Supreme Court End-of-Term Analysis: 2005-06 Term
The 2005-06 term was clearly a period of transition for the Supreme
Court, as Chief Justice Roberts replaced Chief Justice Rehnquist, and
two justices in a sense replaced Justice O’Connor Justice Alito took
her seat on the Court while Justice Kennedy replaced her as the “swing”
vote in a number of closely divided cases. And while a relatively large
number of the Court’s decisions this term were unanimous (generally
where the Court was able to agree on a narrow approach and avoid
divisive issues as in the New Hampshire abortion case), the new justices
clearly pushed the Court towards the right in several important, closely
divided cases. Justice Kennedy played an important role in these cases
as well, sometimes restraining the Court majority from adopting more
extreme positions. For example:
- a 5-4 majority (including Roberts, Alito, and Kennedy) ruled that the
First Amendment does not protect government employee internal
whistleblowers
- the same 5-4 majority decided that the exclusionary rule should not
apply to violations of the constitutional requirement that police “knock
and announce” searches, with Justice Kennedy alone making clear that the
decision would not apply more broadly
- the same 5-4 majority limited the scope of the Clean Water Act, with
Roberts and Alito joining Scalia and Thomas in arguing for a dramatic
cutback in this important environmental law but Kennedy providing the
decisive voice for a more restrained approach
- in the Texas redistricting case, where the Court upheld most of the
mid-decade redistricting plan inspired by former Rep. Tom DeLay, the
same 5-4 majority rejected a challenge by African American voters to the
redrawing of a Dallas-area congressional district. Yet Justice Kennedy
joined the four moderate members of the Court to rule that carving
Hispanic voters out of another district had violated the Voting Rights
Act
Justice Kennedy also provided the crucial fifth vote to rule in the
critical Hamdan case that the Bush Administration could not unilaterally
ignore U.S. law and the Geneva Convention in setting up procedures to
decide the fate of detainees in Guantanamo. (Chief Justice Roberts did
not participate in that ruling since he had been involved in the case
earlier when he was on the D.C. Circuit.)
Voting patterns in 2005-06 confirm the expectations of many about Chief
Justice Roberts and Justice Alito. According to an analysis by the
Georgetown University Law Center Supreme Court Institute, Roberts and
Alito agreed with each other 91 percent of the time. Roberts agreed
with President Bush’s professed models for Supreme Court justices,
Justice Scalia and Thomas, 86 and 82 percent of the time, respectively.
Alito’s statistics reflect only a portion of the term, but he agreed
with Thomas and Scalia 77 and 74 percent of the time. In non-unanimous
cases, Alito agreed with Roberts 88 percent of the time, but with
Stevens only 23 percent of the time; Roberts agreed with Scalia 78
percent of the time, but with Stevens only 35 percent of the time in
non-unanimous cases.
The Court’s 2006-07 term is already shaping up as presenting clear and
dangerous opportunities for the Court’s ultraconservative members to
move the nation backwards on key civil rights and civil liberties
issues. The Court has agreed to consider two cases on the validity of
the federal abortion ban that closely resembles the Nebraska so-called
“partial birth” abortion ban struck down 5-4 by the Court several years
ago, with Justice Kennedy among the dissenters.
In addition, the Court
will review two decisions concerning the affirmative use of race to
promote integration in public schools, which many believe could threaten
the Court’s recent 5-4 decision upholding affirmative action in higher
education, in which Justice Kennedy also dissented. The Court will also
hear an important case concerning whether the Clean Air Act requires the
EPA to take action on greenhouse gases. The views of Chief Justice
Roberts, as well as Justices Alito and Kennedy, will be crucial in these
upcoming rulings.
This report summarizes the Court’s key decisions in 2005-06 on civil
rights, civil liberties, and other non-criminal law subjects discussed
in our Courting Disaster 2005 report, including cases in which PFAW
Foundation filed amicus curiae briefs.
Read more: