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The United States Supreme Court, under the Constitution, is intended to be one of three coequal branches of government. Most recently, however, it has played an outsized role. Republican Senator Mitch McConnell from Kentucky has been the chief architect in pushing the federal judiciary in a more conservative direction and nowhere more so than on the United States Supreme Court. This chapter presents a view of how the Supreme Court is intended to operate and argues that today’s Court is exceedingly political. McConnell engineered the placement of three very conservative justices on the Court giving the Court its current 6-3 conservative majority. By reviewing key cases and arguing that the current Court is rejecting much of Supreme Court and constitutional law history, we demonstrate the Court’s rightward shift. As an ideal, we like the Court to be as politically neutral as possible, and we would like it to find and not make the law. However, as we discuss, given the role the Court plays in constitutional interpretation, it is inevitable that it will make the law and that politics will influence its decision-making. This chapter also argues that today’s Court may be the most politicized Court in our lifetimes, if not in our history.
This chapter briefly surveys the history of the Supreme Court's interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment and shows how many salient cases would come out today under a correct originalist interpretation. It shows how the privileges or immunities clause justifies the result in Brown v. Board of Education and possibly also Obergefell v. Hodges, and explores the implications for, among other things, public accommodations cases, "one person, one vote," and partisan gerrymandering, economic liberty, and incorporation.
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