WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court has often warned justices not to intervene in election cases when the process is already underway, but it is now accused of doing just that in recent rulings favoring Republicans in redistricting fights.
The court’s decision in a Louisiana case that weakened the Voting Rights Act has sparked a frenzy in some Republican-led states to draw new congressional maps that favor their party. The stakes are high heading into this year’s midterm elections that will determine which party controls the House.
The court issued its decision, focused on the Louisiana map but with national implications, less than three weeks before that state’s congressional primary and after delaying action on the case for more than a year. Now, Louisiana and Alabama are moving back their primaries to reset their districts, and other states could follow.
The court, which has a conservative majority of 6 votes to 3, further accelerated the process by granting special requests filed by Louisiana And Alabama, allowing states to move forward with new maps that will eliminate majority-black districts held by Democrats.
In Louisiana, some ballots had already been returned when Governor Jeff Landry announced that the congressional elections originally scheduled for May 16 would be suspended. In Alabama, the primaries were supposed to take place on May 19, but they will now be pushed back to August for the districts concerned.
The court’s interventions came as Chief Justice John Roberts I complained last week that the American public wrongly perceives judges as “political actors.” A recent NBC News Poll showed that trust in the Court is at an all-time low, as it also attracted critical for his frequent decisions in favor of the Trump administration.
Some liberal critics have suggested that the Court does not apply the law equally, pointing to its past rulings that chastised judges who changed election rules late in the process.
“I don’t think you can see this as anything other than just an exercise of power,” Kareem Crayton, an attorney at the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School, said in an interview.
“The Court is indeed playing, whether it likes it or not, an outsized role in these mid-term elections. It is quite regrettable that it has chosen this path,” he added.
Other liberal lawyers And commentators made similar criticisms.
The Supreme Court often relies on a 2006 ruling entitled Purcell v. Gonzalez, giving rise to a term now known as the “Purcell Principle” which urges judges to exercise restraint before an election.
In that case, the court blocked a ruling that blocked Arizona from implementing a photo ID requirement for voter registration.
“Court orders affecting elections, particularly conflicting orders, may themselves cause confusion among voters and cause them to stay away from the polls. As elections draw closer, this risk will increase,” the court said in the unsigned opinion.
The ruling says, among other things, that the potential for voter confusion is a factor that courts should consider before blocking an election rule.
The Purcell principle applies specifically to federal courts that modify the rules and is not binding on state legislatures in the same way.
“It’s one thing for state legislatures to change their own election rules late in the round and take responsibility for any unintended consequences. It’s another thing for a federal district court to step in and change a state’s carefully researched and democratically adopted election rules when an election is imminent,” Justice Brett Kavanaugh said in a statement. Case 2020 of Wisconsin.
But in this specific case, Kavanaugh also expressed a broader sentiment: “The Court’s precedents recognize a fundamental principle of election law: When an election is near, the rules of the road must be clear and established,” he wrote.
In another case from 2020also of Wisconsin, the court used similarly broad language, referring to “the wisdom of the Purcell principle, which seeks to avoid this kind of court-created confusion.”
In the Louisiana and Alabama decisions that green-lighted redistricting efforts, the Supreme Court majority did not explain its reasoning and did not mention Purcell.
Liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, dissenting in the Louisiana case, clearly referred to the “so-called Purcell principle” as a reason not to intervene.
In a strong response, conservative Justice Samuel Alito defended the court’s actions, saying it was “baseless and irresponsible” to suggest the court was abusing its power.
In explaining how the court can consider it to be acting in accordance with the Purcell principle, Derek Muller, an election law expert at the University of Notre Dame Law School, said that principle does not apply when a court lifts an injunction, as the Supreme Court did this week in allowing Alabama to move forward with its preferred map, which had previously been blocked.
While acknowledging that the Court’s recent rulings have favored Republicans, thus fueling criticism, Muller noted that the Court would be subject to scrutiny whenever it acts.
“The court’s hand is somewhat forced. Whether they act or refuse to act, they are making a decision,” he added.
Justin Levitt, an election law expert at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, said that in more recent cases, the Purcell principle appeared to have a broader, vaguer meaning, suggesting that courts simply should not interfere in the run-up to elections.
“It was a firmer, hands-off, no-pencil principle,” he added.
But the court applied it unevenly, Levitt noted, emphasizing the court decision in December, it allowed Texas to use a new hand-picked map that a lower court had blocked even though it was months before the primary began.
Liberal Justice Elena Kagan dissented in the case to defend the lower court’s decision.
“If Purcell prevents such a move, it gives every state the opportunity to hold illegal elections,” she wrote.
The result of recent developments is that Purcell’s principle “doesn’t really seem to be a principle at all,” Levitt said. “It appears that the Supreme Court picks winners and losers, not makes law. »


































