From Think Progress
(Click HERE to read the entire article)
In an interview
with the New York Times' Adam Liptak, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg
offered a grim assessment of the Court where she so often finds herself
leading a four justice dissent - the Roberts Court is "one of the most
activist courts in history."
As an historic matter, this is a pretty staggering claim. The
Supreme Court in 1905 handed down a decision called Lochner v. New York
that is now widely taught in American law schools as an example of how
judges should never, ever behave. Lochner treated any law improving
workplace conditions or helping workers to obtain an adequate wage as
constitutionally suspect. And Lochner was hardly an anomalous moment in
the Court's history.
Thirteen years after Lochner the Supreme Court struck down federal
child labor laws in a decision that is also widely taught as an example
of inexcusable judicial activism. In 1895, the Supreme Court rendered
the country virtually powerless against monopolies and other powerful
combinations of corporate power, and then it held an income tax on the
wealthiest Americans unconstitutional just a few months later. The
Supreme Court has, with rare exception, been a largely malign force in
American history.
There is, however, one important way in which the Roberts Court is
distinguishable from the Courts that decided cases such as Lochner. Laws
such as the Sherman Antitrust Act and the first federal ban on child
labor arose as lawmakers with struggling with many of the negative side
effects of the Industrial Revolution. The birth of the railroad and the
dawn of mass production massively improved the American standard of
living, but they also enabled monopolists to thrive and they resulted in
mass exploitation of the working class. The Supreme Court in this era
did not so much tear down established rights as it stood for a status
quo that favored capital over labor and the rich over the rest of the
nation.
The Roberts Court, by contrast, has actively rolled back existing
laws protecting workers, women and people of color. The Nineteenth
Century Supreme Court blocked America's first meaningful efforts at
racial equality, but the Roberts Court stole from minority voters rights
that they had enjoyed for decades. The Lochner Court strangled basic
protections for workers in their crib, but the Roberts Court takes fully
matured protections for workers and carves them up a piece at a time.
And, while Lochner Era courts acted out in the open, undermining human
rights in published opinions. the Roberts Court pushes an alternative,
corporate-run arbitration system that operates largely in secret.
None of this is to say that the world we live in now is worse than
the world our great-grandparents lived in under the Lochner Court - if
the Roberts Court's goal is to bring us back to this era, they are
currently shy at least one vote. Nevertheless, the Roberts Court is
unusually willing to take from ordinary Americans rights they have
enjoyed for a very long time. The Supreme Court has a long history of
standing athwart history yelling stop. This Supreme Court, however,
wants to shift history into reverse.
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