The Supreme Court systematically favors corporate interests
over workers, consumers, and voters.
The Supreme Court
rulings that made marriage equality a reality for many same-sex couples and
struck down an Arizona law that made it harder to register to vote were
important civil rights victories. But, they obscure our highest court’s
rightward shift.
Consider this: In
recent years, the Supreme Court has turned corporate treasuries into campaign
slush funds for CEOs, demolished campaign finance laws, aided and abetted pay
discrimination, made it much harder for consumers and workers to file class
action lawsuits against corporations that have cheated them, and kindly
delivered the White House to one lucky Republican from Texas (who, in turn,
helped to create today’s far-right Supreme Court majority).
Study after
study has found that the Supreme Court, under Chief Justice John Roberts and
his predecessor William Rehnquist, has swerved hard to the right,
systematically favoring corporate interests over workers, consumers, and
voters. Former Justice John Paul Stevens, a moderate Republican placed on the
Supreme Court by Gerald Ford, observed in 2007 that in his three decades on the
court, nearly every justice who retired had been replaced by someone who leaned
further to the right.
By the time Stevens
retired, he was seen as a staunch liberal. His views hadn’t shifted to the
left, but the justices around him had shifted far to the right.
Despite all this,
Americans still perceive the Supreme Court as a liberal institution.
A new USA Today poll finds
that many more Americans think the Supreme Court is “too liberal” than think
it’s “too conservative.” Thirty-one percent of those polled thought the Court
leans too far to the left, versus 21 percent who thought it was too far right
and 37 percent who thought it was “about right.”
The Supreme Court’s
rightward lean, paired with the public’s misperception that it in fact leans
left, is no accident. For decades, right-wing leaders have worked in popular
culture to attack the courts as liberal bastions while successfully organizing
to dominate and control legal institutions to create courts that no longer look
out for the rights of all Americans.
A perfect example of
public confusion is the reaction to the Supreme Court’s narrow decision to
uphold the Affordable Care Act. While the final outcome of the case was good
news for supporters of universal, affordable health care, Chief Justice John
Roberts’ opinion was undergirded by remarkably conservative legal theory.
Along with the other
four conservatives on the court, Roberts laid the groundwork for restricting
the ability of the federal government to solve national problems under the
Constitution’s Commerce Clause — harkening back to the Gilded Age era when the
Supreme Court routinely struck down protections for workers and consumers as
unconstitutional.
The Supreme Court’s
narrow majority in two key marriage equality cases this year rightly got plenty
of attention. But we shouldn’t let conservative Justice Anthony Kennedy’s
fair-mindedness on one issue hide the fact that he often sides with a
conservative majority in one of the most right-leaning courts in American
history.
Michael B. Keegan is the president of People For the American
Way. PFAW.org
Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)
Distributed via OtherWords (OtherWords.org)