What we learned from today’s big SCOTUS case

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Dec 05, 2022 View in browser
 
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WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 23: Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch stands during a group photo of the Justices at the Supreme Court in Washington, DC on April 23, 2021. (Photo by Erin Schaff-Pool/Getty Images)

The Supreme Court's conservative majority sounded likely to side with a graphic designer in a high-profile free speech/LGBTQ rights case. | Erin Schaff-Pool/Getty Images

SCOTUS WATCH — In one of the Supreme Court's biggest cases of the term, justices heard arguments today over whether an evangelical graphic designer can refuse to make wedding websites for same-sex couples. Arguments ran well over time and featured passionate, lively questioning on both sides, but — as expected — the high court's conservative majority sounded likely to side with LORIE SMITH, the designer.

"While the conservative justices indicated support for Smith's stance, the liberal justices leaned toward Colorado's arguments," Reuters' Andrew Chung and Nate Raymond report . Both ideological wings posed deep philosophical questions about where to draw the lines for free speech and minority anti-discrimination protections.

  • Conservatives asked whether speechwriters could be forced to write wedding vows for unions of which they disapproved. 
  • Liberals asked whether wedding vendors would be allowed to discriminate against interracial marriages — a line of questioning of which some conservatives seemed skeptical.
  • Justice NEIL GORSUCH indicated that Colorado forced baker JACK PHILLIPS, the subject of a similar case four years ago, to undergo a "reeducation training program" when it made him learn the state's anti-discrimination laws. (State Solicitor General ERIC OLSON sharply disagreed.)
  • And this lighthearted exchange: Justice SAMUEL ALITO: "Jdate dating profile. Is it a dating service, I gather, for Jewish people?" Justice ELENA KAGAN: "It is." Alito: "Maybe Justice Kagan will also be familiar with the next website I'm going to mention … Ashley Madison."

GEORGIA ON MY MIND — The day before the big Senate runoff, UMass Lowell's Center for Public Opinion is out with a new poll that finds Democratic Sen. RAPHAEL WARNOCK leading HERSCHEL WALKER 51% to 46%. (Meanwhile, President JOE BIDEN has a 4-point advantage over DONALD TRUMP in Georgia in a hypothetical rematch.)

— Sabato's Crystal Ball shifted its rating of the race today from toss-up to leaning Democratic . Walker "needs a big Election Day showing," writes Miles Coleman.

— Though Atlanta's northern suburbs have gotten plenty of attention as the region where well-educated voters abandoned the GOP and flipped the state, WaPo's Theo Meyer and Leigh Ann Caldwell report that turnout levels in Henry County could be the best bellwether for the runoff. The southern suburbs have turned blue for a different reason: demographic change, as white residents leave and new Georgians arrive from other states and countries. Having doubled in size this century, the county is now plurality Black. Can Democrats get their new voters to the polls in sufficient numbers?

AP's Bill Barrow explores how differently Warnock and Walker have navigated being Black men, in life and on the campaign trail — and how Black Georgians are receiving the two nominees. "Black voters say the choice is stark: Warnock, the senior minister of MARTIN LUTHER KING's Atlanta church, echoes traditional liberal notions of the Black experience; and Walker, a University of Georgia football icon, speaks the language of white cultural conservatism and mocks Warnock's interpretations of King, among other matters."

MANDATE DEBATE — After Dems said this weekend that they might compromise and roll back the Covid vaccine requirement for the military, the administration made clear today they'd oppose such a change. JOHN KIRBY told reporters that Biden and Defense Secretary LLOYD AUSTIN don't want the mandate pulled from the National Defense Authorization Act, as Republicans have advocated.

PERSON OF THE YEAR — Time magazine unveiled its 10-person (or -group) shortlist for its designation of the world's most influential person, which last year went to ELON MUSK. (Prescient!) The contenders this year: Rep. LIZ CHENEY (R-Wyo.), Florida Gov. RON DeSANTIS, Chinese President XI JINPING, Musk again, philanthropist MacKENZIE SCOTT, Treasury Secretary JANET YELLEN, Ukrainian President VOLODYMYR ZELENSKYY, gun safety advocates, protesters in Iran and the Supreme Court. More from the "Today" show

Good Monday afternoon. Which of the shortlisted candidates would you choose — or whom did Time leave out? Drop me a line at eokun@politico.com .

 

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CONGRESS

IMMIGRATION FILES — Could Congress actually get back to bipartisan immigration reform? Sens. THOM TILLIS (R-N.C.) and KYRSTEN SINEMA (D-Ariz.) have reached a draft accord for a bill that would give 2 million Dreamers a pathway to citizenship, along with several enforcement measures, WaPo's Greg Sargent reports . They include the extension of the controversial Title 42 policy for another year, faster processing of asylum claims and removal of migrants whose claims are denied, and a resource boost for more border officers. The big question is whether it can secure 10 GOP senators' support.

Burgess Everett has a note of caution : "It's an incomplete and outdated discussion draft," a Senate aide tells him. "There is no final agreement on a deal and a lot of details would still need to be worked out." The deal also doesn't seem to include Sen. JOHN CORNYN (R-Texas), who's really the key Republican on any immigration legislation. Burgess reports that the border security funding would top $25 billion.

THE NEW MINORITY — House Democrats are tapping Rep. BRENDAN BOYLE (D-Pa.) to be ranking House Budget member next year, per Punchbowl's John Bresnahan and Heather Caygle . The DCCC chair pick is likely to come in the next few weeks.

KNOWING MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE — Elaina Plott Calabro's first feature back at The Atlantic is a major profile of the GOP congresswoman , on the ground in Georgia: her history, her beliefs and her fervent following. "She wasn't greeted" at a local GOP breakfast last month, reads the lede. "She was beheld, like a religious apparition. Emotions verged on rapture. Later, as she spoke, one man jumped to his feet with such force that his chair fell over. Not far away, two women clung to each other and shrieked." Diving into Greene's family background, childhood and career, Plott Calabro finds that "by the time she reached her late 30s, something in her had started to break." A few years later, she got into politics.

EYEING THE EXITS — Despite plenty of chaos, most people haven't actually stopped tweeting under ELON MUSK's stewardship. But Democratic members of Congress are thinking through what comes next — and taking a Twitter departure more seriously than you might expect, The Daily Beast's Sam Brodey reports . "None are quite ready yet to make a clean break, but some said they are actively considering leaving, and many are beginning to imagine a digital communications strategy in a post-Twitter era." Among the actual congressional tweeters, Sen. BRIAN SCHATZ (D-Hawaii) has no plans to leave, but Reps. JARED HUFFMAN (D-Calif.) and JAMAAL BOWMAN (D-N.Y.) have thought about it.

ALL POLITICS

BIG NEWS IN ALBANY — A federal judge tossed out three bribery and corruption charges against former New York Lt. Gov. BRIAN BENJAMIN today, "saying prosecutors had failed to demonstrate an explicit quid pro quo," per the NYT . Those counts had led Benjamin to resign. But two other charges of falsifying records remain.

MURPHY ON MEDDLING — New Jersey Gov. PHIL MURPHY, the new chair of the Democratic Governors Association, told Zach Montellaro that he wouldn't rule out meddling in GOP primaries to try to get less electable Republicans nominated. "I say this literally, you should assume that if something is legal and ethical, nothing's off the table," Murphy said. His first priority is getting another term for Kentucky Gov. ANDY BESHEAR, who is up for reelection in 2023.

WHERE ARE THEY NOW — Former Education Secretary JOHN KING JR., who ran for Maryland governor this year, is heading back to New York: He's being named SUNY chancellor today, Joseph Spector and Katelyn Cordero report for Pros from Albany.

 

JOIN WEDNESDAY FOR A POLITICO DISCUSSION ON THE NEW TRAVEL EXPERIENCE : Americans are now traveling in record numbers — but the travel experience has changed drastically in recent years, not always for the better. What lessons can we learn from the pandemic and different responses around the globe? And in the face of a possible recession, what will help the travel industry remain vibrant and deliver jobs? Join POLITICO on Dec. 7 for "The Travel Experience Redefined" to discuss these questions and more. Breakfast and coffee will be provided. REGISTER HERE .

 
 

WAR IN UKRAINE

ONE FOOT ON THE BRAKES — Under the radar, the U.S. tweaked advanced rocket launchers it supplied to Ukraine so that they're not able to shoot long-range missiles, WSJ's Michael Gordon and Gordon Lubold scooped . The secret HIMARS alterations to hardware and software reflect U.S. anxieties about broader escalation if Ukraine fired over the border into Russia, though Kyiv has vowed not to do so. "The U.S. has refrained from supplying Ukraine with long-range ATACMS missiles. But the modifications ensure that Ukraine couldn't use the Himars launchers the U.S. has provided to fire ATACMS missiles if Kyiv were to acquire them from other sources."

THE WHITE HOUSE

BIDEN ON THE ROAD — As the president prepares to head to a Phoenix chip manufacturing plant Tuesday, WSJ's Yang Jie details some of the company's difficulties in getting ready to launch next year. "High costs, lack of trained personnel and unexpected construction snags are among the issues cited by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co." Ultimately, "comparative cost to build and operate" is the leading hurdle to siting more manufacturing in the U.S., the company says.

AMERICA AND THE WORLD

MUCK READ — In a striking revolving-door story, WaPo's Craig Whitlock and Nate Jones write about two Air Force generals who sought to make big bucks after retiring by working for an Azerbaijani airline — after they'd overseen American supply routes through the country. U.S. officials warned that their new jobs could pose "a potential embarrassment and a risk to national security," leading to a yearslong court battle. WaPo tried to get information on the story for at least six years, before the reporters finally got records on the consulting deals and investigation thanks to a federal lawsuit.

WHERE THE MONEY WENT — "Hackers linked to Chinese government stole millions in Covid benefits, Secret Service says," by NBC's Sarah Fitzpatrick and Kit Ramgopal: "The theft of taxpayer funds by the Chengdu-based hacking group known as APT41 is the first instance of pandemic fraud tied to foreign, state-sponsored cybercriminals that the U.S. government has acknowledged publicly, but may just be the tip of the iceberg."

BEYOND THE BELTWAY

THE NEW GUNS LANDSCAPE — After the Supreme Court made it harder for municipalities to restrict guns, Democratic-led states are pushing ahead with new laws even in a legally unclear environment, WSJ's Jimmy Vielkind reports . Creating new permitting regimes in New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Hawaii and elsewhere, state and local officials are hoping their regulations will stand up to a new test in court.

 

LISTEN TO POLITICO'S ENERGY PODCAST: Check out our daily five-minute brief on the latest energy and environmental politics and policy news. Don't miss out on the must-know stories, candid insights, and analysis from POLITICO's energy team. Listen today .

 
 

POLICY CORNER

AILING AMERICA — "Social Security offices critical to disability benefits hit breaking point," by WaPo's Lisa Rein: "The same system has collapsed in many of the other state offices where Social Security has outsourced reviews of disability claims — a decentralized, convoluted structure Congress created nearly seven decades ago to let low-paid state employees rule on who should get federal benefits. Now more than a million Americans wait in limbo just to hear whether they will get assistance — the first step in a system of drawn-out judgments and appeals that can ultimately take years before a resolution."

SOUNDS FAMILIAR — The Real ID deadline is getting pushed back, once again, DHS announced today. Americans will now have until May 2025, instead of May 2023, to get the IDs, which Congress passed … 17 years ago. The department cited pandemic disruptions, in part. More from USA Today

AFTERNOON READ — "The Pandemic Has Created Two Very Different Kinds of Workplaces. That Especially Matters for Women," by Eleanor Mueller in POLITICO Magazine: "Though congressional Democrats briefly appeared poised to push through universal child care and paid leave as part of their party-line spending package in 2020, those efforts eventually capsized amid opposition from key moderates like Sen. JOE MANCHIN (D-W.Va.). Now, economists warn that policymakers' inertia and the resulting reliance on employers to administer paid leave and child care is creating two distinct workplaces for women — and risks exacerbating racial and gender inequality for decades to come."

JUDICIARY SQUARE

MORE FROM SCOTUS — Coming in the spring, the Supreme Court will hear a lighthearted trademark case with some serious First Amendment implications, NYT's Adam Liptak writes . Jack Daniel's is challenging a dog toy called Bad Spaniels that riffs on the whiskey bottle's design with canine jokes. The toy's creator calls it parody that constitutes constitutionally protected speech; Jack Daniel's argues that the squeaker "confuses consumers by taking advantage of Jack Daniel's hard-earned good will." Liptak notes that this case echoes a 2008 dispute over a Chewy Vuiton dog toy, which didn't sit well with Louis Vuitton. (Haute Diggity Dog won that case.)

REMEMBER HIM? — MICHAEL AVENATTI will be sentenced today for wire fraud and obstruction of collection of taxes, the L.A. Times' Michael Finnegan previews . He's already in prison for other crimes.

PLAYBOOKERS

REDIRECTED — After Republican opposition stalled Tamara Cofman Wittes' nomination as assistant USAID administrator for the Middle East, she joined the State Department this summer as a senior advisor to sanctions policy coordinator Jim O'Brien, Jewish Insider's Gabby Deutch reports .

MEDIA MOVE — Wes Venteicher is now a California energy and climate reporter for POLITICO. He previously was a reporter at the Sacramento Bee covering state government and workers.

TRANSITIONS — Annie Moore is now senior director of digital at Dezenhall Resources. She previously was digital director for the Republican State Leadership Committee. … Liz Jurinka is now a senior policy fellow at the Tobin Center for Economic Policy at Yale University. She was most recently special assistant to the president in the Office of Legislative Affairs at the White House. …

… K. Dane Snowden is now a senior adviser at Wilkinson Barker Knauer. He previously was president and CEO of the Internet Association, and is an FCC alum. … J. Carl Maxwell is now VP for public policy for the Association of American Publishers. He previously was manager of advocacy for the American Chemical Society.

WEEKEND WEDDING — John Ryan, Senate director at State's Bureau of Legislative Affairs, and Tara Tighe, counsel at Schertler and Onorato, got married this weekend at St. Matthews Cathedral, with a reception at the Army Navy Club. The couple met through friends in his Army unit. Pic Another pic SPOTTED: Sen. Bob Menendez (D-N.J.) and Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.)

 

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California Today: The judge and the case that came back to haunt him

After 40 years, Anthony Kline had to confront a case he had forgotten.
Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Monday. A San Francisco judge, Anthony Kline, had to confront an unsettling case from 40 years earlier in his career. Plus, Los Angeles jurors begin deliberations in Harvey Weinstein's sex crimes trial.

Illustration by Mark Harris

The story of Anthony Kline and Jamesetta Guy seems almost too coincidental to be true.

As told in a gripping article in The New York Times Magazine, Kline was the most senior justice on California's First District Court of Appeal in San Francisco until last year, when, at age 83, he asked to be transferred to the juvenile bench. It seemed to be a downward career move, but Kline wanted to escape the abstract world of the appeals court, where he had spent so many decades. It had been 40 years since he had done a stint in the very real-life universe of the juvenile courts.

So Kline began handling juvenile cases — students caught at school with knives, kids stealing cars. And then, five weeks into his new role, Kline was assigned the case of Jamesetta Guy.

Guy was 58, but she was slated to appear in his courtroom because of a new California law intended to help reduce the state's prison population. An inmate serving an inordinately long sentence for a crime committed as a minor could now return to juvenile court and have the case reconsidered.

Kline learned that Guy had served 41 years for a homicide during a botched robbery that she committed at 17. A lifelong progressive, the judge found her term to be staggeringly long, especially for someone convicted as a minor. In Kline's view, Guy's ordeal confirmed what he felt was wrong with California's judicial system, inequities that he had dedicated his career to fixing.

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But Kline soon learned that he was one of the people who helped put Guy behind bars many years ago. As a juvenile court judge in 1981, Kline had declared her "unfit" to be tried as a juvenile and sent her case to the adult system instead, which contributed to the length of her sentence. When he encountered the case again in 2021, he didn't even remember the ruling.

Jesse Barron, who wrote the Times Magazine article, said, "A lot of the people around this story — including some very sober-minded lawyers — started to feel that there was a logic at play beyond pure chance, because it's unheard-of for a judge to descend from such a lofty position in the system back to such a lowly position by comparison."

He continued, "And then to do that, to be drawn back to juvenile as Justice Kline was, only to slam into an unfinished case from his own past — it's a kind of coincidence that does seem almost fictional."

The article follows Kline as he grapples with the decision he made 40 years earlier, and considers whether he could, or should, try to rectify the extreme effect it had on Guy. At the time of his original ruling, Kline thought that Guy would be sentenced to 15 years in prison. But because of a confluence of unlucky circumstances, including the harsh treatment of juveniles within California's criminal justice system at the time, she got 27 years to life.

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Jesse told me that the longest sentence Guy would have received under the current judicial system, in which punishments for minors are much less severe, was probably eight years in juvenile detention. There are many people like Guy who are currently serving sentences that would, according to today's standards, be considered extreme and unfair. Jesse's reporting revealed that about 470 prisoners are serving life sentences in California state prisons for crimes they committed as minors.

"A lot of those cases, if you pulled at the threads, would have similarities to Jamesetta's, because they were decided before the Supreme Court overhauled juvenile sentencing in the 2010s," Jesse said. "In California, for example, 15 of the 470 juvenile lifers are serving life without the possibility of parole, a sentence the Supreme Court has since found unconstitutional for juveniles."

"Jamesetta's is an exceptional case because it's the same judge on both sides — that'll never happen again, I think — but there are other people in similar situations, whose cases we might never hear about."

For more:

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Marissa Li in her dorm room at Harvard University. She didn't emphasize her passion for chess in her college applications. Tony Luong for The New York Times

If you read one story, make it this

Applying to college, and trying to appear "less Asian."

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Advertising accounted for more than 90 percent of Twitter's $5.1 billion in revenue last year.Jason Henry for The New York Times

The rest of the news

  • Twitter: Under Elon Musk, Twitter's new owner, the company has cut its revenue projections after repeatedly missing its weekly advertising targets.
  • Achievement gap: California's school closures during the pandemic widened the state's achievement gap, with the most negative impacts felt in local school systems with high numbers of poor children, CalMatters reports.
  • Welcome, lawmakers: The newest class of state legislators will be sworn in on Monday in Sacramento, and they will immediately find themselves in the middle of Gov. Gavin Newsom's battle with the oil industry, The Los Angeles Times reports.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Weinstein: Jurors in Los Angeles began deliberations in the second trial for Harvey Weinstein on sex crime charges, including seven charges of rape and sexual assault. He was convicted of similar charges in New York in 2020.
  • Retail theft ring: Eighteen people were arrested after the Los Angeles police busted an organized crime ring that targeted clothing and shoe stores as recently as last week, The Associated Press reports.
  • Oil and gas drilling ban: The Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously to ban drilling of new oil and gas wells and to phase out existing ones over the next 20 years, The Associated Press reports.
CENTRAL CALIFORNIA
  • House race: John Duarte, a Republican, defeated Adam Gray, a Democrat, in a new U.S. House district in the Central Valley farm belt, in the closest congressional contest in the state this year, The Associated Press reports.
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA
  • Traffic stops: A plan to limit when San Francisco police officers can make certain types of traffic stops has been revised because of heightened concerns about public safety in the city, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
  • Coding academy layoffs: A for-profit San Francisco coding academy, the Bloom Institute of Technology, plans to lay off 60 employees by early next year, The San Francisco Chronicle reports.
Julia Gartland for The New York Times

What we're eating

Walkers stroll along a trail in San Pedro Valley Park.Liz Hafalia/San Francisco Chronicle via AP

Where we're traveling

Today's tip comes from Ricki McGlashan, who recommends a Bay Area hike:

"As a longtime resident of central San Mateo County, I was surprised and delighted to be taken on a hike up Montara Mountain in Pacifica. It's part of San Pedro Valley Park. It has astonishing views of the ocean, Half Moon Bay, The Farallons, the Marin County Headlands and Point Reyes, Mt. Tam, the Golden Gate Bridge and much of San Francisco, the Bay Bridge, the Bay and Mt. Diablo. It's truly spectacular."

Tell us about your favorite places to visit in California. Email your suggestions to CAtoday@nytimes.com. We'll be sharing more in upcoming editions of the newsletter.

What we're recommending

Does Broadway need another "Romeo and Juliet" musical? Pat Benatar says yes.

Tell us

Have you visited any of the travel destinations that we've recommended in the newsletter? Send us a few lines about your trip, and a photo!

We'd like to share them in upcoming editions of the newsletter. Email us at CAToday@nytimes.com. Please include your name and the city in which you live

Alisal Street in Solvang.Ana Elisa Fuentes for The New York Times

And before you go, some good news

With December underway, TripsToDiscover.com, a website that provides trip-planning suggestions, released a list of the 21 best small towns to visit for Christmas — and one California town made the list: Solvang.

The tiny village, located in the heart of the Santa Ynez Valley, has European architecture and sensibilities, and goes all out for Christmas, KRON reports.

The town has dozens of boutiques that sell traditional Danish items, including clogs and other knickknacks. During the winter, much of the town is decorated with holiday lights and wreaths, and there's a palpable holiday spirit as you walk along its decked-out streets.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

Briana Scalia and Maia Coleman contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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