National Review Online
Thursday, July 01, 2021
Legal constitutionalists and political conservatives
have had reason to be disappointed at times with the Roberts Court, but today
is not one of those days. The Court concluded its 2020-21 term with a pair of
6-3 rulings written by George W. Bush’s appointees (Chief Justice John Roberts
and Justice Samuel Alito) and joined by all six Republican appointees to the
Court. Both reached the right conclusions. Both will advance the progress of
the law toward a vibrant space for democracy, by protecting free speech and free
and fair elections.
Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Bonta arose
from the California attorney general’s office, mainly under Kamala Harris and
Xavier Becerra, trampling the First Amendment rights of nonprofit advocacy
groups to the privacy of their donors. It was not a coincidence that California
launched that initiative at the height of the Tea Party movement. Its draconian
scope applied not only to California charities but to any nonprofit that
solicited donations in the state — even Chinese dissident groups. In an age of
cancel culture and ever-increasing digital surveillance, the Court found, the
risks of harassment and reprisals “are heightened in the 21st century and seem
to grow with each passing year, as anyone with access to a computer can compile
a wealth of information about anyone else, including such sensitive details as
a person’s home address or the school attended by his children.”
The cause of donor rights brought together possibly the
broadest coalition of interest groups on the same side of an issue in the
Court’s history. Even the Biden administration’s brief admitted that Harris and
Becerra had disregarded the importance of protecting the privacy of donors by
maintaining donor lists on a system the trial court found to be “an open door
for hackers.” Given the record of Harris and Becerra, Roberts wrote, their
office’s “assurances of confidentiality are not worth much.” The Court also
found “a dramatic mismatch” between the California AG’s claimed interest in
fighting charitable fraud and its methods, with “not a single, concrete
instance” in which collecting this information advanced its law-enforcement
purpose. AFPF v. Bonta may be a loss for the likes of Kamala
Harris and Xavier Becerra, but it is a victory for the free-speech and
association rights of people and groups spanning the entirety of the political
spectrum. It is also a shot across the bow against the Democrats’ “For the
People Act,” which similarly invades the privacy of donors.
Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee upheld
two Arizona laws that are common across many states: a ban on counting
provisional ballots if they are cast in person in the wrong precinct, and a ban
on “ballot harvesting,” preventing activist groups from collecting and handling
another person’s completed mail-in ballot. Both types of rules are regularly
decried as “voter suppression” by hysterical Democrats. The Court properly
found that Arizona had a legitimate interest both in assigning voters to
precincts and in protecting the sanctity of the secret ballot from the threat
of voter intimidation or fraud presented by third parties handling ballots.
The Court rightly rejected efforts to cast the Arizona
legislature’s careful work as driven by racial discrimination simply because
one state legislator who brought ballot harvesting to the legislature’s
attention had also engaged in wild conspiracy theories. Alito shut down future
efforts to apply such theories: “legislators who vote to adopt a bill are not
the agents of the bill’s sponsor or proponents. Under our form of government,
legislators have a duty to exercise their judgment and to represent their constituents.
It is insulting to suggest that they are mere dupes or tools.”
Democrats routinely file suits under Section 2 of the
Voting Rights Act against any change in election law passed by Republican
legislatures. Alito’s opinion, the Court’s first applying Section 2 to
challenges to voting procedures, emphasized that the statutory language passed
when the statute was last amended in 1982 focuses on whether state laws have
the overall result of restricting the access of racial minorities to voting —
it does not prohibit every single rule that makes voting marginally less
convenient. “The core” of Section 2, Alito wrote, “is the requirement that
voting be ‘equally open.’ The statute’s reference to equal ‘opportunity’ may
stretch that concept to some degree to include consideration of a person’s
ability to use the means that are equally open. But equal openness remains the
touchstone.”
The Court provided five “guideposts” that will help
courts decide cases and dispose of flimsy ones: courts should have a sense of
proportion about “the size of the burden imposed. . . . Mere inconvenience
cannot be enough”; courts should ask how far “a voting rule departs from what
was standard practice” when the statute was written in 1982; small disparities
in the impact of laws on minority-group voting are less likely to violate
Section 2, especially where the voter-suppression theory relies on differences
“with respect to employment, wealth, and education”; courts “must consider the
opportunities provided by a State’s entire system of voting” rather than
individual provisions; and courts should also consider “the strength of the
state interests served,” specifically including the powerful state interest in
preventing fraud. “It should go without saying,” Alito added, “that a State may
take action to prevent election fraud without waiting for it to occur and be
detected within its own borders.”
The Court’s renewed focus on the language of the law
passed by Congress, and its guidance in how to apply it in practice, is
welcome. The doors of the federal courthouse should always remain open to
protect all Americans — and black Americans in particular, given the nation’s
painful history — from laws that result in real discrimination in who is able
to vote. But federal law was never intended to put every state in the Union in
a permanent straitjacket to the point where even temporary emergency voting
rules adopted to manage a once-in-a-century pandemic can never be
revisited. Brnovich is bad news for junk lawsuits such as the
Justice Department’s suit against Georgia. But it is good news for letting the
people’s representatives protect free, fair, open, and orderly elections. Trust
in democracy requires nothing less.
With a series of high-stakes cases on the docket for next
term on hot-button issues, we can only say of the Roberts Court after reading
today’s opinions: a good start.
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