By David K. Shipler
Now
that Californians have crushed Republicans’ effort to recall Democratic
Governor Gavin Newsom (with 63.9 percent of the votes at last count), maybe the
left ought to try what the right has done in Texas: Let anyone sue anyone who
helps anyone do something you don’t like. In the case of Texas, it’s getting an
abortion.
Imagine if liberal California—or New
York, or the District of Columbia, for example—did the same on issues dear to
the hearts of “progressives.” The Texas law recently enacted by radical
Republicans allows anyone in the entire country to bring a civil suit against
anyone in the state who helps a woman exercise her constitutional right to
abortion after a fetal heartbeat is detected. Any bounty hunter who wins in
court gets $10,000 plus legal fees from the suit’s target, whether doctor, nurse,
receptionist, or possibly the Uber driver who takes the woman to the clinic.
The tactic is designed to remove
the state as the enforcer and thereby befuddle the courts, which otherwise might
enjoin government from putting the law into effect. That gave five anti-abortion
Supreme Court justices just enough leeway to refuse to block the Texas law,
even temporarily. So, let’s consider what the left might do in return.
First, California could pass a law allowing anyone who refused to be vaccinated against Covid to be sued by anyone anywhere in the country. Going unvaccinated is an obvious public health threat, and while legitimate medical and perhaps religious exceptions could be made, those refusing the shots incubate evolving variants and endanger children and the immunocompromised. Therefore, under the Texas formula, everyone has what judges call “standing” to sue.
Then, the hunt would be on. Waves
of vaccine vigilantes could collect names. They could troll the internet for
anti-vax postings, scour the streets of Orange County for signs of resistance,
knock on doors to inquire with purported innocence. They could launch minor
careers chasing down violators for $10,000 apiece.
Anti-vaxers might wriggle out of
liability by rushing to get the shots, and maybe the law should let them off
the hook if they rectify their behavior. Or, maybe not. An abortion cannot be
reversed, obviously, and an offense against the public good is an offense at
the time it’s committed, no matter the subsequent regrets.
Now, take gun possession. If
California law permitted anyone in the country to sue anyone in California who
had a gun, what a bounty that would bring. There are few threats to public
health and common welfare more severe than guns, and all Americans have a
standing interest in curtailing weapons proliferation. Again, a few exemptions
might be in order: for those whose work poses a safety risk, for example, or
hunters properly trained and licensed and limited to one non-automatic firearm
apiece. But the masses of citizens do not need guns, and they ought to face
that $10,000 hazard.
Conservatives will cry, “Second
Amendment!” Yes, as interpreted oddly by a bare majority in a conservative
court with convoluted grammatical sophistry that imagined an individual right
in an amendment that mentions only “a well regulated militia.” But constitutional
rights seem to come and go with the shifts in the political winds. There is
also a constitutional right to abortion, established by the Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade, and that precious right is evidently
about to go.
Although all the Republican-appointed
justices pledged under oath at their confirmation hearings to respect judicial
precedent, they now do otherwise. (The law has a word for that: perjury.)
Let’s pretend that the justices of
the Supreme Court are principled, consistent, and transcend the country’s
divisions rather than reflect them. Let’s see California or New York or D.C. or
another courageous jurisdiction throw the right-wing’s tactics back at them. Would
the Supreme Court conservatives block such laws of the liberals or let them
take effect?
And if they were to take effect, as
the Texas abortion law has been allowed to do, then what would we have? We
would have vigilante, bounty-hunting civil suits against all manner of
controversial policies. We would have an eroded rule of law, unpredictable enforcement
by lynch mob, a debilitated judicial system, and a chaotic legal landscape.
That is why the title of this essay
says, “I’m Kidding.” I do not want the left to use the same tactics as the
right. I want the left to uphold the due processes of the judicial mechanism,
even if Republican legislators and Republican judges do not. I do not trust
zealots at either end of the political spectrum, and while the greatest danger
to the democratic system in the United States is now posed by the radical
right, autocratic intolerance can be found on the radical left as well.
Republicans who invent ways to impede voting, undermine elections, evade
judicial scrutiny, and undermine due process should be careful what they wish
for. Two sides can play that game.
And the justices of the Supreme
Court ought to be mindful that as they facilitate radical agendas, they risk their
own authority. They have no battalions. They rely on the respect for their
power inherent in the institutions and officials and citizens of the nation. Once
their rulings become so ignoble as to be ignored, disobedience will grow and
grow until it becomes a habit. Then we lose our Constitution, our law, and our
reasonable expectation of order.
Kidding? These are great ideas! I mean, shouldn't we pass at least one such law to give the Supreme Court something to think about when it considers the abortion case? I thought we should do the anti-vaxxer law until I read the gun version. That one HAS to be the right choice. That would really give the Court pause!!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the chance to imagine...
I appreciated this article and also Lynn Dickinson's comment. I agree with her! The scary thing is shown by your final sentences - Truly scary!! Thanks for an excellent, thought-provoking piece.
ReplyDeleteI know one person who isn't laughing: Gavin Newsom!
ReplyDelete