Alito Objected to Obamas History Claim
The president touched off a controversy when he broke with tradition - and decorum, his critics said - by criticizing the courts recent campaign finance decision in his speech with six justices in attendance and bound by their own tradition of not reacting to what is said. (Justice Antonin Scalia once said he no longer goes to the annual speech because the justices “sit there like bumps on a log” in an otherwise highly partisan atmosphere.)
“With all due deference to the separation of powers,” Obama said, “the Supreme Court reversed a century of law to open the floodgates for special interests - including foreign corporations - to spend without limit in our elections.”
It seems clear from Alitos questioning when the court heard argument in the case that he was taking issue with the presidents assertion that the court reversed 100 years of law, rather than with Obamas reference to foreign influence, which also has generated some legal debate.
At the September argument, Alito suggested to attorney Seth Waxman that 20 years was the appropriate time frame, encompassing two high court decisions that upheld limits on corporate spending in campaigns.
“Mr. Waxman, all of this talk about 100 years and 50 years is perplexing,” Alito said then. “It sounds like the sort of sound bites that you hear on TV. The fact of the matter is that the only cases that are being, that may possibly be reconsidered, are McConnell and Austin. And they dont go back 50 years, and they dont go back 100 years.”
In the end, the court left untouched a 1907 law that bans contributions by corporations to candidates. But in overruling those two decisions, the court did strike down limits on corporations in a law that had been in place since 1947.
News organizations attempting to convey the sweep of the ruling without ignoring these distinctions said the courts opinion represented a sharp turn away from the a century-long trend toward greater regulation of corporate contributions.
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In William Rehnquists days as chief justice, it took more than the threat of snow - heck, it took more than a blizzard - to close the Supreme Court.
With the possibility of more than two feet of snow in the forecast, Chief Justice John Roberts announced the building would close at midday Friday, allowing employees to make their way home before the brunt of the storm hit the Washington area.
That is arguably a sensible choice, but Rehnquist, chief justice from 1986 until his death in 2005, surely would have chuckled at his successors decision.
In 1996, while the rest of the federal government closed following a two-foot snowfall and then again later the same week because of a smaller storm, Rehnquists court remained open.
When that second snow fell on Washington in 1996, Supreme Court police drove Rehnquist to work, but Justice Sandra Day OConnor drove her own car.
Employees were told to report to work if they could, but were allowed to take a vacation day if they could not make it. Most employees - including seven justices - decided to stay home.
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The Supreme Court is in the middle of its annual winter recess that lasts nearly four weeks. As they do each year, some justices are on the move.
Roberts and Justices Stephen Breyer and Ruth Bader Ginsburg are traveling to Luxembourg next week for meetings with their counterparts at the European Court of Justice.