear a case are about one in a hundred. This one is pretty much a sure thing.
The justices have already temporarily blocked a lower court decision in the case. In that decision, the Montana Supreme Court seemed to defy the higher court by saying that a state law regulating corporate political spending was constitutional notwithstanding Citizens United. Two dissenting State Supreme Court justices said they would have liked to vote with their colleagues but did not believe they were entitled to ignore the United States Supreme Court.
Liptak doesn't expect the Supreme Court to have changed its mind.
The main question on Thursday, then, will be how the court will reverse the Montana decision. It could call for briefs, set the case down for argument in the fall and issue a decision months later. Or it could use a favorite tool of the court led by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. -- the summary reversal.
Nine times so far this year, the court has issued an unsigned opinion ruling on the merits of a dispute without full briefing or oral argument. Such rulings have been the subject of criticism from practitioners and the legal academy. These critics say it is a mistake to resolve cases without adequate information and deliberation. It is also problematic, they add, to do so anonymously.
The latest critique arrived this month in The Tulane Law Review in an article by Ira P. Robbins, a law professor at American University. It was called “Hiding Behind the Cloak of Invisibility,” and it considered “per curiam” opinions, ones issued “by the court” without indication of authorship. “In the first six years of Chief Justice Roberts’s tenure,” Professor Robbins wrote, “almost 9 percent of the court’s full opinions were per curiams.”
Liptak finally lets us indirectly figure out that this a liberal beef with the court:
Two of the current term’s unsigned summary reversals were followed by dissenting opinions, both times from three members of the court’s liberal wing. In one of them, reinstating a California woman’s conviction for shaking her grandson to death, Justice Ginsburg quarreled with both the result and how the court chose to get there.
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Comments
Just as valid as a denial to take the case
Submitted by c5then on Tue, 06/12/2012 - 2:06pm.
In the case of a denial, there is no opinion issued or dissenting opinion. The court looks at it's jurisdiction and whether there is a constitutional issue, or if there have been opposing decisions by different federal courts on the same or substantially identical issues that need resolving.
Just as there can be cases where the court decides that there is no reason to take the appeal, there can be cases where there is no doubt as to the correct ruling.
It is difficult for liberals to remember that the SCOTUS is almost never hearing evidentury arguments and deciding on guilt or innocence of the defendants in the case. They are solely hearing constitutional issues relating to the admisability of certain evidence, the proceedural issues that a lower court employed, etc. etc.
This is why they always seem to get confused by certain rulings. They (the liberals) look at whether something is a good idea or will "help" people or society, whereas the Court is supposed to look only at the issue of what the Constitution says about it or allows.
In a few weeks they will be flumoxed again as the SCOTUS strikes down the healthcare law becasue it is unconstitutional. Regardless of whether you think it is a good idea or not, the Constitution does not give the Federal Government the authority to force citizens to purchase a product against their will. Since there is no severabilty clause in the Healthcare law the court will have no choice but to strike the entire law, not just the mandate part.
Madison and Jefferson and Franklin built a Republic - Roberts killed it!
Does Liptak really think SCOTUS will fold over his propaganda?
Submitted by drsamherman on Tue, 06/12/2012 - 2:35pm.
I think the court is made of sterner stuff than the self-important worm Liptak could ever muster.
The amateurish and emotional whoring that Liptak is doing is nothing but bad window dressing. He is attempting to vilify the court before the decision is even announced. Liptak always was a gutter-crawling slime, but he managed to sink ever lower.
11th Amendment demands that SCOTUS must deny cert
Submitted by ZBrugman on Wed, 06/13/2012 - 12:56pm.
Liptak’s Sidebar in the NY Times fails to assess the paramount jurisdictional issue presented in the Montana case: whether the 10th and 11th Amendments to the US Constitution provide Montana with sovereign immunity, demanding that the SCOTUS deny cert altogether?
"The First Amendment may have been the most important constitutional issue up until now, but now it’s the 11th Amendment that trumps the Supreme Court’s authority to impose its views of the First Amendment on the states." http://www.11thamendment.org/2012/05/08/542/
The key point to be made is that the 11th Amendment provides the best argument to avoid a summary reversal, the argument is not being made by Montana’s AG, and time is running out:
http://www.11thamendment.org/2012/06/11/breaking-news-montana-ag-refuses...