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Court of appeals to reconsider postponing California recall
election
By Don Knowland
22 September 2003
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The US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit voted Friday
to have an 11-judge panel of the court rehear the case that resulted
in a September 15 ruling postponing the October 7 gubernatorial
recall election to March 2004. Oral arguments in the case will
be televised live on C-Span on Monday at 1 p.m. Pacific Standard
Time.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed the case challenging
the continued use of punch-card voting machines in six heavily
working class California counties because they invalidate votes
at a rate two to four times that of newer technologies in place
in the rest of California. The three-judge panel on September
15 ruled that use of the punch-card machines would violate the
equal protection clause of the US Constitution because voters
in those counties would have their votes validated at a significantly
lower rate than in the rest of the state.
The Ninth Circuit panel ruling merely followed the legal arguments
of the US Supreme Court in the Bush v. Gore case in 2000,
handing the election to Bush over Gore. In fact, the recall presents
a stronger case for asserting violation of equal protection than
did Bush v. Gore, where the right-wing majority applied
the courts prior one-man one-vote decisions in a completely
cynical and dishonest fashion.
Bush v. Gore in effect assumed that voting personnel
in a recount could not be trusted to honestly discern the intent
of the voters, a standard long employed in Florida and many
others states, when faced with hanging and dimpled chads and the
like. Although no prior court had ever suggested that equal protection
outlawed anything other than intentionally giving votes in some
geographic areas less weight than those in other locations, the
Supreme Court ruled that uniform standards were required between
and within counties for counting undervotes generated
by punch-card machines.
The Supreme Court then refused to give Florida time to do the
recount using uniform standards, an act that even most conservative
legal commentators and scholars have been unwilling or unable
to justify. The result was that many thousands of ballots were
not counted in the cliffhanger Florida election, the antithesis
of a democratic result.
In contrast, the September 15 ruling of the three-judge Ninth
Circuit panel rested on the fact that at least 40,000 votes in
the punch-card counties would be invalidated. The ruling maximized
the chance that all votes would be counted in a critical election.
Weighed against that basic democratic consideration was Californias
interest in having the recall election held in the timeframe called
for by its own constitution. The recall provision arguably embodies
a conception of democratic rights, at least in the abstract. But
the September 15 ruling gave short shrift to that interest, pointing
out that had supporters of the recall submitted the required signatures
six weeks later the recall election would have been placed on
the March 2004 primary ballot anyway.
That court was well aware that the recall was initiated by
the extreme right wing of the Republican Party and financed by
multimillionaire reactionary Darrel Issa, precisely to overturn
the November 2002 election of Democrat Gray Davis. Moreover, it
is conventional wisdom that the Democratic turnout will be much
higher for the March primary election than in October, to Daviss
benefit.
The three judges who halted the October 7 election were all
appointed by Democratic presidents and are generally considered
liberal, at least on civil rights. Whether any or all of them
were seeking to turn Bush v. Gore into a weapon against
the Republicans or were merely carrying out their judicial duty
to implement the law as established in that case cannot
be ascertained. Such processes are not always fully conscious
in any event.
Much more significant is the fact that the ruling delaying
the October 7 recall has touched off a political firestorm. The
right-wing supporters of the recall charged that the judges acted
for political reasons rather than to uphold the law, a charge
the media did little to dispel. The right wing has long alleged
that the Ninth Circuit is a liberal court off the edge (most recently
in its rulings that the Pledge of Allegiance is unconstitutional
and vacating dozens of deaths sentences imposed by judges rather
than juries), which is routinely reversed by an eminently sensible
Supreme Court.
The 11 judges randomly drawn from the entire 25-judge Ninth
Circuit to rehear the matter did not include any from the three-judge
panel. They are widely viewed as much more conservative than the
three-judge panel that ruled on September 15, even though eight
of them were appointed by Democratic presidents, almost all by
President Clinton. The panel includes three hard right-wing Reagan/Bush
appointees (two with a supposed libertarian streak), two liberal
Democrats, five centrist Democrats and a moderate Republican appointed
by Clinton.
The 11-judge panel can affirm the September 15 equal protection
ruling, overturn it outright, or decide to hold off hearing any
equal protection challenges until after the October 7 election.
Overturning it outright would require either a ruling that Bush
v. Gore does not apply, or a finding that the facts do not
establish the likelihood that votes will be more fairly counted
if the recall occurs in March. In that vein, some efforts have
been made by pro-recall lawyers in the last week to make a factual
showing that combining the recall election with the primary election
in March will cause confusion and problems, despite the use of
newer technologies.
The leading legal newspaper in California, in an article to
run Monday, says it is almost a certainty that the decision delaying
the recall election will be overturned. That may be the likely
result, but the calculations are not so simple. Some of the following
considerations do suggest a reversal:
* The Ninth Circuit can spare the Supreme Court doing its own
dirty work by reversing and permitting the recall to proceed on
October 7.
* Over a half dozen states still use punch-card systems. Upholding
the September 15 result will automatically support legal challenges
to punch-card systems in those states and further complicate upcoming
elections.
* The presiding judge of the Ninth Circuit supposedly is on
a mission to undo the Ninth Circuits reputation as a group
of judges that has lost its legal moorings.
But it will not be easy to square a decision that permits an
election with glaring punch-card discrepancies with the decision
in Bush v. Gore. Such a result will itself strongly suggest
naked partisanship, while reminding all of the blatantly political
nature of the latter decision. Distinguishing Bush v. Gore
on technical legal grounds will convince few.
Regardless of the judicial result, it is undeniable that the
courts, like the election system, have become a highly charged
and unstable arena. Deepening social polarization has led to a
breakdown of the old mechanisms by which political and class conflicts
were mediated.
This process is increasingly recognized by prominent legal
commentators. Edward Lazarus, himself a former law clerk on the
Ninth Circuit and the Supreme Court, and author of a well-known
book on the current Supreme Court, on September 18 produced a
column on the decision to postpone the recall on the leading US
Internet legal site Findlaw.com. According to Lazarus:
Bush v. Gore was a tragedy. In
one of the most nakedly partisan opinions in Court history, a
narrow five-Justice conservative majority handed the presidency
to a political compatriot. It did so by jerry-rigging an analytically
indefensible argument that the Florida Supreme Courts approach
to the hand recount of punch card ballots violated the Equal Protection
Clause of the federal Constitution.
Now the farce is in full swing. Three quite liberal judges
from the Ninth Circuit, the most liberal court of appeals in the
country, have taken Bush v. Gores much-criticized
principles for judicial intervention into elections and applied
them in the California recall....
There is, of course, a delicious political irony in watching
judicial liberals hoist the conservatives on their own petard.
But the intellectual amusement just isnt worth the price.
Our judicial branch is suffering an integrity meltdown. And that
meltdown could not come at a worse time....
Th[e judiciarys] job will be all the harder if
the judicial branch continues to undermine its credibility by
issuing a decision such as Bush v. Gore, and the recent
recall decision. These decisions are plainly little more that
political tit-for-tat, dressed up in supposedly august judicial
robes, and the public will doubtless perceive them as such....
If this decision were an isolated incident, perhaps it
would not matter except to Californians. But it is not, and it
should matter to every Americanfor it occurs at a time when
ideological divisions have already seriously eroded the integrity
of the judicial branch.
In fact, Lazarus here bemoans a development that can only continue
to accelerate. Political tensions and social polarization have
become so intense in the United States today that the courts are
no longer capable of playing a mediating role and preserving an
image of standing above the fray.
See Also:
The courts, the California recall and
the crisis of the US political system
[19 September 2003]
Socialist candidate pledges to continue
campaign
John Christopher Burton responds to court ruling delaying
California recall vote
[16 September 2003]
Federal appeals court postpones California
recall election until March
[16 September 2003]
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