Tag: court

  • The Supreme Court’s destruction of the Voting Rights Act reminds us of Kentucky’s ‘Great Dissenter’

    The Supreme Court’s destruction of the Voting Rights Act reminds us of Kentucky’s ‘Great Dissenter’

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    The Supreme Court’s destruction of the Voting Rights Act reminds us of Kentucky’s ‘Great Dissenter’

    This commentary was originally published in The Kentucky Lantern.

    “There are obvious echoes between Louisiana v. Callais, in which Justice Samuel Alito’s majority opinion finished off the [1965 Voting Rights Act]…and the notorious Plessy v. Ferguson decision, in which the court blessed Jim Crow,” Pema Levy wrote in Mother Jones magazine on May 7.

    “The Roberts court is in many respects a neoconfederate court, and it repeatedly applies the tactics and ideas of the 1880s and 1890s court, whose members likewise could not abide a robust vision of equality.”

    May 18 was the 130th anniversary of the Plessy case, whose sole dissenter was Kentucky native John Marshall Harlan. “Our constitution is colorblind, and neither knows nor tolerates classes among citizens,” he argued, adding that racial segregation “cannot be justified upon any legal grounds.”

    His “dissent in the Plessy case is memorable, first, for the courage he displayed,” said James Klotter, author and Kentucky state historian. “Alone of the justices, he spoke for the future, for ‘the better angels of our nature,’ and for the rights of mankind.”

    Harlan seemed an unlikely champion of Black rights. He was born into a wealthy slaveholding family in southern Mercer County – now Boyle County – in 1833. He grew up to own slaves and had been an outspoken defender of the South’s peculiar institution.

    Historians agree

    Murray State University historians Brian Clardy and William Mulligan also see alarming parallels between Callais and Plessy.

    “Both decisions represent conservatism that privileges hate and white supremacy, Plessy after Reconstruction, Callais after landmark civil rights legislation in the 1960s that was called a second Reconstruction,” said Clardy, a professor of history.

    “The Callais decision continues a troubling trend – reversing decisions that have expanded the definition of who receives full rights and equal treatment,” said Mulligan, a history professor emeritus. He proposed that the court’s six-member conservative majority might heed Justice Louis D. “Brandeis’ argument that what matters most is the result of a law or a decision.” (The University of Louisville Law School is named for Brandeis, a Louisville native.)

    Added Levy: “Harlan’s canonical dissent in Plessy could, in many parts, apply to Callais too. In his view, a law doesn’t fulfill the Constitution’s obligations to equality if its effects are discriminatory.”

    She wrote that the majority used Harlan’s claim that the constitution is “color-blind” to justify its ruling. “Harlan, of course, was not arguing for a context-blind, effects-blind reading of the Constitution…. Look around, Harlan urged. But the majority, then and today, refuse to.”

    An unlikely dissenter

    Named for John Marshall, the renowned early 19th century chief justice, Harlan chose a career in law. He was pro-slavery and pro-Union, like most Kentuckians. The state’s pro-Confederate minority said only secession could save slavery.

    Harlan fought as a Union army colonel in the early part of the Civil War. After his father died in 1863, Harlan resigned his commission and came home. Soon afterwards, he was elected attorney general on the conservative Union Democratic ticket.

    He and his party vigorously opposed the Emancipation Proclamation, though it did not apply to Kentucky. In the 1864 presidential contest, Harlan voted for Union Gen. George McClellan over President Abraham Lincoln, whom he had also rejected in the 1860 election.

    After the war ended in 1865, Kentucky became intensely pro-Southern, and Harlan was defeated for reelection in 1867. White supremacist Democrats, many of them former Confederate soldiers and sympathizers, dominated the General Assembly, which refused to ratify the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments.

    After initially opposing the Republican-championed amendments, Harlan, also a former Whig and “Know-Nothing,” stunned fellow conservative Kentuckians by embracing them and joining the GOP he had hated for years. President Rutherford B. Hayes named him to the Supreme Court in 1877.

    The Republicans mostly controlled national politics, so Harlan’s critics, Democrats and some Republicans, accused him of political opportunism. Klotter said the charge was false. “But he may have taken his stand, perhaps for personal reasons, for he had a Black half-brother named Robert Harlan.”

    Harlan’s brother changed his views

    Robert Harlan prospered in business and “became a respected and successful citizen,” Klotter said. “John Marshall Harlan recognized that Robert’s life refuted the notion of Black inferiority…he knew that his half-brother was the equal of all men when it came to business acumen, political leadership, and much more. He could not, in good faith, support a segregated world that denied basic black rights and so he dissented once more in Plessy.”

    Harlan was the lone naysayer in other civil rights cases, including an 1883 ruling that overturned the Civil Rights Act of 1875. The measure banned racial discrimination in “accommodations, theatres, public schools, churches, and cemeteries.” The law also prohibited “the barring of any person from jury service on account of race and provided that all lawsuits brought under the new law would be tried in federal, not state, courts.”

    In dissenting, Harlan wrote, “Deprived of their enjoyment in common with others, a freeman is not only branded as one inferior and infected, but, in the competitions of life, is robbed of some of the most essential means of existence, and all this solely because they belong to a particular race which the nation has liberated.”

    In a letter to Harlan, civil rights leader Frederick Douglass wrote, “I am glad sir, that in this day of compromise and concession where it is so much easier to drift with the current, to sacrifice conviction for the sake of peace, that you have been able to adhere to your convictions and thus save your soul. When self respect is lost the soul is lost.”

    Harlan died in 1911 and is buried in Rock Creek Cemetery in Washington, D.C.

    Harlan “accurately predicted problems ahead for America if [Plessy]…became the law of the land, for it could not represent the future,” Klotter said. “His courageous words echoed through the years; his lone stance makes his dissent perhaps the most forceful and far-reaching in American history. The ‘Great Dissenter’ fully earned his moniker with the greatest dissent in the history of the court.”

    Kentucky Lantern is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Kentucky Lantern maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Linda Blackford for questions: info@kentuckylantern.com.

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    Source: ohiocapitaljournal.com
    Author: Berry Craig

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  • Private school voucher lawsuit heads to Ohio’s 10th District Court of Appeals

    Private school voucher lawsuit heads to Ohio’s 10th District Court of Appeals

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    Private school voucher lawsuit heads to Ohio’s 10th District Court of Appeals

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    Attorneys fighting on behalf of public and private school funding will present arguments before an appellate court today, Tuesday, in a continued battle over Ohio’s private school voucher program.

    A lawsuit that has been active since 2022 will now go before the 10th District Court of Appeals, as attorneys for more than 300 public school districts and advocates defend an attempt to force the state legislature to eliminate funding for the private school voucher program.

    Public school advocates are against the state funding of private school vouchers, partly because they argue the program funding has overtaken that of public schools.

    The Ohio Constitution includes a provision requiring the state to fund a single system of public schools. The lawsuit argues that the private voucher program represents an unconstitutional funding of a second system of education.

    The lawsuit also argued that the program violated the equal protection clause in the constitution.

    Schools including Cleveland Heights-University Heights, Columbus, Richmond Heights, Lima, and Barberton were signed on to the lawsuit, along with individuals and parents.

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    The case landed in the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, where Judge Jaiza Page said the legislature has “exceedingly broad powers” in its authority over the state’s education system, but the power does not come with “unlimited discretion.”

    Supporters of private school vouchers argued that it is a scholarship program, and does not purport to be a “system” of schools, something Page didn’t buy in the June 2025 decision in which Page said the voucher program was unconstitutional.

    Calling vouchers a scholarship program “is mere semantics” because the state pays schools directly, the judge wrote.

    “Where EdChoice participating private schools are inexplicably receiving double the per-pupil state funding than public schools, it is difficult to say that EdChoice is simply a scholarship that follows and/or benefits the students, as opposed to a system that benefits private schools,” Page wrote in 2025.

    The judge didn’t make a decision on one claim in the lawsuit: that the voucher program created “segregation” in public schools.

    Page wrote that there was no evidence of “discriminatory intent,” and denied the request for a summary judgment from both sides of the lawsuit, meaning the claim is still active and awaiting a ruling in the Franklin County court.

    Anticipating the rest of the lawsuit would be appealed, Page allowed the program to continue “in recognition that this decision may cause significant changes to school funding in Ohio.”

    The parties in the suit have appealed, with the state and private school advocates appealing the rulings that the voucher program is unconstitutional, that it creates more than one “system of uncommon schools,” and that the direct payments from the state allows unconstitutional funding for religious schools.

    Attorneys for private school parents maintain their argument that it is “a scholarship program, not a school-funding program,” according to appeals court documents.

    “It therefore cannot run afoul of any prohibition against funding ‘uncommon schools,” wrote attorney Keith Neely, of the Institute for Justice, a DC-based law firm representing private school parents.

    Public school advocates are cross-appealing, pushing back against the one ruling for which Page sided with the state.

    Page ruled that there was no evidence that the voucher program in Ohio creates a disparity in education.

    “While it seems inevitable that some Ohio students might be excluded from the EdChoice program by a participating private school, none of student plaintiffs have alleged or provided any evidence of denial of participation in the EdChoice program,” Page wrote.

    Cleveland-based attorneys Maria Fair and Mark Wallach argued in a brief to the appellate court that “there is no valid governmental interest in funding private education, much less seeking parity between public and private resources.”

    “The cycle never ends: The state insufficiently funds public schools, which are then forced to seek local tax levies or apply for private grants,” the attorneys wrote.

    “The state then diverts more taxpayer dollars to private entities, justifying this by citing those very same levies and grants.”

    The case is scheduled to go before the 10th District Court of Appeals on Tuesday morning.

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  • Democrats set sights on protecting, adding to Ohio Supreme Court seats

    Democrats set sights on protecting, adding to Ohio Supreme Court seats

    Democrats set sights on protecting, adding to Ohio Supreme Court seats

    Democratic judges have an uphill battle to change the 6-1 Ohio Supreme Court, where Justice Jennifer Brunner is an island unto herself in a sea of Republican justices. But she and another judge making a run for a seat in November sense a change in the winds when it comes to Democratic support, both in the judicial system and elsewhere.

    “As I travel the state, I am taken by the movement, the energy, the sort of undertow that I’m sensing from the counties around the state,” Brunner said at the Ohio Democratic Party’s primary night event on Tuesday.

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    Brunner has been on the court since 2021, but until last year, she shared the bench with two other Democratic justices.

    Races for the state’s top judicial positions were made explicitly partisan when Republican state lawmakers added party labels to the races starting in 2022. Since that change, the court has gone from 4-3 to 6-1 Republican.

    “I don’t mind it,” Brunner said. “But I sure would like a little more company.”

    The most recent general election in 2024 saw the defeat of Justice Melody Stewart and Justice Michael P. Donnelly, in favor of Republican justices Joe Deters and Megan Shanahan.

    Brunner will now face off against Republican challenger and former Franklin County Common Pleas Judge Colleen O’Donnell, who edged out a crowded primary field of appellate judges on Tuesday, garnering 32% of the vote in unofficial results from the Ohio Secretary of State.

    She succeeded in the election with a margin of less than 18,000 votes between her and her closest opponent, Fifth District Court of Appeals Judge Andrew King.

    “This is not just a victory for my campaign team, but for all Ohioans who support law and order, public safety, and fair, consistent court decisions,” O’Donnell said in a statement late Tuesday night.

    Brunner told the crowd of Democratic supporters that she wants to be “part of the foundation and the strong shoulders that people like (governor candidate Dr.) Amy Acton can stand on.”

    She said the energy she’s seen from voters shows a dissatisfaction with the way government is working, particularly the Republican leadership at the federal level.

    “We know we all have problems in our lives … and every time we look up thinking we might get a little hope, what we get out of Washington is this din, and this craziness, and this sense that this is not our country,” she said.

    If Brunner loses the Nov. 3 election, and Justice Dan Hawkins defends his seat against a Democratic challenger, First District Court of Appeals Judge Marilyn Zayas, the Ohio Supreme Court will be a full 7-0 Republican panel.

    In her campaign to join Brunner on the court, Zayas also feels a different energy in the 2026 election.

    “I’m seeing how we are losing faith in our court because of politics, and politics has no place in our Ohio Supreme Court,” said Zayas, who was unopposed in her primary race.

    Zayas said the state is at a crossroads, one in which wins for the two Democrats in 2026 could provide opportunities for more judges in 2028.

    “We have to do this, because the alternative is way too dire,” Zayas said.

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