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7. the unbearable rightness of bush v. gore

TLDR
In the case of the Florida recount, the U.S. Supreme Court properly accepted the Florida court's interpretation of state law and provided that court with an opportunity to reconsider its own interpretation as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Bush v. Gore was a straightforward and legally correct decision. For more than a quarter century, the Supreme Court has treated the stuffing of ballot boxes as a paradigmatic violation of the Equal Protection Clause. Much more subtle and indirect forms of vote dilution have also been outlawed. Like some of those practices, the selective and partial recount ordered by the Florida Supreme Court may have been an inadvertent form of vote dilution. But that recount had effects that were virtually indistinguishable from those in the paradigmatic case. There is no meaningful difference between adding illegal votes to the count and selectively adding legal votes, which is what the Florida court was doing. The Supreme Court rightly concluded that the vote dilution in this case violated well-established equal protection principles. Nor did the Supreme Court err in its response to this constitutional violation. Although the Court acted with unprecedented dispatch after the Florida court's December 8, 2000 decision, it was highly improbable that a legally proper recount could be conducted by the December 18 deadline set by federal law. And it was quite impossible for such a recount to meet the December 12 deadline that the Florida court itself had found in Florida law. Contrary to a widespread misconception, the U.S. Supreme Court properly accepted the Florida court's interpretation of state law and provided that court with an opportunity to reconsider its own interpretation of state law. When the clock ran out, it was entirely due to mistakes and delays attributable to the Florida court. The Supreme Court's majority opinion has been subjected to a barrage of political criticisms of a kind that might more fittingly be directed against a Senate Majority Leader or a Secretary of State. Ironically, it is precisely because the Justices correctly applied the law that they have been accused of having partisan motives.

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The Liberal Legacy of Bush v. Gore

TL;DR: For example, the authors examines the last ten years of the Rehnquist Court, which was divided evenly by the Court's highly controversial intervention in the 2000 presidential election, Bush v. Gore, and argues that the Court shifted noticeably to the left, particularly in high-profile cases, after the decision.
Journal ArticleDOI

The controversial intellectual giant of our time: A note on the late Justice Antonin Scalia

TL;DR: The late Justice Antonin Scalia is best known for his colourful, intemperate dissents, but not everyone is aware of his broader significance as a jurist and legal scholar as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three Bizarre Presidential-Election Scenarios: The Perils of Simplism

TL;DR: The 1968, 2000, and (future) 2024 U.S. presidential elections provide settings for deliberately provocative, offbeat scenarios that might have happened or could happen as mentioned in this paper. But, in this case, the scenario is different.
Posted Content

The Perils of Over-Constitutionalizing the Law: A Reply to Professor Epstein

TL;DR: In this article, Epstein argued that the Supreme Court's categorical unwillingness to consider state-law reversals is nothing more than a self-imposed constraint from its 1874 decision in Murdock v. City of Memphis; this rule cannot be found in any of the external constitutional or statutory commands that limit the court's authority.
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Posted Content

The Liberal Legacy of Bush v. Gore

TL;DR: For example, the authors examines the last ten years of the Rehnquist Court, which was divided evenly by the Court's highly controversial intervention in the 2000 presidential election, Bush v. Gore, and argues that the Court shifted noticeably to the left, particularly in high-profile cases, after the decision.
Journal ArticleDOI

The controversial intellectual giant of our time: A note on the late Justice Antonin Scalia

TL;DR: The late Justice Antonin Scalia is best known for his colourful, intemperate dissents, but not everyone is aware of his broader significance as a jurist and legal scholar as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Three Bizarre Presidential-Election Scenarios: The Perils of Simplism

TL;DR: The 1968, 2000, and (future) 2024 U.S. presidential elections provide settings for deliberately provocative, offbeat scenarios that might have happened or could happen as mentioned in this paper. But, in this case, the scenario is different.
Posted Content

The Perils of Over-Constitutionalizing the Law: A Reply to Professor Epstein

TL;DR: In this article, Epstein argued that the Supreme Court's categorical unwillingness to consider state-law reversals is nothing more than a self-imposed constraint from its 1874 decision in Murdock v. City of Memphis; this rule cannot be found in any of the external constitutional or statutory commands that limit the court's authority.
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