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Feminist Court Watch

Supreme Court Cases to Watch

Virginia v. Black, No. 01-1107

This case will determine whether a Virginia law that prohibits cross burning violates the First Amendment. The law states that cross burning is illegal only when there is an intent to intimidate present. If this statute is found to violate the First Amendment, similar statutes protecting individuals from hate crimes or gender based violence may also be at risk.

Scheidler v. National Organization for Women, No. 01-1118
Operation Rescue v. National Organization for Women, No. 01-1119

In these 2 companion cases, the Supreme Court will determine whether the forcible blockading, invasions, destruction of property, and physical attacks orchestrated by Scheidler, Operation Rescue, and their co-conspirators against women's health care clinics qualify as extortion under the Hobbs Act and whether these attacks can be enjoined under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. The jury, federal district judge, and panel of the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals have all ruled in favor of NOW. Women's rights advocates fear that a victory by the anti-abortion extremist defendants in this case will embolden those who would attack abortion clinics.

Nevada Department of Human Resources v. Hibbs, No. 01-1368

This case will determine whether state employees are protected under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) which guarantees employees 12 weeks of unpaid leave to address family or medical problems. Passed as a result of vigorous lobbying and work by the women's rights community, the FMLA is a key step towards women's equality in the workplace because it allows women, who are still overwhelmingly responsible for family care, to address their family obligations without losing their jobs. When the FMLA was passed, lawmakers clearly intended that its provisions would apply to state employees. However, in the intervening years, a series of remarkably conservative 5-4 decisions by the Supreme Court have dramatically curtailed the federal government's ability to protect state employees from discrimination on the basis of religion and disability. If the Court rules that the FMLA cannot protect state employees, it will be the first time these reactionary "state's rights" arguments have been applied to a statute based on protection against gender discrimination. If the state is successful in claiming immunity, the result could be a wave of attacks on other protections against gender discrimination such as the Equal Pay Act.

Lawrence v. Texas, No. 02-102

This case questions the constitutionality of Texas’ sodomy law, which makes oral or anal sex between same-sex partners – but not opposite-sex partners – a crime. The first question before the court is whether the law is unconstitutional because it punishes homosexual couples and not heterosexual couples, which will test similar same-sex-only sodomy laws that exist. The second constitutional question is whether the law is a violation of the right to privacy, calling into question all sodomy laws and the Supreme Court's own prior decision on this issue. If the Supreme Court decides the right to privacy argument in favor of the plaintiffs and rules that all sodomy laws are unconstitutional, that ruling will strengthen the right to privacy in general, which in turn will help protect the right to reproductive freedom.

Gratz v. Bollinger, No. 02-516
Grutter v. Bollinger, No. 02-241

These two related cases challenge the University of Michigan's policy of using race as a "plus factor" like geographic diversity, athletic talent, musical talent, or alumni connections in its admission decisions in order to increase the diversity of its student body. In its last opinion on affirmative action and school admissions, which occurred in 1978, the Supreme Court approved this type of "plus factor" program. Since 1978, several liberal Supreme Court justices have been replaced by much more conservative jurists. The current Court is hostile to civil rights and affirmative action. States that have banned affirmative action in their universities (California and Texas) have seen a tremendous decrease in the number of minority students. If the University's program is ruled unconstitutional, it could have drastic results for the higher education opportunities of all minorities.


   


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