SirNitram wrote:Well, we hit our first bump. Yes, the Legislative branch of the US Federal Government can decide.
SCOTUS is the Judicial branch of the US Federal Government.
Ergo, that's the first problem with your reply.
No, no, no, the
state legislature has the right to decide,
not the US Federal government, not the federal legislative branch, ergo congress. The constitution is
crystal clear on this matter. The electors are apportioned in whatever manner the
state's legislature decides.
I covered this already, in bold type, in my first long post.
I'm not asking you to read my posts out of some desperate attempt to brand you as ignorant. You are not ignorant, but you cannot cogently respond to what I am saying without a clear idea of what I am actually saying.
The law says that the State legislature has the right to determine how the electoral delegates are assigned. The legislature in Florida has passed laws as to how that is to be done, and the Florida Legislature empowered the Florida Secretary of State (Katherine Harris, a great fool, panderer, and political crony of the governor, I grant) to certify the elections results. She did so. Ergo the Legislature had already made their decision, as far as the SCOTUS was concerned.
SirNitram wrote:The second is just endemic to your entire time in this thread: Instead of actually considering that you could be completely wrong, that minor procedural rulings do not pass the smell test in this, you have retreated into the pre-packaged response of far too many: It's because Scalia is evil. It's because he's Fascist. It's this, it's that, it's all the person questioning it's fault. In short, Appeal To Motive fallacy, which you have never let go of.
Nitram, you responded to a direct question of what legal grounds Scalia used to justify his position by indicating (though I concede, not coming out and saying it) that he had none, which is a flat untruth. You jumped on me when I suggested that too many people (I was not refering to you specifically, but to the debates that always surround what happened in 2000, and I'm sorry if I made that unclear) take the "Scalia is a fascist" view of things. You accuse me of appealing to motive, yet you have yet to even
read (I am led to believe) the actual text of what I posted, and reject everything I say based on a completely fictitious assumption of what I must mean. I am not the one in this thread making logical falicies left and right.
You are right, I should not assume you are calling Scalia evil.... except that seems to be the crux of your damned argument. You claim Scalia voted as he did for no reason whatsoever, and leave unstated the implication. You've yet to even reply to the rationale he actually did give, as did the other five judges. What the hell am I
supposed to conclude save that you think he is a corrupt political partisan making decisions without legal basis to benefit his party.
A fallacy is only a fallacy if it's wrong. What DO you think Scalia's reasoning was if I'm guilty of such faulty assumptions? You do not win points by accusing me of failing to understand your arguments when you leave your arguments deliberately unsaid.
SirNitram wrote:The letter of the law as the majority saw it was a set of procedural nonsense that added up to not simply counting the votes.
The votes
were counted. They were counted and certified by the state elections authority. A recount was ordered because of irregularities, I grant,
gross irregularities. That recount was conducted illegally, in violation of the Equal Protections clause of the US Constitution, as I have shown. In absence of a viable recount, what precisely do you suggest the SCOTUS should have ordered used if not the certified elections results? Guesswork? Ideological identity politics? Ouiji boards? There was a full slate of elections returns available. It is not "procedural nonsense" to make use of said slate. It is in fact, as five judges found, the only appropriate response.
Four judges disagreed. Those judges argued that the safe harbor clause was being misinterpreted, and that the court should have ordered another recount. I am not qualified to say that this was the right or the wrong decision. I feel (and I sense you feel as well) that the dissenting judges were correct. I will not however throw out the entire reasoning behind the majority decision based on the fact that you falsely brand it as "procedural nonsense".
SirNitram wrote:The fact there are obvious idealogical ties between the five majority and the one they ruled in favor of, is worth noting.
And what? The fact that there are equally obvious idealogical ties between the four minority and the one
they ruled in favor of is not worth noting? I'm trying not to make a motivational fallacy here, so I'm just gonna ask directly: What
is your motive in suggesting only that the five majority judges were blinded by their ideological politics, and not the four dissenting ones?
Is it not possible that conservative judges, who believe in literalist readings of the constitution and the law, might have acted in a manner conforming with their beliefs, while liberal judges, who believe in a more broadly interpretative reading of the constitution and the law, might have acting in a manner conforming with theirs? Why is the political affiliation of the conservative judges the only one in question?
SirNitram wrote:The idea they did not decide the election.. That they were innocent bystanders with no ability to simply let the Florida Supreme Court's ruling stand, or to revert to the Legislative branch's remedies(Specifically, the 12th Amendment).. Is ludicrous.
In the first place, the Supreme Court found (7-2, by the way) that the Florida Supreme Court's ruling was unconstitutional. As to the 12th amendment, it allows for the House of Representatives to decide the issue
only if there is NO majority of electors for any candidate. The only way that would have become the case in 2000 is if Florida's electoral votes were not counted at all. Whether Bush won the votes or Gore won them,
someone was gonna wind up with an electoral majority.
In the second place, the issue of who won the 2000 election was not before the Supreme Court in any way shape or form. It is not ludicrous, in fact it is
absolutely fundamental to the justice system of the United States that this point be made clear. For the SCOTUS to declare that the House was to decide would remove the electoral franchise from the State of Florida itself. Nobody, not Gore, not Bush, not anyone, was claiming that
nobody had won Florida. The Supreme Court had absolutely no standing to do what you are claiming it ought to have done. None. That you would prefer they had such an authority does not conjure it up out of thin air. They did not have the means to appeal to the 12th amendment, for it applies only if there is no majority of electors for any one candidate. Under no permutation of the laws was this the case in 2000. Gore's team did not even mention the 12th amendment in making its case.
SirNitram wrote:Specifically, I will draw attention to SCOTUS vs. Florida SC in this. SCFL rules to complete the count. On Dec 1, SCOTUS agrees to hear Bush. Dec 4 (And those who watch SCOTUS know this is absurdly fast, especially given the weekend), an unsigned opinion sets aside the verdict with no reason and remands it SCFL. It declined to rule on the constitutionality and legality of the SCFL decision. Dec 8, SCFL rules on both it's own decision handed back and some local ones: Everything must be counted. Simple principle.
Saturday, the very next day, SCOTUS injunctures the counting suddenly and on the 12th, they once again punted it back, again, knowing the 12th was the legal deadline for the electors to be chosen.
You make it sound like a conspiracy to deliver the election to Bush, but as I am not ascribing motive, I will not assume that's what you mean. SCOTUS did move absurdly fast, but partially because time was a factor in this case. By the 1st of December, the issue had already been dancing around the courts for nearly a month. The deadline to seat electors was the 18th, the Safe Harbor deadline was the 12th. If the rulings lasted beyond that point, it would result in the total disenfranchisement of Florida's slate of electors. There was no option but to move quickly.
I explained, already, in as great detail as I could, the reasons that SCOTUS gave for injuncturing the recount on the 11th. That ruling was, as I have mentioned several times, not 5-4, but 7-2. Half the Liberal wing of the SCOTUS agreed that the recount was being performed in an unconstitutional manner. The disagreement (and the aspect that was decided 5-4) was (broadly stated) whether or not another recount was permissible. The majority decided it was not. The dissenting four justices decided it was. Both of them had legal grounds to stand on.
SirNitram wrote:Let me condense this: The SCOTUS repeatedly stepped in, continually punted back the rulings by 5-4, and ran out the clock. It used procedural points in the majority, but the pattern is there to be seen.
I don't think I'm being fallacious when I say that you're now suggesting that there was a conspiracy within SCOTUS to give the election to Bush. Is that fair? You're alluding to a "pattern" of behavior within SCOTUS' reactions and you've already called all five conservative justices' motives in voting as they did into question. And yet all you have to suggest as to what they should have done otherwise was to
ignore both the law, the established procedure, and the constitution of the United States itself. They had
no authority to remand this decision to the US House of Representatives. That much is made
adamantly clear by the text of the 12th amendment. They had found by a massive majority that the recount as it was proceeding was unconstitutional. Should they have found otherwise? Should they have permitted it to continue anyway? What would you suggest? Not even Judges Breyer and Souter, two members of the liberal wing of the court, would countenance the recount as it was being conducted. Are they also members of this conspiracy? Were they acting in bad faith? Were they wrong?
And the answer to that last question might well be 'yes', (certainly the remaining two justices said so), but they are not simply wrong because you don't like the result. And before you accuse me of ascribing motive, I'm ascribing that motive because you've given me
nothing else to go on. You speak of procedural nonsense as though it is a bad thing, but the Supreme Court does not make decisions based on "what they think is a good idea". They make decisions based on what the law is, and what the law says, and what the law permits, and what the law does not permit. The law does not permit this decision to be remanded to the House. The law does not permit them to disenfranchise Florida. They found that the law did not permit Florida to conduct the recount in the manner that they did, and the law did not permit this decision to be deferred beyond December 12th.
Exactly what else were they supposed to do?
EDIT: I've edited this post a lot to correct spelling, refine my meaning, and so on, but I do want to end with this little factoid: During the recount that was being conducted before the SCOTUS quashed it, the one they found was being conducted illegally, at no time during the recount process was Gore ever ahead of Bush in the popular vote in the state of Florida. Bush's margin was razor thin, and at some times he was further ahead of Gore, and at some times he was less so, but never was it found that Gore was actually leading Bush.
Now, this by itself means nothing. The recount itself was both flawed and never finished. But lest we imagine that the Supreme Court saw that Gore was going to win and instantly squashed it, the recount by no means had guaranteed Gore's victory, or even
suggested Gore's victory in Florida in 2000. I will finish by saying that I agree with Justice Stevens in his dissent. "We may never know with complete certainty the identity of the winner." That should not be taken to mean that the winner was Gore. It should be taken to mean we just don't know.
Gaze upon my works, ye mighty, and despair...
Havoc: "So basically if you side against him, he summons Cthulu."
Hotfoot: "Yes, which is reasonable."