Subject: news of the day 6/13/05 |
From: Rick Hasen |
Date: 6/13/2005, 8:48 AM |
To: election-law |
The Chicago Tribune offers this
report, with the subhead: " Support for 1965 law must be first step
to court blacks, he says."
The Seattle Times offers this
report,
which begins: "More ballots than voters? Republicans, who made much of
that and other 2004 election discrepancies in their unsuccessful court
bid to unseat Democratic Gov. Christine Gregoire, found themselves with
the same problem at their King County convention in Bellevue yesterday."
See the last paragraph in this
essay by Jeffrey Rosen in the New York Times Magazine.
In a thoughtful and lengthy analysis
of the Texas redistricting case, Beldar predicts a summary affirmance
by the Supreme Court. I'm not so sure. That is certainly possible, and
perhaps it is the most likely result. But as I've indicated here,
the only rational way of reading the remand of the Texas redistricting
case is that Justice Kennedy wanted another crack at this issue, and he
might make up his mind about what to do by the time this case reemerges
at the Supreme Court. Also, if the Chief retires and is replaced by
someone more sympathetic to the policing of partisan gerrymanders, we
could well end up with a 5-justice majority reviving the cause of
action. I don't think we can predict anything with confidence on this
issue. (By the way, here
is another partisan gerrymandering case out of Pennsylvania that is
working its way through the courts.)
I have enabled comments.
David Schleicher has posted 'Politics
as Markets' Reconsidered: Natural Monopolies, Competitive Democratic
Philosophy and Primary Ballot Access in American Elections on SSRN
(forthcoming Supreme Court Economic Review). Here is the
abstract:
Moreover, competition is not too narrow a concept on which to base the regulation of elections, but rather too broad. There are a number of conflicting normative justifications for using competition as a guide for electoral regulation, each of which suggests different policy outcomes. Specifically, electoral competition can promote the ends of representative government or decisive electoral results, but policies that enhance one of these often harm the other. Rather than assume away the benefits of either representation or decisive outcomes, as much of "politics as markets" scholarship does, judges should balance these ends when determining the constitutionality of state regulation of electoral competition.
The Supreme Court has created one line of cases that does not suffer
from these flaws. Its holdings in primary ballot access cases like
Timmons v. Twin Cities Area New Party, California Democratic Party v.
Jones and Clingman v. Beaver, much pilloried by "politics as markets"
scholars, are in fact consistent with the application of economic
theory to electoral markets and feature a balanced approach to the
conflicting normative justifications for favoring competition. This
paper stands as a defense of the Court's approach to resolving the
constitutional law of primary ballot access as a matter of economic
theory and competitive democratic theory.
-- Rick Hasen William H. Hannon Distinguished Professor of Law Loyola Law School 919 Albany Street Los Angeles, CA 90015-1211 (213)736-1466 (213)380-3769 – fax rick.hasen@lls.edu http://electionlawblog.org http://www.lls.edu/academics/faculty/hasen.html