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Chapter 9. The Judiciary: The Guardians of America’s Liberal Tradition. 9-2. Bush v. Gore. The Supreme Court decided the election of 2000 a month after voters had gone to the polls One of the key debates was on voter intent in Florida
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Chapter 9 The Judiciary: The Guardians of America’s Liberal Tradition
9-2 Bush v. Gore • The Supreme Court decided the election of 2000 a month after voters had gone to the polls • One of the key debates was on voter intent in Florida • Other issues revolved around Florida court decisions and the Legislature
9-3 Judicial Review and Republican Government • Judicial Power • Political questions may eventually turn into judicial questions • The courts have gained more power, yet still remain passive especially in issues involving judicial review • Justices serving for life, is believed to be a protection for liberalism
9-4 Judicial Review and Republican Government • Federalists and Anti-federalists on the Judiciary • Once again, there was debate about how much power the courts would wield • Some thought the courts would undermine a representative government • Others felt the courts would be too weak to be a problem
9-5 Judicial Review and Republican Government • The Restraining Role of the Judiciary • Federalists and Anti-Federalists debated the judiciary’s role • Some saw it as an anchor to stabilize the government to protect individual liberties against democratic whims
9-6 The Judiciary In Defense of the Constitution • The early days of the Court were marked by questionable leadership • The Judiciary Act of 1801 was used to “pack” the courts with Federalist leaning judges • Jefferson waged a war with many courts fearing they would destroy liberty
9-7 The Judiciary In Defense of the Constitution • Marbury v. Madison • Marbury asked the court to force Madison to deliver the court commissions • Justice Marshall wrote that Jefferson and Madison needed to deliver the commissions to Marbury • But the commissions were invalid because part of the law was unconstitutional
9-8 The Judiciary In Defense of the Constitution • The Marshall Court’s Achievement • Marshall worked to raise the prestige of the Court by demonstrating impartiality • As a small body, Marshall wrote most of the opinions and worked on the other Justices so the opinions would be nearly unanimous • Marshall also practiced judicial restraint
9-9 The Judiciary In Defense of the Constitution • Nationalism • Marshall centralized the government more than some would have liked • He left a nationalist legacy that would endure for generations • One such issue was the banking done by the government
9-10 The Judiciary In Defense of the Constitution • Nationalism- McCulloch v. Maryland • Marshall upheld the bank as a classic statement of nationality • Marshall stated the constitution was the supreme law, but a bank was not a delegated power, it was an implied power • A state did not have the power to tax a legitimate part of the federal government
9-11 The Judiciary In Defense of the Constitution • Nationalism’s Limits • Jackson argued that the elected officials should be the ones to interpret the Constitution, not the courts • Marshall continued to make rulings that established the Court as the principal guardian of the Constitution and make it equal with the other branches
9-12 The Judiciary In Defense of the Constitution • Dred Scott and the Limits of Judicial Review • The decision damaged the reputation of the court • The case centered around a slave who made frequent trips to free areas • He sued claiming he should be free
9-13 The Judiciary In Defense of the Constitution • Dred Scott and the Limits of Judicial Review (continued) • The court ruled that the Missouri Compromise was unconstitutional • It also ruled that African Americans had no right to sue in court- they didn’t have rights at all • The Civil War settled the issue
9-14 The Court and Property Rights • Slouching Toward Laissez-faire • In another court case, the Court restricted the power of the government • Parts of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act were ruled unconstitutional • Manufacturing was deemed intrastate, and the Act did not apply • The court protected property rights
9-15 The Court and Property Rights • Substantive Due Process • The Court made another ill-advised decision that restricted the powers of state and local governments • Other decisions reinforced the Laissez-faire mode of operation for government
9-16 The Court and Property Rights • The Judicial Challenge to the New Deal • The court resolved to adhere to economic rights • The Court ruled against federal laws involving wages and against state laws • The court angered many by not yielding to any economic reform
9-17 The Court and Property Rights • The Constitutional Revolution of 1937 • FDR wanted to pack the court with pro New Deal Justices • The Court continually struck down New Deal legislation on various grounds • Finally, some of the Justices changed their minds, and economic legislation has become generally constitutional
9-18 The Judiciary in Defense of Programmatic Rights • Ending Forced Segregation: the Brown Case and the Civil Rights Movement • Plessy v. Ferguson upheld segregation laws in the states • The Brown decision rested on sociological and psychological grounds • The Court was becoming more activist
9-19 The Judiciary in Defense of Programmatic Rights • Into the “Political Thicket”: The Court Upholds a Right to Fair Representation • The Warren Court became actively involved in deciding voting districts • Some felt the court was exceeding it bounds, others applauded the decisions saying it was good for democracy
9-20 The Judiciary in Defense of Programmatic Rights • A New Era of Substantive Due Process • Court cases have extended rights to include privacy as a right • Roe v. Wade continued the “right of privacy” and had strong political and policy effects • The Court’s activism continued
9-21 The Judiciary in Defense of Programmatic Rights • The Complex Legacy of the Brown Decision • A year after Brown, the court issued another ruling requiring schools to be integrated and had to rely on other governments to accomplish this, so it took quite some time • De jure discrimination was easier to fix than de facto deiscrimination
9-22 The Judiciary in Defense of Programmatic Rights • “Constitutional Policy” and Statutory Interpretation • Katzenbach v. McClung allowed Congress broad use of the commerce clause in some non-commerce areas • Through other court decisions, many administrative laws and other policies were converted to rights that needed protection
9-23 Has the Rights Revolution Run Its Course? • The Senate Rejects Judge Bork • Bork was nominated by Reagan and subject to bitter attacks by Democrats • His hearings reopened debates on the meaning of the Constitution and the Court’s interpretation of it • In the 1990’s Congress and the Court sparred over issues of employment
9-24 Has the Rights Revolution Run Its Course? • The “Center” Holds • Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey upheld the Roe decision in part because the court did not want to reverse an earlier decision • Some thought the Court was restraining itself too much by not revisiting past decisions to see if they were correct
9-25 Box 1 – Nuts and Bolts • Essential Legal Concepts • Criminal law cases • Misdemeanors • Felonies • Civil law cases • Contracts • Torts • Public, Constitutional, Administrative law
9-26 Box 2 – Nuts and Bolts • The Courts • There are federal and state systems with state courts doing most of the work • There are district, appellate and the Supreme Court at the federal level • The Supreme Court controls the cases it gets on appeal, but must accept cases the Constitution designates for it
9-27 Box 3 – Nuts and Bolts • How the Supreme Court Considers a Case • Once the court agrees to hear a case, it asks for input from the litigants • Oral arguments allow the Justices to query the attorneys for both sides • Secret deliberations are taken, and then opinions are written
9-28 Box 4 – Civil Rights • Civil Rights for the Disabled • Since 1990, courts have been working to decide the extent of handicapped individual’s rights • The Court recently decided that while the rights are important, forcing a business to excessive costs for handicapped people is not acceptable
9-29 Box 5 – Nuts and Bolts • The Department of Justice • The Attorney General is a cabinet member and the government’s lawyer • There are other levels with administrators approved by the Senate • There are several U.S. Attorneys in every state to handle the federal cases
9-30 Box 6 – Nuts and Bolts • Judicial Confirmation • The president gathers advice on who to nominate • The president checks with key Senators under the process of senatorial courtesy • The full Senate may confirm the nominated judge, after committee hearings on the candidate
9-31 Box 7 – Civil Liberties • Self Incrimination: Privileges vs. Punishment • McKune Warden, et. al. vs. Lile showed a difference between a right and a privilege • The Court ruled that incentives can be removed and that does not infringe upon any rights of the individual
9-32 Box 8 – Contemporary Public Policy • Obscenity and the Internet • Congress has attempted to legislate restrictions on what can be viewed over the Internet by minors • These laws have been challenged as restrictions on free speech, and in one case, the Court has agreed