Originally published June 26, 2007 at 12:00 AM | Page modified June 26, 2007 at 2:01 AM
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Roberts rules the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court nears the end of its term this week with a flurry of opinions that offer a glimpse into the emerging influence of Chief Justice John Roberts.
McClatchy Newspapers
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The Court is likely to finish its term this week, with several contentious issues remaining. Among the decisions yet to be announced:
Schools and race: Are public-school programs in Seattle and Louisville, Ky., that consider race in assignments to promote diverse school populations permissible?
Death penalty-mental illness: Whether a death-row inmate has to understand that his or her impending execution is the result of the crimes for which he or she was convicted.
Antitrust: Whether manufacturers and stores can set minimum retail prices for products.
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday confirmed the contours that are taking shape under Chief Justice John Roberts.
Roberts and Justices Samuel Alito, Anthony Kennedy, Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia supported an Alaska high-school principal who forced a student to take down a banner proclaiming "Bong Hits 4 Jesus." They also blocked taxpayers from challenging President Bush's faith-based initiatives.
The Roberts circle likewise united in ruling that Wisconsin Right to Life should have been permitted to run pre-election ads targeting Democrats. The same five justices sided with home builders over environmentalists in agreeing that the state of Arizona could take over clean-water enforcement without first being reviewed by the federal Fish and Wildlife Service.
On Thursday, the court will finish its spring term with a handful of opinions, including a much-anticipated affirmative-action decision.
While three of the five decisions Monday arrived on a 5-4 majority, they showcased what has become an ideologically conservative and business-friendly, if narrow, majority.
Upcoming
![]()
![]()
The Court is likely to finish its term this week, with several contentious issues remaining. Among the decisions yet to be announced:
Schools and race: Are public-school programs in Seattle and Louisville, Ky., that consider race in assignments to promote diverse school populations permissible?
Death penalty-mental illness: Whether a death-row inmate has to understand that his or her impending execution is the result of the crimes for which he or she was convicted.
Antitrust: Whether manufacturers and stores can set minimum retail prices for products.
Since last October, in Roberts' second term as chief justice, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has claimed 11 victories and seen only two defeats on business-related cases.
"We always thought the [Chief Justice William] Rehnquist court was a good forum for business," noted Maureen Mahoney, a lawyer who has argued 18 cases before the court, "but the Roberts court is even better."
The court has been irrevocably changed by the departure of former Justice Sandra Day O'Connor and her replacement by Alito.
In December 2003, for instance, O'Connor wrote part of the opinion in which the court upheld a sweeping campaign-finance law. On Monday, Alito helped undermine part of the earlier opinion regulating pre-election ads run by unions and corporations.
"It goes without saying that nothing has changed about the facts," Justice David Souter noted in dissent. "It is only the legal landscape that now is altered," he added.
"This is a victory for a ... commonsense approach to environmental regulation," said Damien Schiff, an attorney with the conservative Pacific Legal Foundation, based in Sacramento, Calif.
Even more than in previous years, the court was skeptical of the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, considered the nation's most liberal. With Monday's decisions, the Supreme Court has reversed the 9th Circuit on 17 out of 19 opinions issued since October.
The 70 decisions expected by the time the court leaves for summer vacation reflect a continually shrinking workload for a court that handled twice as many cases a generation ago. The rulings also show that Roberts hasn't had the success he wanted in forging a more unified court.
With the decisions issued Monday, 19 opinions issued this term have come on 5-4 splits. Last term, only 12 decisions were split 5-4.
At his Senate confirmation hearing, Roberts had suggested that he would be getting different results.
"I do think the chief justice has a particular obligation to try to achieve consensus consistent with everyone's individual oath to uphold the Constitution," he told the Senate Judiciary Committee, "and that would certainly be a priority for me if I were confirmed."
Nor was Roberts simply talking about unanimity, which is frequently elusive. He was hoping to steer the court away from the fractured decision-making in which a majority is constructed by multiple justices writing multiple opinions.
"That undermines the importance of providing guidance," he told senators.
Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company
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