After Justice Sonia Sotomayor recused
herself, the United States Supreme Court voted unanimously in an 8-0 decision
released on Monday that presidential electors must keep their pledge to support
the popular vote of their state. This decision came about because two separate
cases made their way through the court system. Three Washington electors broke
their pledge and were fined $1,000 each, according to state law, and sued the
state. Three Colorado electors planned to break their pledge. Two changed their
minds when the third one was removed. However, all three electors took the
matter to court. The decision by the Supreme Court is a huge win for conservatives
who have been fighting to preserve the Electoral College.
The decision clearly affirms that
the Electoral College is important in our presidential elections. It balances
the popular vote of the citizens with the power of the sovereign state. If the
Democrat candidate carries the state, then Democrat electors become part of the
Electoral College. If the Republican candidate wins the popular vote in the
state, Republican electors are chosen. At least this is the way that it works
in 48 states with Maine and Nebraska doing something more complex. The people
vote in November, and the Electoral College votes in individuals state capitols
in December.
The states have different numbers of
electors with the number being determined by the total of two U.S. Senators
plus the number of state representatives in the House of Representatives. Alaska
has three electoral votes because we have two Senators and one Representative, and
other states have differing numbers. Zack Smith and Hans von Spakovsky gave the
following explanation.
This arrangement balances the interests of
the larger states with larger populations and the smaller, often more rural
states with smaller populations so that presidential candidates won’t ignore those
smaller states and campaign only in the large, urban population centers….
Article II of the Constitution is very
straightforward. It says that states can appoint electors “in such Manner as
the Legislature thereof may direct.”
Eight Justices agreed that “Article II,
§ 1’s appointments
power gives the States far-reaching authority over presidential electors,
absent some other constitutional constraint,” meaning that as a condition of
appointment, a state “can demand that [an] elector actually live up to his
pledge, on pain of penalty.”
Going further, Justice Elena Kagan,
writing for these eight, noted that “nothing in the Constitution expressly
prohibits States from taking away presidential electors’ voting discretion.”
Justice Clarence Thomas, who concurred in
the judgment, rejected the majority’s Article II analysis because he believes
this last point really holds the key to the outcome.
He said, “The Constitution does not
address—expressly or by necessary implication—whether States have the power to
require that Presidential electors vote for the candidates chosen by the
people. Article II, § 1, and the Twelfth Amendment provide for the election
for the President through a body of electors. But neither speaks directly
to a State’s power over elector voting.”
Regardless, all nine justices agree that
the Constitution does not prohibit states from limiting electors’ discretion.
It is amazing that all nine justices
can agree on anything, and it is even more amazing that they all agree on
something as important as the sovereign power of the states over their electors.
This decision affirms that the Supreme Court believes that “We the People” are
in control.
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