‘Janus’ Was Decided by Conservative Judicial Activists Who Are Legislating From the Bench

‘Janus’ Was Decided by Conservative Judicial Activists Who Are Legislating From the Bench

‘Janus’ Was Decided by Conservative Judicial Activists Who Are Legislating From the Bench

A judicial assault on unions and Justice Kennedy’s retirement confirm that the makeup of the Supreme Court must be a central issue in every 2018 Senate contest.

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Organized labor has taken brutal hits from policy-makers and judges over the course of the past decade, and Wednesday’s US Supreme Court decision in the case of Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees, Council 31 strikes serious new blows.

The high court’s 5-4 decision held that government workers cannot be required to contribute to public-sector unions that represent them in collective bargaining. As Justice Elena Kagan noted in a stinging dissent, the decision “will have large-scale consequences. Public employee unions will lose a secure source of financial support. State and local governments that thought fair-share provisions furthered their interests will need to find new ways of managing their workforces.”

By abandoning a 41-year-old precedent that permitted public-sector unions to levy fair-share fees on workers whose interests the unions have long represented, the Court takes aim at the treasuries of unions that need resources to engage in collective bargaining and to assure that public services are not threatened by cuts in funding and privatization schemes.

The decision, handed down on the same day that Justice Anthony Kennedy announced his retirement, guarantees that the makeup of the Supreme Court will be a central issue—perhaps the central issue—of the 2018 election cycle. Never as moderate as some court watchers imagined, Kennedy was a member of the anti-union majority in the Janus case. But his departure on July 31 will give President Trump an opportunity to move the court to the right on economic and social issues. The fight to prevent that shift will require Democrats to be far bolder than they were in the struggle to block the confirmation of Trump’s first nominee, Justice Neil Gorsuch.

That fight will focus a great deal of attention on concerns about abortion rights and affirmative action, two issues on which Kennedy broke with his more conservative colleagues. But the damage that a Trump-defined Supreme Court can do extends to every issue.

The threat to workers will be especially serious, as the Janus decision illustrates.

Tom Perez, the former US Secretary of Labor who now serves as chairman of the Democratic National Committee, described the ruling as “One of the most blatant and disgraceful examples of union busting in our nation’s history.” Roberta Lynch, the executive director of American Federation of State County and Municipal Employee Council 31 in Illinois, said “the Supreme Court has taken the side of the powerful few”—describing the case as “a blatant political attack by [anti-labor Illinois Governor] Bruce Rauner and other wealthy interests on the freedom of working people to form strong unions.”

No one should be confused about why the Court majority decided the Janus case as it did. These justices are conservative judicial activists who regularly use their positions to advance a rigidly pro-corporate, anti-union economic agenda. But they can also be understood as conservative judicial strategists who implement structural changes that are designed to benefit partisan allies of that agenda while undermining supporters of a popular vision for a fairer and more inclusive economy. They have engaged in what AFSCME President Lee Saunders correctly describes as an “unprecedented and nefarious political attack—designed to further rig the rules against working people.”

Organized labor has for the better part of a century been the most effective proponent of a politics that takes into account the concerns of working people—those who join unions and those who simply benefit from the advances in pay, benefits, and workplace protections that are achieved through collective bargaining and collective action. That does not mean that unions are always so right or as effective as they should be. But it does mean that they have provided a vital counterbalance to the often overwhelming influence of billionaire CEOs, multinational corporations, and big banks on our politics and our governance.

This counterbalance has historically benefited the political aspirations of pro-worker Democrats and a good many Republicans—who in the days of Abraham Lincoln, Teddy Roosevelt, and Dwight Eisenhower still displayed a good deal of skepticism with regard to corporate power. As the Grand Old Party has in recent decades embraced a crony-capitalist vision for achieving and retaining power—along with the anti-union zealotry that goes with it—Republican presidents and congresses have abandoned their better instincts, especially when it comes to selecting Supreme Court nominees.

It is no secret that GOP nominees for lifetime sinecures on the nation’s highest court have for many years now been chosen with the purpose of achieving political ends. They are nominated and confirmed not with the hope of securing justice but with a win-at-any-cost focus on aiding the interests of electoral allies and, in so doing, on satisfying the demands of donors to the campaigns of those allies. This extends across a wide spectrum of cases that the Court has decided in recent years, from those involving voter purges to gerrymandering to campaign-finance rules. But it is particularly evident in cases involving labor rights.

The Janus decision must be seen in this context. The Court majority is legislating from the bench. To this end, a narrow majority of justices has made a calculated political intervention that harms the interests of public-sector workers while also making it harder for the unions that represent those workers to assure that public services are maintained. The purpose of the advocates for the position that has been embraces by the Court is to threaten the viability of unions that have already been attacked by governors such as Wisconsin’s Scott Walker and Michigan’s Rick Snyder, and that are under constant assault from the elaborate political networks that have been established and maintained by the Koch brothers.

“Behind Janus is the coordinated attack on labor rights by the Koch brothers, other billionaires, and the anti-worker groups they back like the National Right to Work Foundation and Americans for Prosperity,” explained Amalgamated Transit Union President Larry Hanley. “They want every minute of American life to be spent toiling under the bosses’ thumb. They don’t believe in democracy or the rights of the individual worker. They know that to give even more of our money to the wealthy to create a permanent plutocracy, they can’t have workers organizing and standing in the way.”

Unions will survive. But their circumstances will be different. They will be required to develop new models for organizing bargaining, and new tactics for engaging at the grassroots of our politics. Much of the work on these projects has already begun. “While this decision is both unjust and, frankly, unfair and stupid, it’s happening at a time workers, especially in ‘right-to-work’ states—are more conscious than ever of the need to unite and fight back. Recent successful teachers’ strikes in West Virginia, Kentucky, and Oklahoma have shown what happens when workers’ backs are pushed against the wall,” explained Hanley, whose union represents public-sector workers in communities across the United States. “At the ATU, we didn’t take a wait-and-see approach. We knew where the Supreme Court was heading, so we used the past year to rediscover our roots, strengthen our locals, and engage tens of thousands of members who have recommitted to the trade-union cause.”

On Wednesday, the ATU and other unions, such as the American Federation of Teachers, highlighted “I’m Sticking With My Union” messages. “While today the thirst for power trumped the aspirations and needs of communities and the people who serve them—workers are sticking with the union because unions are still the best vehicle working people have to get ahead,” argued AFT president Randi Weingarten on Twitter.

The Janus decision also demands something of the great mass of Americans, no matter what their affiliation may or may not be with organized labor.

With the Janus decision, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Samuel Alito, Clarence Thomas, Gorsuch, and Kennedy placed their thumbs on the scale and tipped the balance in workplaces across the country. They also influenced the broader politics of cities, states, and the nation.

If the great mass of Americans who are not card-carrying oligarchs want a politics that is defined by real competition between differing ideals and visions for our future, if they seek alternatives to crony capitalism and the dictates of the billionaire class, then voters must make their own demands of candidates for the US Senate, and ultimately for the presidency.

There can be no more compromises with regard to the makeup of the nation’s highest court.

The battle over the Kennedy seat will be the first fight.

But it will not stop there. The fall election fight for control of the US Senate, already vital, will now matter more.

The Senate must be transformed into something nobler than the partisan swamp that Mitch McConnell and his allies have made it. The machinations that prevented then–President Barack Obama from filling a Supreme Court vacancy in 2016 with a qualified and responsible jurist, Judge Merrick Garland, can never be repeated. The system of checks and balances must be sufficiently renewed so that Supreme Court nominees who are clearly aligned with billionaire interests and the political program that those interests demand, such as Gorsuch, will face proper scrutiny.

The Court and its makeup has to become an overarching issue of our politics in 2018 and beyond. Indeed, the Court and its makeup must be understood as the issue that touches all others—because when corporate-aligned justices tip the balance of our politics in favor or their partisan allies, as they did with the Janus decision and too many other recent decisions involving the rights of workers to make their voices heard, and as they will do at every opportunity in the future, these judicial activists on behalf of crony capitalism do not merely threaten unions or the Democratic Party. They threaten the basic functioning of American democracy as the competition of ideas and interests that it must be.

We cannot back down

We now confront a second Trump presidency.

There’s not a moment to lose. We must harness our fears, our grief, and yes, our anger, to resist the dangerous policies Donald Trump will unleash on our country. We rededicate ourselves to our role as journalists and writers of principle and conscience.

Today, we also steel ourselves for the fight ahead. It will demand a fearless spirit, an informed mind, wise analysis, and humane resistance. We face the enactment of Project 2025, a far-right supreme court, political authoritarianism, increasing inequality and record homelessness, a looming climate crisis, and conflicts abroad. The Nation will expose and propose, nurture investigative reporting, and stand together as a community to keep hope and possibility alive. The Nation’s work will continue—as it has in good and not-so-good times—to develop alternative ideas and visions, to deepen our mission of truth-telling and deep reporting, and to further solidarity in a nation divided.

Armed with a remarkable 160 years of bold, independent journalism, our mandate today remains the same as when abolitionists first founded The Nation—to uphold the principles of democracy and freedom, serve as a beacon through the darkest days of resistance, and to envision and struggle for a brighter future.

The day is dark, the forces arrayed are tenacious, but as the late Nation editorial board member Toni Morrison wrote “No! This is precisely the time when artists go to work. There is no time for despair, no place for self-pity, no need for silence, no room for fear. We speak, we write, we do language. That is how civilizations heal.”

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Onwards,

Katrina vanden Heuvel
Editorial Director and Publisher, The Nation

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