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US readies historic rulings

Published: 12 May 2013 - 04:09 am | Last Updated: 03 Feb 2022 - 10:40 am

WASHINGTON: The US Supreme Court is preparing to hand down one of the most significant sequences of judgments in US history, with upcoming rulings expected to have far-reaching consequences for millions of Americans.

The nine-justice panel must issue opinions on outstanding cases it has heard in fall and winter sessions by the end of June.

They are set to rule on cases involving hot button issues such as same-sex marriage, equal opportunities in education and voter rights for minorities.

The first of the keenly awaited opinions could be released as early as tomorrow, with analysts tipping the possibility of a resolution to a case revolving around the affirmative action admissions policy of the University of Texas at Austin.

An undergraduate student, Abigail Fisher has challenged the college’s decision to deny her admission because of racial quotas. Fisher argued that she had effectively been discriminated against because she was white, in violation of equal protection rules enshrined in the US Constitution.

A separate case also seeks to address another crucial pillar of the civil rights struggle, looking into whether federal laws protecting minority voting rights were still warranted.

In the most high-profile case, justices will rule on the legality of same-sex marriage following landmark oral hearings in March.

Elizabeth Wydra, a lawyer at the Constitutional Accountability Centre, said the upcoming rulings might even outweigh last year’s arguments on health care.

“Everyone thought that last term was the term of the century because of the health care arguments,” Wydra said. 

“But this term might be even more historic because the Court is considering the constitutionality of the Voting Rights Act, one of America’s most iconic civil rights laws, the constitutionality of providing for equal opportunity in higher education in the affirmative action case, and a fundamental question of equality in the same-sex marriage cases.

The Supreme Court justices are supposed to be independent, but five of them were selected by Republican presidents and are mostly conservative, while four picked by Democrats and tend to be liberal. 

Kennedy, appointed by Republican Ronald Reagan in 1988, is often the swing vote.

Meanwhile Elise Boddie, the litigation director of the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People Legal Defense Fund, said the opinions on the two civil rights cases before the justices — on affirmative action programs in college and minority voting rights — would have a massive sociological impact.

“The cases are enormously important because ultimately the issues that are at stake are protecting opportunities in higher education for African-Americans and protecting the opportunity to participate in our democracy, tremendously important issues that will affect the landscape of opportunity and inclusion in the country,” Boddie said. AFP