Threatening the judiciary threatens the foundations of democracy

This appeared in today’s edition of Capitol Weekly. As we approach the decision on Prop 8, it is important that we remember the critical role of the judiciary.

Back on Nov.12, Capitol Weekly published an opinion by the Flash Report’s Jon Fleischman entitled “When considering Proposition 8, remember Rose Bird.” His populist threat against a branch of government that is very intentionally designed to be counter-majoritarian deserves admiration for its moxie, if not its intellectual rigor.

Mr. Fleischman’s threat would be of little concern if it had been directed to the Governor or to a member of the Legislature. After all, the executive and legislative branches are supposed to be reflective of popular will. They are supposed to consider the will of their constituents when they make decisions. But by threatening judges, Mr. Fleischman attacks the important counter-majoritarian role that the judicial branch serves in our government. In so doing, he has attacked the foundations of our democracy and its delicately balanced separation of powers.

In drafting our nation’s constitution, James Madison urged protecting minority factions from the “tyranny of the majority.” In Federalist Number 10, Madison argues that under direct democracy, the rights of weaker minorities will inevitably be sacrificed on the altar of popular opinion.  Such democracies, said the father of our Constitution, “have in general been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their deaths.”

Throughout our country’s history, minorities have looked to the counter-majoritarian judicial branch to provide protections that the populist executive and legislative branches refused to provide. The most notable of these cases is Brown v. Board of Education. In 1954, the Supreme Court decided that racial segregation in schools was unlawful because it violated the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Reaching this unanimous opinion required the Supreme Court to ignore strong public opinion in favor of segregation. In short, it required the Supreme Court to exercise its power as an independent and counter-majoritarian branch of government.

There’s more over the flip.

In his article, Mr. Fleischman asks “what kind of hubris would a Supreme Court Justice have to show to justify overthrowing a Constitutional Amendment (Proposition 8) as… unconstitutional?” Although rhetorical, this question demonstrates a critical lack of historical perspective. After all, the constitutional challenge to Proposition 8 is not the first time oppressed minorities have challenged a constitutional amendment passed through the initiative process. And when the Supreme Court strikes Proposition 8, it will not be the first time the courts have exercised their responsibility to temper the will of the majority by striking a constitutional amendment as . . . yes, unconstitutional.

In 1964, Proposition 14 passed with an overwhelming 65 percent of the vote. Supported by similar groups as Prop 8, including the California Republican Assembly, Proposition 14 repealed the Rumsford Fair Housing Act and amended the California Constitution to allow property owners the unfettered right to refuse to rent or sell to people based upon their race, religion, sex, or physical handicap. In striking down Prop 14, the Supreme Court found that the voters of California overstepped their constitutional authority and violated the Equal Protection Clause.

The obligation of the Supreme Court to protect minorities from the tyrannical will of the majority applies equally to Proposition 8. Supreme Court Justice Joyce Kennard made this point saliently in her concurring opinion in In Re: Marriage Cases when she said that “Whether an unconstitutional denial of a fundamental right has occurred is not a matter to be decided by the executive or legislative branch, or by popular vote, but is instead an issue of constitutional law or resolution by the judicial branch of state government.”

But the Chief Justice, at least, has faced this down before.  In 1998, the right-wing came after him because they disagreed with an abortion related opinion.  The conservative movement has a history of challenging judges from the right, without a similar response from the left. The net result is a pressure to drift to the right. However, Chief Justice George has done an admirable job of resisting the pressure and making his decisions based upon the law and the facts before him. While I can certainly say that there are a slew of his opinions that I strongly disagree with, his integrity in those decisions is beyond reproach.

So, to those like Mr. Fleischman who threaten the judiciary, consider the fact that you are attempting to throw dirt on the form of governance that Madison and our founders built for us hundreds of years ago.  Do we really want justices who only protect rights when it is politically convenient?  The independence of our judiciary is simply too important to risk for an ephemeral political issue.  

Please Support Pro-Democracy Budget Reform Measure ACA 4.

Jon-Erik G. Storm is a candidate for State Assembly in the 33rd District in 2010. He is an attorney in Santa Maria, and lives with his wife, Lara, a 6th grade teacher, in Los Osos. The 33rd District is the least affordable place to live in California, something Jon-Erik is committed to changing. He is also committed to restoring representative democracy to California.

Speaker Karen Bass has proposed a Constitutional Amendment to restore democracy to California’s broken budget process. If passed, this bill would put the question to a vote as a referendum.

If this bill passes, we would have the opportunity to vote for it in a possible special election this June. I would also ask that you support that referendum. In order to get it passed, however, this measure requires two-thirds support in both Houses of the Legislature. Three Republican Assemblymembers and two Republican Senators must join with our Leadership on this. Please respectfully ask for the support of your legislative representatives, regardless of party.

Thank you for your attention.

Regards,

Jon-Erik G. Storm

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[email protected]

www.stormforassembly.com

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Yes, Having A Democrat Running A Democratic Committee Would Be A Catastrophe

Howie Klein notes that the next in line for the powerful House Ways and Means Committee, should Charlie Rangel succumb to his ethical struggles, is progressive Pete Stark.  This has many on Capitol Hill in a tizzy: including those who should have the loudest voice in determining Democratic chairmanships, anonymous operatives and industry lobbyists.

Next in seniority to Rangel is Ways and Means Health Subcommittee Chairman Fortney (Pete) Stark, D-Calif., who is given virtually no chance. “The conventional wisdom is he would have a tough time getting elected chairman,” said a Democrat close to leadership. From suggesting Republicans were sending troops to Iraq to die “for the president’s amusement” to referring to a former GOP lawmaker as a “little fruitcake,” Stark is prone to gaffes, sources said. “The guy behind [Rangel] is just not tenable. Republicans would have a field day,” an industry lobbyist said, while noting the business community would “go nuclear. It would just be open warfare.” A more viable pick might be Ways and Means Trade Subcommittee Chairman Sander Levin, D-Mich., who is next in seniority, although sources cautioned the cerebral Levin may be too deliberate for the high-profile job. Levin also appears to relish his duties at the helm of the trade panel. He is also seen as very much in tune with the labor movement, although industry sources said Levin was someone they could work with, as opposed to Stark. Also, the Democratic Caucus still largely respects the seniority system, the Democratic strategist said. “If you make the decision that Stark is too out there, then I don’t see how you go over Sandy,” he said. “He’s been a loyal member, and nobody would doubt he’s got the intellectual and legislative expertise for the job.”

As Matt Stoller notes, there are NINE anonymous sources in this article.  You’d think the people who presume to control Congress and who gets selected for particular committees wouldn’t be so cowardly, would you?  But of course, they just want to be behind the curtain, impervious to political pressure.

As a contrast, Pete Stark is open and honest about his views.  He has paid his dues and he’s next in line for the job.  His “radical” policy ideas include making health care accessible and affordable for every American and opposing a giveaway to the financial services industry.

Howie explains the double standard at work here:

Do you recall any of the Inside the Beltway types viewing a Republican appointee to any job thru the lenses of how that person might be accepted by working families or by organized labor? Or did I miss the issue where CongressDaily suggested that Elaine Chao might be the world’s absolute worst Labor Secretary because she loathes working people and doesn’t recognize their aspirations as legitimate or worthy of her attention?

Did anyone ever question whether one of Congress’ biggest corporate shills on environmental issues, Dirty Dick Pombo, would be unqualified to be Chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee because he was unanimously loathed by every single environmental group in the country? And what about that issue of CongressDaily– or any other daily– that pointed out that maybe Joe Barton (R-TX) shouldn’t be chairman of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce because the $1,315,660 in legalized reported bribes he’s taken from Big Oil over the years is far more than any other member of the House, more even than notorious Big Oil puppets like Don Young (R-AK- $964,763), Steve Pearce (R-NM- $804,815), Tom Delay (R-TX- $688,840), and Pete Sessions (R-TX- $582,264), and that all the green energy groups feel that Barton is an integral part of the energy problem in our country and decidedly not part of the solution? No, I must have missed it too.

Indeed.  This might be a good time to contact the Speaker and tell her that Democrats up for Democratic committee chairs shouldn’t be subject to a veto by industry.

PPIC Prop 8 Poll: Republicans and Evangelicals Motivated to Win

I will be on KRXA at 8 this morning to discuss this and other topics in California politics

The Public Policy Institute of California released a poll today about voter decision-making on Prop 8 (and some other props, including 1A and 4). Their conclusion is that Prop 8 passed because its Republican and evangelical supporters were highly motivated to pass it, whereas Prop 8 opponents lacked a similar sense of urgency. From the PPIC press release:

   * Evangelical or born-again Christians (85%) were far more likely than others (42%) to vote yes.

   * Three in four Republicans (77%) voted yes, two in three Democrats (65%) voted no, and independents were more closely divided (52% yes, 48% no).

   * Supporters of Republican presidential candidate John McCain were far more likely than those who backed President-elect Barack Obama to vote yes (85% vs. 30%).

   * Latinos (61%) were more likely than whites (50%) to vote yes; and 57 percent of Latinos, Asians, and blacks combined voted yes. (Samples sizes for Asians and blacks are too small to report separately.)

   * Voters without a college degree (62%) were far more likely than college graduates (43%) to vote yes.

   * While most voters (65%) consider the outcome of Proposition 8 to be very important, the measure’s supporters (74%) are far more likely than those who voted no (59%) to view the outcome as very important.

The poll also indicated that support for same-sex marriage was split, 47% in favor, 48% against, and 5% opposed. That suggests to me that the Yes on 8 campaign’s lying ads about the effects of Prop 8 had some effect on voter behavior.

Still, if the poll’s conclusions about voter motivation are accurate, then it adds more fuel to the criticisms of the No on 8 campaign for not having done an effective job in mobilizing its own base to vote, and not doing a good enough job of creating a sense of urgency around the proposition – and in reaching out to other communities, including communities of color. If and when this goes back to the ballot we can expect the anti-marriage forces to be highly motivated to vote. Our side, the supporters of marriage equality, need to be motivated as well.

The PPIC poll has a wealth of other information on state politics, from approval ratings of the governor and the legislature (Arnold fares better than the Legislature – 42% approve of Arnold, 49% disapprove, 9% no opinion; and a whopping 66% disapprove of the Legislature) and public opinion on the initiative process.

CA-31: Becerra Out, Garcetti In?

Xavier Becerra, a Congressman from Hollywood, is at the least being strongly considered for the post of US Trade Representative and may have already accepted the job.  Becerra is in the House leadership as Vice President of the Democratic caucus, and while he voted for NAFTA he has since regretted doing so, and he led the fight against CAFTA and other trade agreements which he felt did not have the proper safeguards, or labor and environmental standards.  And channeling my inner David Sirota, the fact that pro-business conservatives are worried about the direction Becerra will take US trade policy confirms that he would be an excellent choice:

And now Business Week reports on some rumblings of opposition from the pro-business and free-trade camp:

Philip Levy, who’s now with the conservative American Enterprise Institute, told the mag that the choice is “troubling,” arguing that “to oppose Nafta is in many ways to lash out symbolically against trade.” A business lobbyist added to the mag that he and his colleagues are “pretty concerned.”

Well, I’m sold.

If Obama brushes off the concerns of the American Enterprise Institute (and really, everyone should) and Becerra gets the job, a very safe Democratic seat in the heart of Los Angeles would be up for grabs.  Considering the density of the city it’s actually a pretty large district (with lots of it in rapidly gentrifying Hollywood), and has a good deal of Latino voters.  However, this would be up for grabs in a special election, and the universe of special election voters is probably a smaller Hispanic universe than on a normal Election Day, so I wouldn’t say that only a Latino candidate could win here. In fact, LA City Council President Eric Garcetti represents a good portion of the district on the council.

Garcetti would be a progressive leader in the Congress and a major upgrade.  Becerra is a member of the Progressive Caucus and generally solid on the issues, but he’s not particularly outspoken, and as part of the leadership team, wouldn’t stray too much from the party line.  On the other hand, Garcetti is a smart, committed young leader, a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford and a graduate of the London School of Economics who has led on so many progressive issues in the city it’s hard to even count them all.  It would be great to have someone in the Congress with the background of dealing with key urban issues from graffiti to housing to development, while at the same time having led on important national initiatives like clean money, the war in Iraq (the LA City Council was among the first to pass a resolution opposing it) and renewable energy.  Garcetti jumped aboard the Barack Obama campaign from almost the very beginning as a California chairperson, so he would be able to tap that network of organizers pretty easily.  He would make a fantastic member of Congress, among the best in the nation in my view. (and that’s not just because he appeared on Calitics Radio on primary election night!)

Rep. Becerra would get to set trade policy, and Los Angeles would experience no dropoff in leadership.  Everybody wins!

CA-31: Becerra Out, Garcetti In?

Xavier Becerra, a Congressman from Hollywood, is at the least being strongly considered for the post of US Trade Representative and may have already accepted the job.  Becerra is in the House leadership as Vice President of the Democratic caucus, and while he voted for NAFTA he has since regretted doing so, and he led the fight against CAFTA and other trade agreements which he felt did not have the proper safeguards, or labor and environmental standards.  And channeling my inner David Sirota, the fact that pro-business conservatives are worried about the direction Becerra will take US trade policy confirms that he would be an excellent choice:

And now Business Week reports on some rumblings of opposition from the pro-business and free-trade camp:

Philip Levy, who’s now with the conservative American Enterprise Institute, told the mag that the choice is “troubling,” arguing that “to oppose Nafta is in many ways to lash out symbolically against trade.” A business lobbyist added to the mag that he and his colleagues are “pretty concerned.”

Well, I’m sold.

If Obama brushes off the concerns of the American Enterprise Institute (and really, everyone should) and Becerra gets the job, a very safe Democratic seat in the heart of Los Angeles would be up for grabs.  Considering the density of the city it’s actually a pretty large district (with lots of it in rapidly gentrifying Hollywood), and has a good deal of Latino voters.  However, this would be up for grabs in a special election, and the universe of special election voters is probably a smaller Hispanic universe than on a normal Election Day, so I wouldn’t say that only a Latino candidate could win here. In fact, LA City Council President Eric Garcetti represents a good portion of the district on the council.

Garcetti would be a progressive leader in the Congress and a major upgrade.  Becerra is a member of the Progressive Caucus and generally solid on the issues, but he’s not particularly outspoken, and as part of the leadership team, wouldn’t stray too much from the party line.  On the other hand, Garcetti is a smart, committed young leader, a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford and a graduate of the London School of Economics who has led on so many progressive issues in the city it’s hard to even count them all.  It would be great to have someone in the Congress with the background of dealing with key urban issues from graffiti to housing to development, while at the same time having led on important national initiatives like clean money, the war in Iraq (the LA City Council was among the first to pass a resolution opposing it) and renewable energy.  Garcetti jumped aboard the Barack Obama campaign from almost the very beginning as a California chairperson, so he would be able to tap that network of organizers pretty easily.  He would make a fantastic member of Congress, among the best in the nation in my view. (and that’s not just because he appeared on Calitics Radio on primary election night!)

Rep. Becerra would get to set trade policy, and Los Angeles would experience no dropoff in leadership.  Everybody wins!

UPDATE: In this LA Times article, Sen. Gil Cedillo is also mentioned as a possible candidate.  I’m a fan of Cedillo’s as well, particularly his leadership on the DREAM Act and his advocacy for comprehensive immigration reform.  Garcetti is quoted in the article saying “it was premature to speculate on a possible run but did not rule it out.”

Wednesday Open Thread

Courtesy of your friendly neighborhood open thread people.

• A federal judge today appeared to signal that he will mandate the early release of California inmates in order to control the unconstitutional prison health care disaster.  This is happening because of a total failure of leadership from the top down over 30 years on prison policy, so they have no right whatsoever to object, but early release is not the final answer, only a temporary stopgap.  If sentencing is unchanged, if the root causes are not addressed, we’ll be returning to this issue again and again.  It’s also unclear if terminally ill prisoners would be the ones released, which would make no sense since they would merely become a burden on the strapped regular health care system.

• Lawyers in Santa Monica for Roman Polanski are seeking a dismissal of his notorious underage sex charge which has caused him to be in exile in Paris for over 30 years.  They’re basing their motion on revelations of prosecutorial misconduct in the HBO movie “Roman Polanski: Wanted and Desired.”

• I’m a fan of Citizens for Repsonsibility and Ethics in Washington, but lumping in a $145 charge from Rep. Loretta Sanchez for culturally appropriate Vietnamese attire during meetings in her Vietnamese-heavy district with Sarah Palin’s $150,000 clothing charge during the fall election is borderline insane.

• In other campaign finance news, MapLight.org, a Berkeley based watchdog group, is suing the state for electronic voting records for the legislators.  That would be very, very helpful for us bloggers.  Combining those with MapLight’s campaign finance tools would be even more powerful. Here’s their release.

• Village idiot Jim Boren thinks Darrell Steinberg represents politics as usual because some of his committee appointments have gone to the same Senators who held them under Don Perata.  Uh, Jim?  There are 19 committees and 24 Democratic State Senators.  Everyone who doesn’t have a chairmanship is in the leadership.  Do the math.

• Here’s one local election where the winner prevailed by one – 1 – vote.

A Slew of Structural Reform Proposals

Today, the Democratic Legislative Leaders proposed ACA 4, which would eliminate the 2/3 vote requirement for a budget passed before the Constitutionally mandated June 15 deadline. Check out Speaker Bass chatting about the plan; it’s got some stuff that we need, but there’s still a lot more to be done.

Some other proposals out there are SCA 5 by Loni Hancock, which would also eliminate the 2/3 budget requirement as well as changing the ability to put some votes into referendum and the effective dates on other bills.  Mimi Walters (R-OC) has SCA 1 to allow a simple majority for any budget that doesn’t exceed the previous year’s budget by 5%.

These are all piece meal measures.  The 2/3 vote for the budget is certainly important. It’s allowed the Republicans to hijack the budget to get at unrelated bills (see their attempts at attacking AB32’s carbon limits last year). In the good times, the budget vote is really the most important vote of the year.  Eliminating the 2/3 requirement would be a boon, especially when we have a Democratic governor.

However, in order to build a more perfect government, we need to look at more than just the budgetary vote.  As we’ve seen, we can’t do a whole lot with a majority budget vote if the majority doesn’t also control both the spending and the revenue sides of the equation.  Thus, the more powerful measure is one that ends both the 2/3 majority on the budget and the 2/3 majority on taxation.  As of right now, I don’t think such a measure has been filed.

But, there is another way: the Constitutional convention.  In fact, Assemblyman Sam Blakeslee, R-San Luis Obispo, and new State Sen. Mark DeSaulnier, D-Martinez have both filed resolutions calling for a constitutional convention. DeSaulnier’s is Senate Concurrent Resolution 3.  A convention would probably be our best chance to really get a government that works.

All of these will be pretty difficult to get out of the legislature.  We might be able to get some of compromise that looks something like Walters’ SCA 5, but real reform might take a bit longer to emerge from the Legislature.