Strict Scrutiny - Student Debt Relief Bad, Bigotry Good
Episode Date: June 30, 2023The Supreme Court ended its term today with a double whammy, issuing opinions in the 303 Creative case and the student debt relief cases. In the former, the majority creates "a constitutional right to... refuse to serve members of a protected class." And in the latter, the majority invalidate's the Biden administration's student debt relief program because, well, they had feelings about it.Listen to our episode recapping the 303 Creative arguments: "How the 303 Creative case threatens to roll back the 21st century"Listen to our episode recapping the arguments in the student debt relief cases: "Ascertaining the Majorness of Student Debt Relief"Follow @CrookedMedia on Instagram and Twitter for more original content, host takeovers and other community events. Follow us on Instagram, Twitter, Threads, and Bluesky
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Mr. Chief Justice, may it please the court.
It's an old joke, but when a man argues against two beautiful ladies like this, they're going to have the last word.
She spoke, not elegantly, but with unmistakable clarity.
She said, I ask no favor for my sex. All I ask of our brethren is that they take their feet off our legs.
Hello, and welcome back to Strict Scrutiny, your podcast about that very normal, very moderate,
very institutionalist, very restrained Supreme Court we've all been hearing about,
and the legal culture that surrounds it.
Psych! The court is back on its bullshit, per usual, and as expected, issuing decisions that,
Justice Sotomayor's words, quote, for the first time in history, grant a business open to the public a constitutional
right to refuse to serve members of a protected class, creating a constitutional right to refuse
service to a disfavored group. But it didn't stop there. The court also invalidated the president's
student debt relief program, basically because the justices have a lot of feelings about it.
It essentially came down to
that. So those are the decisions we will be recapping today. And stay tuned. We will have
a full term recap episode to follow on Monday. Meantime, we are your hosts. I'm Kate Shaw.
I'm Alyssa Murray.
And I'm Leah Lippman. And the reason why I might sound unhinged today, which is different than the
reason I may have sounded unhinged yesterday, is that Neil Gorsuch took a big fucking dump all over Pride as I'm sitting here in my rainbow
argumentative, antithetical dream girl tank with rainbow nails waiting to hear Taylor Swift perform
It's Different as a surprise song here in Cincinnati tonight, which I have been begging
her to do for weeks and stressing about whether inclement weather like the giant clouds of smoke
from the Canada fires or thunderstorms will interfere with my ability to hear that. If the Supreme Court's contribution to climate problems interfere
with any of this, there is going to be hell to pay and you bitches haven't seen anything yet.
Other caveat is we are literally recording this episode less than an hour after we've received
all of the opinions. So we are still processing them and working them out, much like Clarence
Thomas is processing all of his issues in the pages of the U.S. reports. So you will hear us working it out
in real time. Unlike Justice Thomas, I don't think the fact that we are still working through these
issues should disqualify us from service as your podcast hosts. Because we're actually doing a
service to the country. And we're doing the work. We are doing the work. We are working. We are
working. We are doing the work. Thank you for joining us as we do.
Today's decisions were brutal, both in really important and different ways. So this is going
to be pretty raw, probably. And we're just going to dive right in discussing the two opinions in
the order the court released them on Friday morning, which is when we're recording. So we're
going to start with 303 Creative versus Alanis. Leah already gave you a little sneak preview of
Justice Sotomayor's distillation in her
incredibly powerful dissent, which we will talk about.
But as a reminder, that's the hypothetical case about whether a hypothetical wedding
website designer might hypothetically be asked to design a hypothetical wedding website for
a hypothetical same-sex wedding.
And hypothetically, would that violate her First Amendment rights if, hypothetically,
Colorado told her she couldn't refuse to design that hypothetical website for a hypothetical wedding? And in a 6-3,
happy last day of pride opinion by Justice Gorsuch, the court said, yes, that not at all
hypothetical situation would definitely violate her First Amendment rights. The court wrote that
the First Amendment bars Colorado from, quote, forcing a website designer to create expressive designs speaking messages with which the designer disagrees.
So we will break down the opinion in a second. But really, to understand what the case is about, you just kind of need to go directly to Justice Sotomayor's exceptionally moving and powerful dissent, which I already kind of read from at the outset. So in that dissent, you know, she said the
court had for the first time in history recognized a constitutional right to refuse to serve a
protected group. And I think the opening to her dissent is also worth highlighting, and it's a
little long, so bear with me. But she writes that five years ago, this court recognized the general
rule that religious and philosophical objections to gay marriage do not allow business owners and
other actors in the economy and in society
to deny protected persons equal access
to goods and services
under a neutral and generally applicable
public accommodations law.
What a difference five years makes.
That's a literal direct quote.
And she continues, not just at the court.
So she writes here, as well as later in the opinion,
about the backlash to the movement
for liberty and equality for gender and sexual minorities and how heartbreaking it is, but also how familiar it is.
Because whenever civil rights have advanced principles of equality and liberty in public life, there has always been backlash.
And in the past, she says, the brave justices who once sat on this court decisively rejected those claims.
Alas, not so brave anymore, I guess.
We're going to try and figure out what exactly Justice Gorsuch's opinion for the majority held
and what exactly it means, both for this case as well as for other civil rights statutes,
for other groups that are protected from discrimination by public accommodation statutes
like the one at issue in 303 Creative and more.
So first, it's important to recognize that Justice Gorsuch understands the decision to only be
creating a First Amendment exception where a goods or service provider is engaged in,
quote unquote, pure speech and would be required to do something that constitutes
pure speech. And he says this is such a case because the parties basically stipulated to that, writing that Smith would be asked to create websites that
quote, celebrate and promote the couple's wedding and unique love story and to celebrate and promote
certain marriages and that the resulting websites doing this would be Smith's speech, right? So
that's really important. So this turns on the question of whether the business activity is speechy, right?
But who gets to decide what's speechy?
It seems that that's one Neil Gorsuch who has decided that websites are speechy.
And in the future, it's the 6-3 court that will decide what else is speechy.
And I just want to take a moment here to really rebuke all of you Neil Gorsuch stans from the Bostock days. I haven't forgotten you.
I remember when you were like, that Neil Gorsuch, he seems really-
Let's make him the leader of the pride parade.
Yes. Yes. People said that. People said that. And I was like, I don't know about that. Like, I mean, this is textual-ish.
Bostock was textual-ish. And more importantly, Neil Gorsuch dropped some major fucking breadcrumbs
at the back where he was like, religious liberty might trump all of this. And also,
RFRA is a super statute. And he told us who he was. And so all the folks were like, you know,
Neil Gorsuch wrote Bostock. I just don't know. And I'm just like, I do know, and I've known for a long time. So I just want to say, you're welcome. Like I said this.
Can I just say something about the pure speech issue? I think it's definitely right that in the
opinion, there's a mention of the fact that the lower court held that this website would be pure
speech. But I actually don't read anything in the opinion to say this is an exclusive, like get out
of public accommodation
laws free card only for businesses that are engaging in what we might characterize as
pure speech.
He just says that's one of the many stipulations I think that was made here, including also
the fact that this was an expressive product as opposed to like, you know, a pre-made sandwich
or something, which I don't know, maybe we'll be litigating whether those are expressive
too, at least like custom sandwiches.
I think that's exactly right.
I think that's really hard to figure out,
like what exactly the limiting principle or principles in this case.
Because there is no limiting principle.
There is no limiting principle.
I mean, the limiting principle is, as you said, Melissa,
like what things this 6-3 court will recognize as speechy.
And I am personally very much looking forward to the next 30 years
of civil rights and public accommodations litigation
about what goods
and services are pure speech, something that I'm sure this court will resolve in very principled
and sensible ways. Once again, reminding everyone of what you've been saying, Melissa, it's not like
this court resolves issues. It just creates new ones that give it more power to set the rules we
all have to live by. So just for example, like what if the wedding websites here just said,
here's the date of the wedding? Like, would that be pure speech? I don't know. Or how about, you
know, some words on a cake? Or what about a counselor's words? Or what about some custom
made shirts from Etsy where you can pick the phrase? I mean, we don't even know what kind
of websites Smith might make since she hasn't ever been asked to make one. I was just transfixed, Leah.
I allowed myself a little bit too much caffeine this morning already, both for the concert and
for the hand down. As someone who never drinks caffeine, I should have stopped myself at like
the half-calf caramel macchiato. Instead, I had the full-calf, and I am on like 200% full send already, basically shaking from caffeine and rage.
She ready.
So I like this, but I wonder whether we should put a little like Moscato in your mug for the second episode we're going to record today.
Maybe a little downer.
Drunk term recap.
To go with their drunk history.
But I like this, Leah.
I like that you're ready.
Okay.
So to Leah's point, Justice Sotomayor also raised this in her dissent.
She noted that Colorado does not require the company to speak the state's preferred message.
The company could, for example, offer only wedding websites with biblical quotations describing marriage as between one man and one woman.
The company could also refuse to include the words love is love if it would not
provide those words to any customer. Basically, her point is the state doesn't regulate the kind
of business that you are. It just says when you decide what kind of business you're going to have
and you go into the public space and public sphere, you have to serve all comers in accordance
with the Colorado anti-discrimination law. So that's her point.
It's also worth noting here that we have no fucking idea what kind of website business
Lori Smith is running because Lori Smith's entire dispute is completely hypothetical
and should not have been heard. And I will literally die on that hill.
Yeah. And here we should just renote the reporting done by Melissa Guerra-Grant at
The New Republic that we discussed on yesterday's episode, pointing out how, right, this website submission that the website designer's lawyers pointed to from a guy named Stewart allegedly requesting a same-sex wedding is falling apart on even the quickest inspections because Stewart, right, is a straight man married to a woman and maintains he never requested such a wedding website from Lori Smith. But I guess standing like, yeah, sure, whatever,
you can accomplish it via iffy website submissions now. So that's cool.
And remember, the oral arguments in this case were absolutely unhinged with Justice Alito
having a very normal one, just with bonkers hypotheticals about Black Santa,
suggesting that his colleague, Justice Kagan, might be frequenting an adultery website. I mean,
it was truly, truly, truly off the wall. And it was pretty much off the wall because there were
no actual facts here to ground this case and the oral argument. But leaving that to the side, this court decided to wade in and pretend as though this were a settled case with a settled claim and a settled injury.
And picking up on these truly deranged hypotheticals from the oral argument in this very hypothetical case, Justice Gorsuch, in this opinion, says that if Lori Smith did not prevail here, then, quote,
the government could force all manner of artists, speechwriters, and others whose services involve
speech to speak what they do not believe on pain of penalty. The government could require an
unwilling Muslim movie director to make a film with a Zionist message or an atheist muralist
to accept a commission celebrating evangelical zeal. Equally, the government could force a male website designer married to another man
to design websites for an organization that advocates against same-sex marriage.
This was in the brief for the petitioner.
So again, all of this sort of underscores Neil Gorsuch's libertarian streak.
It also raises, earlier in the term, I forget which case it was
in, but an oral argument, he talked about Maoist camps, like the indoctrination.
Oh, that was this one. He referred to Colorado's anti-discrimination statutes and the Jack Phillips
case as subjecting the baker, who Colorado said couldn't refuse to make a cake for a same-sex
wedding, as subjecting the baker to, quote, a re-education camp. All very much in the worldview of Neil Gorsuch. I think this is
what passes for libertarianism, but definitely anti-statist, definitely in favor of the
individual, and basically allowing each individual to prosecute his or her personal views on all of
the rest of us in the community. Well, only some individuals, right? Since,
of course, the gay couple can't actually go into a good or service provider and ask.
Well, they're not people. They're not individuals, Leah.
You know, this was from the discussion of yesterday, my B. But also all of the hypotheticals that Gorsuch trots out here about the film
director and whatnot are completely wrong and insane because that's not how public accommodations
law works. Directors don't hold themselves out as directing every movie that comes before them.
Steven Spielberg is not a public accommodation. I can't go to him and say, I would like-
Demand a leading role.
No, you can't.
Yes.
Fill my wedding.
Fill my wedding.
Right.
Like you hold yourself out as like serving all comers.
Cast me in your movie.
Like here's my movie about how I'm BFFs with Katonji Brown Jackson.
And we go to all the Taylor Swift concerts together.
Make that movie, bitch.
And like, it's not going to happen.
Crossroads 2, Katonji and Leah.
Okay, Spielberg should make this.
But the point is like public accommodation laws
are about individuals who provide broadly available goods
and services in the commercial marketplace
and serve all comers.
And that does not encompass every commercial transaction, every professional interaction, and many of the hypotheticals seem quite deliberately
obtuse about the actual definition of a public accommodation. And I think it's really clear that
the more likely implications from this decision are what will follow from the court having
recognized for the first time a constitutional right to refuse service in the context of ordinary public accommodations. And Justice Sotomayor's dissent says really
clearly that, you know, we were talking before about limiting principles. There's nothing in
the majority opinion that says there is only a First Amendment right to refuse service to
gay people or LGBTQ people or same-sex weddings. There will be lots of questions about what other
services can be
refused to what other members of protected groups.
I mean, she says very explicitly in her dissent that the decision's logic cannot be limited
to discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity.
The decision threatens to balkanize the market to allow the exclusion of other groups from
many services.
And she says really clearly a website designer could equally refuse to create a wedding website
for an interracial couple, for example. And she references historical
objection to interracial marriage, specifically on the grounds of religion. So she is, I think,
right. And there's not really any attempt on the part of the Gorsuch majority to suggest that there
is such a limitation. I don't think nor could there be. There's also,
I think, this very big problem in the Gorsuch opinion, which is like, there's this tonal
quality to the opinion, which is like, the real problem here is people asking for their civil
rights when everybody just wants to be left alone in this libertarian vision of, I don't know,
our collective existence that Gorsuch has. And he basically says, look, the reason we even have a problem here is because states are trying to expand public
accommodation. And he discusses many states, including Colorado, having expanded the reach
of non-discrimination rules in recent years to cover, he says, virtually every place have been
disengaged in any sales to the public and also to include other forms of discrimination,
including discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity. I will say, I actually, even though there's this incredibly kind of grudging
quality to this overall narrative, I do think he seems to be suggesting that as a general matter,
expansion of non-discrimination provisions to include sexual orientation are constitutionally
sound. So that at least is something. Well, sure. It's just that they can't be enforced against anyone who objects to them.
Because why?
I mean, because the problem is gay people actually asking to be able to participate in public life.
He's like, stay in the closet, gays, right?
And the protections on the books are totally fine.
We are happy for them to exist.
Yeah, but you just can't enforce them.
This is basically an Ayn Rand fever dream. Like it's what it is.
And because, you know, there's almost nothing more that the Republican appointed justices love to do than to deny doing what it is, in fact, they are doing.
Here, Justice Gorsuch insists that this case, 303 Creative, is not actually about status discrimination, that it's not actually about discriminating against people because of who they are and who they love, rather than, say, the message of a particular wedding.
Which, of course, is horseshit because we all know how many gay couples go to wedding website designers asking for wedding websites for straight couples and how many straight couples go to wedding website designers asking for wedding
websites for gay couples. Although actually, we should say that Melissa Guerra Grant's reporting
suggests that this case may involve the sole instance that we know of. That's true.
This individual who seems to be a straight man, maybe was at least according to the filings earlier in this case,
did ask for a same-sex wedding website. But then that too plays up this hypothetical about we don't actually know whether Lori Smith would make this website if it was actually a straight man married
to a woman asking for it. Because recall the exchange between her lawyer and Justice Barrett
from the oral argument when Justice Barrett is
like, well, of course, she also wouldn't make a wedding website for a straight couple wanting to
celebrate gay marriage. And the lawyer was like, oh, no, she'd make that, Your Honor. And then
Justice Barrett came back around and was like, no, no, no, no. And then Barrett was like, she slipped her a note and was like, no, no, you meant to say the opposite.
And she was like, stop reading Ayn Rand. Just focus, girl. Focus.
Get with the program. And Justice Sotomayor, of course, calls out the majority's distinction between status and message as, quote, embarrassing, which it is. responds back in kind, saying that petitioners' contrivance that a prohibition on status-based
discrimination can be avoided by asserting that a group can always buy services on behalf of others
or else that the group can access a separate but equal subset of the services made available to
everyone is what's embarrassing. Well, also, I will just say this morning on MSNBC,
Kerry Severino, who is the head of the Judicial Crisis Network,
one of the many organizations in the Leonard Leo universe, multiverse, as you will, basically made the same argument, like trying to explain to people, you know, ain't no thing here.
You can just get your straight friends to buy this website for you or buy a cake for
you, or you can just go somewhere else.
And it's 1954 all over again.
And the fact that anyone would think that like the stigmatic harm and just being like,
you have to go searching for someone who will serve you or you need to contrive some kind of
intermediary to get you a good or service that your straight friends can get without thinking
twice. Literally the constitutional jurisprudence of like middleman website acquisition is just like,
it's so deranged. I cannot believe anyone takes that position with a straight face.
And Justice Sotomayor really called this out. So maybe we can turn a little bit more to her dissent.
So she writes, the legal duty of a business open to the public is to serve the public without
unjust discrimination and is deeply rooted in our history. And so Justice Gorsuch chastises Justice Sotomayor's use of history in her dissent.
And again, there's this history of public accommodations law that she canvases,
and it's relevant here because she talks about the history of sex and gender discrimination
and how the introduction of public accommodations law changed a lot of that, making the public sphere essentially available to women and minorities who previously had been foreclosed.
And she says, yet for as long as public accommodations laws have been around, businesses have sought exemptions from them.
And this goes back to this whole idea, like one step forward, there's always two steps back because of this backlash and reaction.
The civil rights and women's liberation eras are prominent examples of this. Backlashes to race and sex equality gave rise to
legal claims of rights to discriminate, including claims based on First Amendment freedoms of
expression and association. So this isn't new. It's just the first time this court has actually
given quarter to these arguments. Like basically, people have been trying to limit the scope of anti-discrimination law for years by resort to the First Amendment,
either through religious freedom or through speech. And they've always been rejected. See
Piggy Park, see Bob Jones, whatever. But now the court is like, all of that. Here, the court's like,
nope, we're open for business. Let's do it. Speaking of being open
for business, Justice Sotomayor, you know, really dug into the point that you and Kate were talking
about, which is, you know, there is a real dignitary harm of refusals to service, even if
hypothetically you could obtain the service from another provider or ask a friend to help you
obtain the service or good from a particular a friend to help you obtain the service
or good from a particular provider.
So Justice Sotomayor's dissent has long extended passages writing about how LGBT people no
less than anyone else deserve dignity and freedom and explaining how state-sponsored
discrimination is compounded by discrimination in public accommodations and how that combines
to create an environment in which LGBT people
are unsafe. The closing of her dissent, like the final section, I think is really remarkable. So
she says today is a sad day in American constitutional law and in the lives of LGBT
people. Talking about the message that recognizing a constitutional right to refuse and allowing
businesses to hold up signs saying, you know, no service for same-sex weddings sends.
And she ties this reasoning to the current moment we are in, writing that LGBT rights
have made historic strides and that she is proud of the role this court has recently played, but that the court is taking a step backward at a time when a slew of anti-LGBT laws have been
passed throughout the country, raising the specter of a bare desire to harm a politically unpopular
group. And she not only suggests that the court is blessing businesses literally putting up
signs that say things like, you know, we're not going to provide services that attach to same-sex weddings. She actually says the opinion of the
court is itself a notice that reads something like some services may be denied to same-sex
couples. Like that's what the court has penned in this opinion. And she strikes this note at the end
that I thought was really important that underscores that the court does
not have a monopoly on the meaning of the Constitution. And so she writes this really
explicitly. She says, I fear that the symbolic damage of the court's opinion is done, but that
does not mean that we are powerless in the face of the decision. The meaning of our Constitution
is not found in any law volume, but in the spirit of the people who live under it. Every business
owner in America has a choice whether to live out the values in the Constitution. Make no mistake, invidious
discrimination is not one of them. So it is this kind of clarion call. We don't have to be constrained
by what this group of six super conservative justices decide the Constitution means. We get
to decide for ourselves. And as much as they seem determined to kind of tear us apart from each
other, the values of inclusivity and pluralism are ones that like we can decide the Constitution contains
and live under them. Again, it would be better if the Constitution as interpreted by the Supreme
Court commanded it as it has until today. But I think it's important that she strikes this tone
that we are not powerless. She also, again, as she did in the earlier affirmative action case, made clear that her
dissent was offered as a dissent without any respectfully attached to it.
So she's not playing the game here.
Our Constitution contains no right to refuse service to a disfavored group.
I dissent.
So Sotomayor out.
I think it's worth coming back to Obergefell here. We've been talking about what the fallout from Dobbs would mean for groups like the LGBTQ community, and lots of people have pointed to Justice Thomas's concurrence in which he identified Obergefell as one of the decisions that he was eager to reconsider and possibly overrule as the court had done with Roe and Casey. We haven't seen any
opening salvos against Obergefell, like no frontal efforts to roll back Obergefell. But I think you
could understand this case as perhaps the beginning of that project or the seeds of that project. And
I say it in this way, like this is not about whether the government should recognize same-sex marriages or not.
It's not about that at all.
But it is a case about whether we can normalize the prospect that certain groups can expect
discriminatory treatment when they are interacting with the public.
And once you begin the project of normalizing discrimination, I don't think you're that
far down the road from then making
the leap to invalidating same-sex marriages or refusing to recognize same-sex marriages. And
again, it may be a very long road, but so was Roe, and it began with chipping away at access
to abortion. This is the beginning of the chipping away. Once you start deciding that
same-sex weddings just don't have the expectation of the
same treatment as straight weddings, then we're already down that road. So again, constant
vigilance. And just to echo what you were saying about this paving the way to future rollbacks of
civil rights, I wanted to highlight some research done on social psychology and experimental
jurisprudence by
Sarah Emily Burke and my colleague Rosanna Summers in the Chicago Law Review. It's a piece on
reducing prejudice through law, evidence from experimental psychology. And they ran experiments.
And what they found is, you know, when people learn that certain kinds of discrimination is prohibited by law, it leads some people to report
less prejudicial attitudes and greater feelings of interpersonal warmth toward members of the group
who the law prohibits you from discriminating against. And conversely, they also find that
when people learn that the law permits discrimination against a group, it facilitates
and enables more prejudicial attitudes. So that's one thing, you know, I just wanted to highlight by
way of implications. And then the other is another study, this one more empirical by Stephen Choi,
Mito Gulati, and Eric Posner, a paper on Trump's lower court judges and religion. And what they
did is they studied First Amendment
free exercise claims, you know,
as they were ruled upon by court of appeals judges
and found that President Trump's appointments
to the circuit court more frequently vote
in favor of Christian plaintiffs
and less frequently vote in favor of Muslim plaintiffs
in free exercise cases as compared to other appointees
by other Republican presidents,
as well as by Democratic presidents.
Because everything is fakakta, we also got the same morning, the student debt relief opinions.
And let's start with the bottom lines in those opinions. Justice Alito first wrote a unanimous opinion finding that private borrowers
who were just mad they didn't get more debt relief don't have standing. So like a glimmer
of sanity from this truly deranged court. But don't worry. In the other case, the chief justice
wrote for the six Republican appointees to conclude that the states whose standing claim to my mind
was basically as weak as the standing claim of the individual plaintiffs. But never mind, those states, according to the majority, did have standing.
And when the court reached the merits, it struck down the administration's program of student debt
relief that would have benefited 43 million Americans. That's these justices, like they
did that. They took away the debt relief for 43 million people. There then was a really powerful
Justice Kagan dissent, really powerful, but with one really kind of conspicuous shortcoming,
which is that it should have cited some award-winning recent scholarship criticizing
the major questions doctrine by one of the co-hosts of an award-winning podcast,
Justice Kagan Cite Leah's Major Questions Doctrine article challenge.
This is why Steven Spielberg is making the movie about me and Justice Jackson right now.
Elena Kagan is not allowed in the convertible after this light.
Let's start with standing. So I think it's obvious not only is stare decisis for suckers,
it seems like standing is also for suckers. But as Kate noted, in the case involving
the two student borrowers, the court found that there wasn't standing. But I just want to emphasize
that was the captain obvious of standing cases. If they hadn't found that there was no standing,
we might as well take the Constitution and light it fire, because it would have been just so egregious. Like
it was like the most obvious case that there was no standing there. And so yes, they came out the
right way on that one. But for the other case involving the states, I think standing was a much
tougher question. And the court found this really narrow sliver of an opening by determining that Missouri, which operates this nonprofit, Mojila, which has some business in the administration of student loans, like the fact that Mojila existed gave Missouri sufficient ties to an injury to allow it to have standing.
And I think that is just a more tenuous claim.
Oh, let me just say,ouri doesn't operate mojila
that missouri operates mojila whether in fact mojila is operated by missouri is apparently
part of the challenge of teaching constitutional law and trying to teach opinions because it turns out you can't actually teach the facts as they are recited in the court's opinions because they might be wrong.
So, again, that's the sliver, like by reframing Mojila as an entity operated by the state of Missouri, which it is not, the court finds that Missouri at least has standing.
And that apparently opens the door for this case to actually be reviewed, right? So if you think
about this case in tandem with 303 Creative, who the fuck cares about standing? Like, I mean,
you'll either ignore it entirely or make up facts that give you standing so that you can get to it.
If you want to get to this merits question, you're the YOLO court. You're going to do it.
And apparently, when you have six,
they let you do what you want.
And I think some people thought that a different ruling
on standing might have been possible
in light of the court's decisions
in Holland versus Burkina Faso, the ICWA case,
or United States versus Texas.
But no, YOLO court's going to YOLO.
And I would like to take this moment
to accept the apologies from all of the people who were telling me it was time to retire the phrase YOLO Court's going to YOLO. And I would like to take this moment to accept the apologies from all of the people who were
telling me it was time to retire the phrase YOLO Court because of the rulings over the
last few weeks.
Who said that?
I'm not going to name names.
This is a sub tweet.
Put it in the chat.
Put it on the, ooh.
I want to know.
It's going in the chat.
Sorry, listeners.
OK.
Oh!
What?
What?
What? Oh, yeah. yeah yeah you're right oh this is restraint and not dunking on those individuals it's so hard oh my god fucking hard uh this is a struggle that is my life
the struggle is real screaming in theody is screaming in the chat. Literally screaming in the chat.
People think I'm unfiltered on this podcast.
The things I don't say, you have no idea.
You occasionally say them and then Melody takes them out.
Leah, if you ever get nominated and someone is like, she has no restraint, I'm going to be like, there was this one episode.
Let me tell you about some of the shit she also said.
The most judicial temperament.
I mean, such restraint here.
If I had Moscato, everyone would know who this person is.
All right.
All right.
Back to the program, ladies.
Okay.
So let's – returning to Mojila.
So what the majority reasons is that essentially under the Secretary of Education's plan, roughly half of all federal
borrowers would have their loans completely discharged. And Mojila, this loan servicing
entity, could no longer service closed accounts. And that would cost it, by Missouri's estimate,
some $44 million a year in fees that it would otherwise have earned. Okay, that's what
Missouri says. Mojila would like a word because it says that's actually not true at all.
The American Prospect had some great reporting suggesting that Mojila basically did not get into this litigation, was not even aware of the lawsuit until it was filed, and very explicitly didn't want anything to do with it. So there was some public records request for
documents inside Mojila. And those records revealed employees reacting to news about the litigation
and basically saying, you know, internally, I think Mojila was opposed to this move,
meaning the lawsuit, but couldn't do anything about it. And then says the Missouri Attorney General needed to claim that our borrowers were
harmed for standing. So they're making us look bad by filing this, not only with Missouri on it,
but especially bad because they filed it in Missouri. So basically, Mojila knows that they
are a pawn in Missouri's effort just to gin up a standing case. And there's also indication that
Mojila is actually going to make more money as opposed to less as a result of this federal plan.
But of course, none of that seems to stop a court determined to get to the merits because YOLO.
This is like Missouri's take on Dr. Seuss. Like, I am the Lorax. I speak for the trees because the
trees have no tongue. Mo speak for Mojila.
Mojila has no tongue, only it turns out they do, and they want them to get their fucking name out of your mouth.
Missouri is the Lorax.
So having dispenseless standing and Mojila as an independent entity, the court proceeds to the merits of this case because, of course.
So this case turns on a question about the HEROES Act. So the HEROES Act is a statute that was passed in the wake of 9-11, and it authorizes the Secretary of Education
to waive or modify any statutory or regulatory provision applicable to the student financial
assistance programs under Title IV of the Education Act, authorizing waivers or modification
as the Secretary deems necessary in connection question here is not whether something should have been done, but rather who had the authority to do this.
And this is where he drops his big tell.
Our recent decision in West Virginia versus EPA involves similar concerns over the exercise
of administrative power.
So one, we hate the administrative state.
Two, we love the major questions doctrine.
And three, anytime we say West Virginia versus EPA, we're about to go ham on the made up
major questions doctrine.
And everyone has to drink.
Everyone drink.
This is like the spirit fingers of judicial interpretation.
You say it and it's magic and things happen.
I mean, so when Robert says the question is who has the authority,
the next thing he's going to say is it's not the agency.
The next thing he's going to say is it's Congress.
But what he really means is it's us.
Like we have the authority.
We get to decide what we think is fair.
I'm the problem.
It's me. Yes. I'm the problem. It's me.
Yes. Thank you, Melissa. He just thinks this was the vibe from the oral argument and the vibe of
the opinion that this is just too big and too much. This is essentially too much justice redux,
different contexts, different doctrines, basically same thrust. Like we don't like
too much justice. And so we're going to invalidate what the
administration has done. And as Kagan shows in the dissent, has done pursuant to a statute that
very clearly gives authority to take action in the face of national emergencies, which COVID 100%
was. And all this really falls within, I think, the authority of the Secretary of Education. But
that's really not giving the majority much pause. They just decide to throw it out.
So again, just to reiterate the major questions doctrine,
the court has said in West Virginia versus EPA that in cases involving a major question,
Congress has to be very specific about what the executive through the administrative state may do.
Now, what constitutes a major question? Well, if you were confused, don't be. What constitutes a major question is whatever this court says is a major question. And as they've
defined it, it's a matter of major political salience. So that's not really helpful either.
They basically get to decide. And in determining that the major questions doctrine limits the scope
of congressional authority and the administrative state's ability to act on these statutes, the person in the driver's seat is really the court.
And so, I mean, this is just a continued theme from this term and from last term to some degree.
I mean, it's discussion of democracy and salient issues that were removed from the people and
decided by judicial fiat and Dobbs is basically saying, like, we get to decide what cases go to the people and what cases stay with us.
And we decide what's of political salience.
And they're just doing that again here.
Did they?
So, Leah, you're a big expert on the major questions doctrine.
Can I ask, do they add an additional element?
So previously, the court has said issues of political and economic and economic significance will presumptively or often raise major questions.
Here the court uses this formulation like questions that are personal and emotionally charged.
Is that the new fucking test?
Feelings.
Exactly.
Right.
Like they have a lot of big feelings about this case. So the personal and emotionally charged quote comes from a secondary source that
they are quoting to describe the state of the debate about student debt relief. But I take it
that they think that that's some evidence that the program is politically controversial. And
lest you think we're kind of making this up, you know, recall back to the oral argument where both John Roberts and Sam Alito were basically like, this program triggers me because I think it's unfair and therefore it's a major question and presumptively illegal.
So let's play those clips here.
I think it's appropriate to consider some of the fairness arguments.
You know, you have two situations.
Both — two kids come out of high school.
They can't afford college.
One takes a loan.
The other says, well, I'm going to, you know, try my hand at setting up a lawn care service.
And he takes out a bank loan for that.
At the end of four years, we know statistically that the person with the college
degree is going to do significantly financially better over the course of life than the person
without. And then along comes the government and tells that person, you don't have to pay your
loan. Nobody is telling the person who is trying to set up the lawn service business that he
doesn't have to pay his loan. He still does, even though his tax dollars are going to support the forgiveness of the
loan for the college graduate who is now going to make a lot more than him over the course
of his lifetime.
Now, it seems to me you may have views on fairness of that, and they don't count.
I may have views on the fairness of that, and they don't count. I may have views on the fairness of that and mine don't count.
And therefore, I think it's a fair question to say, what is your client's view about the fairness question that some people have posed and that was reiterated for you by the chief justice?
The view of the department is that this is warranted.
Why is it fair?
Again, as Kate was alluding to, like the statute in this case pretty clearly authorizes this.
As Justice Kagan noted in her dissent, the statute allows the secretary to waive or modify a requirement, which means to lessen its effect or eliminate it altogether.
And so instead, the majority just invokes the major question doctrine after doing this kind of interpretation of the statute.
And then it says the major questions doctrine also
supports this result, leading Justice Kagan to say,
usually when a court is confident
in its interpretation of a statute's text,
it spells out its reading and hits the send button.
But that's not what the court did.
It resorted to, as is becoming the norm, the so-called major
questions doctrine.
And she writes that the court is once again revealing this doctrine for what it is, as is becoming the norm, the so-called major questions doctrine. And she writes,
you know, that the court is once again revealing this doctrine for what it is, a way for the court
to negate Congress's choices. So the budding friendship that we had identified in earlier
opinions this term between the Chief Justice and Justice Kagan, I'm not sure it's in great shape
based on the exchange in this opinion. So the chief kind of like does this tone policing thing
with Justice Kagan's dissent in which, and she does say respectfully, which I'm not sure she had to do.
And obviously, as we've pointed out, not every dissent in this –
The women of color on the court are no longer doing this respectfully.
And I'm there for them.
Kagan is hanging on to it.
Yeah.
Yes, totally.
Kagan here does append the respectfully.
That is a forceful dissent. And the majority says it has become
a disturbing feature of some recent opinions to criticize the decisions with which they disagree
as going beyond the proper role of the judiciary. But Kagan, of course, is wrong.
I mean, like, you know what's disturbing is judicial opinions going beyond the proper role
of the judiciary, right? Like, you're so close to getting it, John. I mean, this opinion, again,
the court ends a program that would have provided relief for something like 43 million student
borrowers. And the people who were benefited from this program are disproportionately like
lower income. The program disproportionately benefited women, communities of color. And the
court's just like,
no, I've got some feelings. So we're going to work it out in the US reports. And we're going to work it out by withdrawing student debt relief, right? That's going to make my feebies feel better.
It would be so much cheaper for the American public if we just sent every member of the
conservative supermajority a copy of Dr. Becky's book to work out their big feelings. That would help.
What also might help is if the majority really internalized the words of Taylor Swift's song,
Dear John, in which she writes, and I lived in your chess game, but you changed the rules every day.
I think instead of Swifties going after John Mayer,
right, they should refocus their attention on John Roberts because he is the problem.
Okay. You know, Justice Kagan, as Kate noted, did respond saying justices throughout history
have raised the alarm when the court has overreached, when it has exceeded its proper
role. It would have been disturbing and indeed damaging if they had not.
The same is true in our own day. Indeed. Do you think these last two days of opinions are going
to in turn the moderate institutionalist court takes or do you think that those have already
been fully cooked? People are so committed to it. They will bring it back every term before the end of the term whenever the court does something that is short of completely fucking deranged.
No, like there's just a cottage industry.
There's a cottage industry in it.
And it's just like you're just like, OK, this is not a normal one.
And I want to just point out something that Kate's plus one, Chris Hayes, said on Twitter that I thought was –
Mr. Kate Shaw.
Kind of.
Did he have a thought?
Mr. Kate Shaw.
Yeah.
Mr. Kate –
This morning?
This morning.
He had a really good point on Twitter.
He was just sort of like, you went to bed last night thinking you were $10,000 richer, so to speak.
And now you woke up and you're $10,000 in the hole because the Supreme Court decided that this was a major question
about which they have major feelings. And the HEROES Act does not authorize the president to
respond to this kind of emergency. And waiving doesn't mean what you thought it meant. And here
we are, six people decided that you could just like, eke it out and pay your loans.
And maybe that $10,000 isn't significant to a group of people
who are coddled by billionaire benefactors and flown around the world on private jets and have
their children's tuition or grandnephew's tuition paid for, right? And their credit card debts paid
off, right, before they actually go through the Supreme Court confirmation process. But it actually
is significant for real people. There are lots of
people who have paid their student loans. I'm one of them, but I don't begrudge anybody this relief
because student loans are crushing. It's expensive. This is a means of social mobility.
Again, I think you have to read this case in tandem with yesterday's decision in the
affirmative action cases with the court essentially foreclosing the doors that were open to minorities, like limiting the
opportunities and access to higher education. And now today saying, and if you do get through
the doors, if you're able, and you're not like the scion of a family that can buy a building,
and you get through the doors, when you take out the loans to be able
to fund your education, you're on the hook for them. Like there's no government relief. And
again, there's so many people who are talking this morning on all of the news shows about, well,
you know, you know, the government never forgives loans. That's a fucking lie. The government funded
PPP relief during COVID and many Congress people took advantage of that.
And those loans were forgiven.
And business loans are dischargeable in bankruptcy, whereas student loans are not.
This was sort of a modest intervention to help a particular group of borrowers.
And it's not out of step with other efforts on the part of the government to forgive loans and to accelerate or catalyze economic activity and development.
Well, but Democrats can't make economic policy. So, you know, economic justice.
When a Democratic president wins an election by promising student loan debt, you've got to basically cut it off at the knees. Yeah. I mean, and in the issue of what happens next,
it is, of course, possible that the administration could
respond by adopting a different student debt relief program.
Some people have speculated that maybe instead
of announcing a broad policy that
says anyone who meets certain criteria
could have their debt forgiven, the administration would instead try to do a more individualized application process
in which it would eliminate student debt for individuals on a case-by-case basis
if individuals point to hardship.
But that's more administratively difficult, right?
And it's more difficult to implement because people might not know,
would I be eligible? How do I apply?
And so that program might not end up being as effective, even if the administration,
you know, were to attempt to implement it.
They could also decide to try to revive kind of pauses, which, of course, like there were
those basically three years of pauses.
This was supposed to be the end of the pauses, basically like wiping away a small percentage
of or for some people a large percentage, but $10,000 and in some cases $20,000 of debt
for eligible borrowers. And then kind of the restoration of normal repayment beyond that.
But rather they could try to kind of revert to some additional kind of extension or pause.
But I think, Leah, you're right, like the administrative burdens and kind of the magnitude
of the impact are going to make anything else the administration tries to do less effective
across the board than
this. This was the most effective and straightforward way to provide targeted
relief to a group of people who really, really need it. And the Supreme Court is responsible.
These six justices decided like, nope, we're not going to let that stand. And people should
really bear in mind who did this and who's responsible. So yeah, that's probably it for today's opinions.
We will be back on Monday for a term recap episode that is going to be a banger.
We are Strict Scrutiny, a Crooked Media production, hosted and executive produced by me,
Leah Littman, Melissa Murray, and Cade Shaw, produced and edited by Melody Rowell.
Ashley Mizuo is our associate producer.
Audio support from Kyle Seglin and Veronica Simonetti.
Music by Eddie Cooper.
Production support from Michael Martinez, Leo Duran, and Ari Schwartz.
And digital support from Amelia Montooth.