The Supreme Court voted 5-4 to deal a blow to the Voting Rights Act, and 5-4 to do the same to DOMA. Justices Roberts, Thomas, Scalia, and Alito, were in the majority to thwack voting rights, and in the minority to keep marriage discrimination; Justices Ginsburg, Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan, were in the minority wanting to protect voting rights, and in the majority for equal rights.
One more Obama appointee on the Supreme Court, and the Voting Rights Act would've survived unharmed.
One McCain or Romney appointee, and the VRA would've been thwacked but DOMA remained fully in force.
Keep that in mind in 2016.
One more Obama appointee on the Supreme Court, and the Voting Rights Act would've survived unharmed.
One McCain or Romney appointee, and the VRA would've been thwacked but DOMA remained fully in force.
Keep that in mind in 2016.
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Reagan appointed O'Connor, because he wanted to appoint the first woman to the court, and she seemed like a good candidate. Also, the fact that O'Connor and Kennedy have been seen as "liberal leaning" justices speaks more to the conservative swing of the court than the views of those justices; compare Kennedy to the Warren court and he'd end up on the conservative side.
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But that still doesn't change the basic premise, which is that you cannot predict from the appointing president which way a Justice is going to vote on a given issue.