| The Authoritarian Left Wing of the Supreme Court 
 06/28/2018
 Tho Bishop
 
 The retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy has cranked-up DC political hysteria to 11. When we have grown adults  weeping in their offices  over the retirement of a judge, it is perhaps high time to question  whether any group of nine individuals should ever have so much power  over the political landscape.  Ryan McMaken was making this very case in the aftermath of Antonin Scalia’s passing:
 
 We’re told by pundits and politicians from across the  spectrum how indispensable, awe-inspiring, and absolutely essential the  Supreme Court is. In truth, we should be looking for ways to undermine,  cripple, and to generally force the Court into irrelevance....Interestingly enough, his idea of  Congress stacking the courts – in order to erode the perception of the Supreme Court as a non-political actor – is even  gaining traction in interesting circles.
 If Americans want a government that's more likely to leave them in  peace, they should ignore the pleas to elect another politician who will  just appoint another donor or political ally to the court. Instead,  state and local governments should seek at every turn to ignore,  nullify, and generally disregard the rulings of the Court when they run  counter to local law and local institutions where — quite unlike the  Supreme Court — average citizens have some actual influence over the  political institutions that affect their lives.
 
 
 With the stakes now seen as being so high, the Democratic Party is  faced with a great deal of Monday morning quarterbacking on how they  handled the post-Scalia vacancy. Most now concede their hubris got the  best of them in assuming Hillary Clinton would now be president and that  Gorsuch’s vote would be held by a judge to the left of Merrick Garland.  Their clear strategy now is a desperate attempt to portray Mitch  McConnell as a hypocrite for pushing a court nomination on an election  year. This strategy will obviously fail because McConnell is a known  hypocrite and politics is simply about power – not legislative norms.
 
 When this effort proves to be futile, my guess will be that the next  strategy will be confrontation. Similar to what we’ve seen this morning  with protests outside of Washington Immigration Control Enforcement  offices, the activist base of the Democratic Party will take to the  streets while their allied pundits will make Kennedy’s replacement out  to be the last stand for the civilized world. This will be the third or  fourth installment of a franchise even more tired than Star Wars: a  battle between the brave #resistance against an authoritarian Trump  regime determined to erode the rights of all Americans who are not  white, male, and straight.
 
 This particular chapter in the “authoritarian threat” story becomes  all the more amusing when we consider this past Supreme Court session.  As Sean Davis of  The Federalist astutely  noted, three of the most significant cases on this year’s docket saw  the “liberal” wing of the court vote in favor of forced participation:
 
 NIFLA v. Becerra, a 5-4 decision, defended the right  of anti-abortion pregnancy center from being legally required to  provide information about abortion services, overturning a 2015  California mandate. The significance of this legislation isn’t only  major for the issue of abortion, but has larger ramifications preventing  government mandates in other medical prescriptions.
 
 Janus v. AFSCME, another 5-4 decision, protected  government non-union members from being obligated to pay union dues  against their wishes. Obviously no institution should have that right ( even government), which led to employee dollars going to help promote causes – including political campaigns – they personally objected to.
 
 Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado, the infamous gay  wedding cake case, was another clear example of forced participation.  While this was a legal victory for the bakers involved, the decision  itself became rather narrow and philosophically hollow – focusing on the  actions of the  Colorado Civil Rights Commission’s  and their clear hostility to the Christian faith. As such, Justices  Kagan and Breyer joined the majority. This only makes the opposition of  Justices Ginsberg and Sotomayor all the more alarming. (In the defense  of all four members of the Court's left wing, they did vote with Justice  Roberts in Carpenter v. United States - an important electronic  privacy case. It should go without saying that authoritarian impulses do  not lie solely with the robes from the left.)
 
 So, once again, what should be made clear here is that the left is  not concerned about “authoritarianism”, but simply rather losing the  ability to enforce their will on the public...
 
 mises.org
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