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US Supreme court issues more anti-democratic rulings
By John Burton and Don Knowland
29 June 2006
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On June 26, the US Supreme Court issued two further decisions
of an anti-democratic character. Earlier this month it handed
down one ruling giving police greater license to enter homes without
knocking, and another sanctioning the retroactive application
of an anti-immigrant law.
The first of Mondays rulings reversed a decision of the
Kansas Supreme Court requiring juries to find that aggravating
factors outweighed mitigating ones before imposing the death penalty.
The second struck down a Vermont campaign finance reform law that
limited contributions to, and expenditures by, political parties
and campaigns.
In both cases, the high courts extreme right-wing justices
ignored contrary state decisions, giving the lie to the claims
that they exercise judicial restraint and respect
states rights.
The Kansas death penalty law, which had been thrown out by
the states high court, allowed an accused to be executed
if the jury found that aggravating circumstances were not outweighed
by mitigating circumstances, thus shifting the legal burden of
proof on the defendant to show that he should not be executed.
Saying this law meant that in doubtful cases the jury must
return sentence of death, the Kansas Supreme Court in 2004
reversed the 1996 death sentence given Michael Lee Marsh. The
US Supreme Courts June 26 ruling returns him to death row.
The case was argued twice before the US Supreme Court, first
while Sandra Day OConnor was still on the court, and again
after Samuel A. Alito, Jr. replaced her as an associate justice.
Alito provided the fifth vote for the majority, joining the new
chief justice, John G. Roberts, Jr., and justices Clarence Thomas,
Antonin Scalia and Anthony M. Kennedy.
Justice David H. Souter dissented in an opinion joined by the
other three liberals on the court, justices John Paul Stevens,
Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer. Identifying dozens of
cases where convicted capital defendants were exonerated, Souter
called the Kansas law obtuse by any moral or social measure.
He elicited a rabid response from Scalia, who filed a separate
opinion concurring with the majority.
There exists in some parts of the world sanctimonious
criticism of Americas death penalty, Scalia wrote,
as somehow unworthy of a civilized society. (I say sanctimonious,
because most of the countries to which these finger-waggers belong
had the death penalty themselves until recentlyand indeed,
many of them would still have it if the democratic will prevailed.)
It is a certainty that the opinion of a near-majority of the United
States Supreme Court to the effect that our system condemns many
innocent defendants to death will be trumpeted abroad as vindication
of these criticisms. For that reason, I take the trouble to point
out that the dissenting opinion has nothing substantial to support
it.
In fact, since 1973 at least 123 people in 25 states have been
released from death row with evidence of their innocence, the
most recent being John Ballard in Florida on February 23, 2006.
What has nothing substantial to support it is Scalias
assertion that the 111 nations no longer conducting executions
are defying the democratic will.
In the campaign finance case, Sorrell v. Randall, the
Supreme Court issued six different opinions, none supported by
a five-justice majority. Breyerthe liberal most
known for seeking common ground with the right-wingersissued
the principal opinion, joined by Roberts and Alito, striking down
for the first time a limitation on contributions as too
low. The opinion went on to hold any spending limits unconstitutional,
giving tremendous advantages to office-seekers with private fortunes,
such as billionaire New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
More generally, the decision was a victory for the big money
interests that dominate and pervert the election process and all
but openly bribe political office-holders to carry out their corporate
agenda.
In a separate concurrence, Thomas, joined by Scalia, called
for prohibiting all contribution limits, which would require the
high court to overrule the 1976 precedent Buckley v. Valeo.
The three remaining liberalsSouter, Ginsburg and Stevensdissented,
saying Vermont could justify its law by demonstrating the
impact of the money chase on the democratic process.
See Also:
The US Supreme Courts no-knock
decision: a frontal assault on democratic rights
[20 June 2006]
US Supreme Court issues anti-immigrant
ruling
[26 June 2006]
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