The Apocalypse? Or Is It Just Me?
Jun. 26th, 2013 11:28 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Very happy for many of my friends with regards to the Supreme Court decisions regarding marriage. Mazel tov!
However...when I read who was on the majority of the Prop. 8 decision, my brain exploded.
Scalia and Roberts helping to strike down Prop. 8??!WTF?
Kennedy and Sotomayor dissenting??!?
If there were a betting pool, I SO would have lost money with any combination of judges I would have thought possible.
Now, the HuffPost did explain:
If March's oral arguments were any indication, the justices' unusual alliances on Wednesday -- Scalia and Roberts with three liberals in the majority and Sotomayor joining Kennedy and two conservatives in dissent -- would have realigned to their usual ideological divides had they at all even noted Proposition 8's constitutional merits in their opinions.
Still...if anyone has a *simple* explanation for this juxtaposition of judges, I'd love to hear it.
However...when I read who was on the majority of the Prop. 8 decision, my brain exploded.
Scalia and Roberts helping to strike down Prop. 8??!WTF?
Kennedy and Sotomayor dissenting??!?
If there were a betting pool, I SO would have lost money with any combination of judges I would have thought possible.
Now, the HuffPost did explain:
If March's oral arguments were any indication, the justices' unusual alliances on Wednesday -- Scalia and Roberts with three liberals in the majority and Sotomayor joining Kennedy and two conservatives in dissent -- would have realigned to their usual ideological divides had they at all even noted Proposition 8's constitutional merits in their opinions.
Still...if anyone has a *simple* explanation for this juxtaposition of judges, I'd love to hear it.
no subject
Date: 2013-06-26 09:57 pm (UTC)Sotomayor probably joined the dissent because she believed the court had reasonable ground to stand on, though it'a good bet she would've wanted to then kill it dead outright. Scalia and Roberts went with the majority because it would be precedent setting to allow someone who had no legal standing in a case to try to act as defense (keeping in mind that the normal defenders of the law should've been the state of CA & Kamala Harris, who opted not to defend the law). It's also far easier to kick out a case on a technicality than it is to make a broad sweeping ruling.
no subject
Date: 2013-06-28 08:07 am (UTC)