Friday, December 18, 2020

A Dangerous Precedent


The Supreme Court Has Set A Ridiculously Dangerous Precedent





....When Texas’ Ken Paxton filed his suit with the United States Supreme Court, he did so with all of these above issues in mind.  He saw how legitimately unfair it was that Texas and other states could conduct elections with rules instituted by their various legislatures, within the bounds of Constitutional guidelines, yet other states could simply change their rules to be able to send out ballots, collect them, and count them, from voters who likely either would have never been engaged or worse, were cast through illegitimate means.

The Supreme Court didn’t even hear the case.  It isn’t like they heard the arguments or allowed for the public to be a part of understanding the complexity of the Paxton suit.  Instead, they refuse to hear it because States are allowed to set and follow their own election rules, even when those rules are unconstitutional or ignore the Constitutional process.  The dissenters, Alito and Thomas, both felt there were merits to the case that warranted the case being heard.  The seven other Justices, including the three Trump appointees, all vote against hearing the case.

This decision should have been 9 to 0 in favor of hearing the case, and later, 9 to 0 in favor of striking down all edicts, orders, and rules that were changed outside of the Constitutional process, and invalidating all of the ballots cast under such rules.  While this certainly would have eliminated some ballots cast through legitimate means, by voters who were truly interested in the process, that elimination would have not been the fault of anyone other than the people who changed the rules outside of the Constitutional bounds set forth by the US Constitution and the Constitutions and Charters in various states.  It is inherently unfair to those states that could follow the process.  It is a denial of the rights of law-abiding states, counties, and voters, in the interest of potentially denying the rights of, at best, a well-meaning unconstitutional and unlawful voter.  It said to states and counties, “Go nuts!  Do whatever you want with your election law and as long as someone doesn’t challenge it from within your state, you’re golden.”  In other words, if a state and activist judges decided to ignore the Constitutional process, for whatever reason they deem necessary, those changes cannot be challenged by other states, for any reason, whatsoever.

It is a dangerous precedent to set, as it neuters the Court in being the standard-bearers of Constitutionality for future interstate challenges to election laws.  In this particular case, Texas was seeking to have states enforce their own laws and Constitutional restrictions.  The Supreme Court decided, in part, to allow States to ignore any law or Constitutional mandate.  Even worse, 7 justices decided that Pennsylvania’s ignoring of a Supreme Court order was permissible.  Essentially, the United States Supreme Court has abdicated its Constitutional power to the executive.  For instance, what is stopping any state from introducing discriminatory laws?  Should the Supreme Court issue an order to prevent the enforcement of that law, what motivation, if any at all, does any state or county have to follow that order?  Josh Shapiro, who likely belongs behind bars for Contempt, now has less-than-zero motivation for ever following a Supreme Court order in the future.

In 2 to 4 short years, we will be conducting another election.  What, at this point, stops red states from instituting sweeping reforms that provide an unfair advantage to the right?  If a state is free to decide their own election and electoral laws and they are free from out-of-state challenges to those laws, why wouldn’t they choose to institute every advantage they want for their House and Senate races? If ignoring the Court carries with it no punishment, has the Supreme Court essentially made themselves completely irrelevant? Do States have any recourse against other States that engage in unconstitutional acts and will they ever be able to challenge them again?

It is a dangerous precedent; One that could mean the end of the Constitution as we know it and the end to the federal system detailed in the Constitution.

No comments:

Post a Comment