Month: July 2022
NYTimes: How to Turn Third Parties From Spoilers to Winners. Rj
NYTimes.com: Liberals Need a Clearer Vision of the Constitution. Here’s What It Could Look Like. rj
Liberals Need a Clearer Vision of the Constitution. Here’s What It Could Look Like.
The legal scholar Larry Kramer on why the left’s embrace of judicial supremacy was a mistake.
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/05/opinion/ezra-klein-podcast-larry-kramer.html?smid=em-share
NYTimes: Israel’s Coalition Didn’t Fail. It Set a New Bar. Rj
NYTimes: Christian Nationalists Are Excited About What Comes Next. Rj
NYTimes: The MAGA Formula Is Getting Darker and Darker. Rj
NYTimes: Another Step Toward Climate Apocalypse
NYTimes: The Persistent Myth That Restricting Abortion Rights Won’t Affect the Rich. Rj
NYTimes: The Supreme Court’s E.P.A. Decision Is More Gloom Than Doom. Rj
NYTimes: The Single Best Guide I’ve Heard to the Supreme Court’s Rightward Shift. Rj
In the past few weeks alone, the Supreme Court has delivered a firestorm of conservative legal victories. States now have far less leeway to restrict gun permits. The right to abortion is no longer constitutionally protected. The Environmental Protection Agency has been kneecapped in its ability to regulate carbon emissions, and by extension, all executive branch agencies will see their power significantly diminished.
But to focus only on this particular Supreme Court term is to miss the bigger picture: In the past few decades, conservative court majorities have dragged this country’s laws to the right on almost every issue imaginable. Shelby County v. Holder gutted the Voting Rights Act and opened the door for states to pass restrictive voting laws. Rucho v. Common Cause limited the court’s ability to curb partisan gerrymandering. Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission unleashed a torrent of campaign spending. Janus v. AFSCME Council 31 weakened unions. A whole slew of cases, including some decided on the shadow docket during the Covid-19 pandemic, undercut federal agencies’ power to help govern in an era of congressional gridlock. And that’s only a partial list.