In late 2016 I published an op-ed entitled Trump and LGBTQ rights: Your worst nightmares unlikely to come true. The premise of the piece was basically what youd expect from the title. People were freaking out about Trump and his cronies reversing the progress made in the fight for LGBTQ+ rights, and I wanted to allay those fears. In particular, people were asking me (a lot) about whether Trump could undo the decision in Obergefell v. Hodges the 2015 decision that recognized same-sex marriages in all 50 states.
Hold on, you say. Why would anyone care what you think? Arent you just some middle-aged shitposter who tricked a law school into hiring you? Yes, but I was also lead counsel for the Kentucky plaintiffs in Obergefell. Seriously! Theres a whole movie about it. Heres the brief we filed:
click to enlarge None of this contact info works anymore, so dont try it.
After the win at SCOTUS, my partners and I litigated the infamous Kim Davis case (thats the one where a county clerk in Kentucky stopped issuing marriage licenses after Obergefell), and won pretty much every step of the way. Those victories led people, including me, to assume I knew something about how the courts, government, civil rights, and history work. So after the election, I published a piece to tell them that while everything wasnt exactly going to be OK, we at least knew for sure that marriage equality is safe.
Well folks, I fucked that one up. Sorry.
Lets briefly denude ourselves and bathe together in my shame. Heres what I wrote in 2016:
For a President Trump to undo the progress made by Obergefell and its predecessors, a number of improbable things would have to happen. First, Trump would have to appoint at least two Supreme Court justices to make any real difference. . . . Suppose, however, that one of the older pro-LGBTQ justices, such as Justice Anthony Kennedy or Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, were to die, or retire, during Trumps tenure? Even then, another marriage case would have to make its way to the Court. With couples already getting married in all but a few counties in the country, this is practically impossible there is no case to be made. Four justices would have to agree to take the case, even if it existed. And the Court would then have to reverse its own interpretation of the Constitution to undo a decision that is just over a year old. An opinion like that would threaten the legitimacy of the Court, something which troubles even the most conservative of jurists.
Five years later, this reads like satire. Its as if someone hit a rip from the worlds biggest bong, peered into the future, and said, Maaaan, lets write this up like it could never happen, just to mess with people. Of course Ginsburg did die, Kennedy did retire, Trump did appoint not two but three justices to the Supreme Court, and??the biggest miscalculation of all??the most conservative of jurists are not troubled by threats to the legitimacy of the courts or any other institution. To the contrary, Trumpism has become terrifyingly proud of its capacity to mow down democratic norms and resculpt them into steaming piles of excrement.
But even as I turn myself over to the Internets Department of Bad Takes and Inconsistencies, I feel compelled to speak in my own defense. First, I was just a lad of 39 when I wrote the above-referenced op-ed; practically a baby, a spring chicken, a tadpole with little nubs of cynical land legs just beginning to show.
Second, I was almost right. Later in the piece, I wrote:
More terrifying is the idea that a Trump-packed Supreme Court could increasingly allow government officials to opt out of things they find distasteful on religious grounds. Like, say, issuing marriage licenses. Rulings like that could culminate in bona fide disaster. Elections become religious litmus tests. Counties develop into fiefdoms, and run according to the whims of oligarchs and demagogues. But to achieve this, Trump would have to pack the Court with justices with extremely radical (read: insane) views of the Constitution. Not impossible, but not likely.
We civil rights lawyers had been sounding the alarm on just how bad the federal courts were for years before that, and I was fully aware that they were about to get even worse under Trump. But judges who issue comically bad rulings do, in fact, undermine the integrity of the justice system, and theres only so much undermining our fragile system can take before it sinks into the Earth and is paved over by burning buildings and dead bodies. I still do not believe this Supreme Court has the stones to issue an explosive opinion reversing Obergefell, or Brown v. Board of Education, or even Roe. Its too politically risky, and the Court is a political animal.
The fatal flaw in my reasoning five years ago was this: I didnt take into account that the courts could simply do nothing in the face of rabid, uninhibited, GOP dumbfuckery. Theres little risked by doing nothing. Nonaction doesnt grab attention, doesnt demand a response, doesnt warrant a backlash. Nothing is powerful.
Thats what were seeing happen with Roe. Texas and other red states have trotted out the wackiest abortion bills you can think of every session for years now, but they havent been able to implement the worst of them because theyve been stopped by the courts. With SB 8, an utterly bonkers bill that allows private citizens to become abortion bounty hunters, Trump judges finally said, Eh; lets just see what happens if we let this one go into effect.
The courts, the media, and lawyers who defend the sacredness of Article III now have cover to say, Well, this terrible law isnt stopped yet, but dont make a fuss, lets wait for the process to play out! Meanwhile, two things are happening: 1) individuals are suffering while we wait months, years, perhaps decades for the courts to get it right, and 2) collective apathy creeps in as we adjust to a new standard of how much everything sucks for those individuals in Texas.
By next session, versions of SB 8 will become law in every state dominated by GOP legislatures, effectively repealing Roe not only in Texas, but in Missouri, Indiana, Kentucky, Oklahoma, etc. As those dominoes fall, people in each state will be in the streets for a few weeks (tops), and then things will go back to normal whatever normal might look like by then. If in two or three years the Supreme Court says, Actually Roe isnt the law of the land anymore, our reaction might well be, Yeah no kidding; it hasnt been for years, big deal. Thats the power of nothing.
Knowing that the courts will demur, could the GOP launch a similarly successful offensive on marriage equality? You bet. Its already happening.
A couple of weeks ago, a letter from a Texas state representative calling on the Attorney General to declare that private citizens can ignore federal law was making the rounds on social media. Heres an excerpt:
Objectively speaking, the letter is nuts: Completely unhinged, sovereign-citizen-looney-bin nonsense. But that doesnt mean its sentiment is out of the mainstream of American political thought. As the Texas letter points out, there are judges who agree with this twisted view of federalism the same judges who can be counted on to do nothing when state officials target the LGBTQ+ community. This rhetoric isnt just happening on the fringes of red states; jamming human rights where the sun dont shine" is at the core of the conservative agenda. The Republican Party Platform, a 66-page conniption fit, mentions the word marriage 19 times and the phrase one man and one woman five times under three separate headings (Religious Liberty, Marriage, Family, and Society, and Defending Marriage Against an Activist Judiciary). If the GOP can get the gun to the head of marriage equality, youd better believe theyll squeeze the trigger. The question is: How will they go about it?
We know the answer already. In the Kim Davis case, our argument was essentially: Look courts, you dont want clerks deciding what the law is in their own counties, according to the dictates of their personal religious principles, leaving America a patchwork quilt of inconsistent, batshit-crazy rules, do you? Ha ha! Thatd be silly! And in 2015-16, even the Republican judges agreed with us. But things are different now. What if the courts refuse to make a clerks office issue licenses? What if a mayor declares that all same-sex marriages in [x city] are null and void? What if a governor orders executive-branch officials to destroy all formal recognitions of same-sex couples? If the federal courts elect to do nothing, Obergefell could be effectively overruled in a county, region, or an entire state. The Supreme Court wouldnt have to write a single word for that to happen.
There is a certain naivete that comes with being a straight, white, male lawyer who has been entrenched in the system for so many years. Even as we stare down the worst that humanity has to offer on a daily basis, people of my age and pedigree tend to believe that the courts will still save us from the greatest injustices. We are obviously mistaken.
So this is my long-form mea culpa for trying to soothe tensions when they didnt need soothing. I was wrong. Your worst nightmares are likely to come true. The principal question we should ask as we live out those nightmares is one that wont be answered by the courts: How do we wake up?
Dan Canon is a civil rights lawyer and law professor. His book Pleading Out: How Plea Bargaining Creates a Permanent Criminal Class is available for preorder wherever you get your books.
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