Oh my God! Chief Justice Rehnquist has died.
Tag Archives: rehnquist
Roberts and Romer
I’m very intrigued by the news about Judge Roberts and Romer v. Evans. My initial cautious admiration had been turning into worriment in the last couple of weeks, with all the news about his cocky Reagan-era views, but this reassures me a bit. It doesn’t mean a whole lot – again, whom you represent or advise as a lawyer doesn’t necessarily say anything about your own views. But I can’t imagine that Antonin Scalia or Clarence Thomas would have volunteered, pro bono, to help out the gays.
On the other hand, the issue in Romer v. Evans was pretty egregious. It involved the following amendment to the Colorado constitution:
“Neither the State of Colorado, through any of its branches or departments, nor any of its agencies, political subdivisions, municipalities or school districts, shall enact, adopt or enforce any statute, regulation, ordinance or policy whereby homosexual, lesbian or bisexual orientation, conduct, practices or relationships shall constitute or otherwise be the basis of or entitle any person or class of persons to have or claim any minority status, quota preferences, protected status or claim of discrimination. This Section of the Constitution shall be in all respects self-executing.”
In short, the amendment (which passed) legalized all types of discrimination against gays and lesbians – in employment, in housing, in whatever. Opposition to that amendment wouldn’t necessarily translate to sympathy for gay marriage or other gay-rights issues. As Arthur Leonard says in the linked article above, “There is certainly a difference between striking down laws that impose second-class citizenship on a class of people and supporting more affirmative rights for such people, and I don’t think a judge’s position on one necessary predicts his position on the other.” (It could be argued, of course, that same-sex marriage bans impose second-class citizenship on a class of people, but I know what he’s getting at.)
So like everything else that has been uncovered thus far, it doesn’t say much about Roberts other than that he’s not a Scalia or Thomas. Well, it also says he might not be a Rehnquist.
But also, Roberts, at age 50, would be the youngest member of the current Court by seven years. (Thomas is 57.) Scalia will be 70 next year. While age does not predict attitude, someone born in 1955 will have grown up in a different cultural context than someone born in 1936. Judge Roberts was 14 at the time of the Stonewall riots, for instance. Not that that necessarily means anything, but it’s something to keep in mind.
Anyway, this whole thing is intriguing. I guess we’ll see what it means.
Blawgs/Seminole
My finger seems to be normal again. That’s good.
Unfortunately, my throat has been sorer today than yesterday. I decided to take the day off from work. After Matt and I had lunch at Lemongrass, I went to the hardware store and bought new air-conditioner filters. Hopefully that’ll make things better.
I also went through my several boxes of memorabilia today (from childhood, adolescence, high school and college) and separated out about half the stuff to toss in the trash. God, I’ve been such a packrat. I don’t know why I was keeping my high school U.S. History notes or my DC Heroes role-playing game.
In other news, I’ve been thinking about starting a law blog (or “blawg”). Lately I’ve been writing lots of law-type stuff, and I’m not sure how interesting it is to my readers. On the other hand, I don’t know if I’d want to write about legal stuff enough to justify a daily law blog.
But this afternoon (and this will sound random) I finished reading Justice Souter’s dissent in Seminole Tribe v. Florida, a major Eleventh Amendment case from 1996. I studied the case in law school and saw a reference to it again recently, so I decided to print out Souter’s dissent and reread it. It’s a brilliant piece of scholarship, and it’s nearly three times as long as Rehnquist’s misguided majority opinion. Over the past 100+ years, the Supreme Court has fucked up the Eleventh Amendment beyond belief.
Anyway, I like having just one blog. Even if it doesn’t have a consistent focus, and some readers might be thrown off by some of the topics, this blog’s a reflection of me and of what’s going through my brain at any given time. And again, I don’t think I’m obsessive enough to keep up a daily blawg.
So I might as well just keep the one.