Lisa Desjardins: History and high stakes at the Supreme Court.
Reporter: Is this a rogue court?
Joe Biden, U.S. President: This is not a normal court.
Lisa Desjardins: The Supreme Court session closes with blockbuster rulings handing conservatives victories on religious rights, the president's student loan forgiveness plan and affirmative action.
Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC): We will not be judged solely by the color of our skin.
Kamala Harris, U.S. Vice President: It is a complete misnomer to suggest this is about colorblind. It is about being blind to history.
Lisa Desjardins: For the left, one standout win came in election law. We look at the decisions and what they mean, next.
Good evening and welcome to Washington Week. I'm Lisa Desjardins. The Supreme Court is now on summer break, but leaving us quite a wake, a series of historic rulings with far-reaching consequences for race, education and elections in America.
For the second year in a row, the Roberts Court overturned years of legal precedent and ruled against a widespread practice conservatives have long sought to end. This year, it was affirmative action.
The justices ruled Thursday that Harvard University and the University of North Carolina's consideration of an applicant's race in college admissions is unconstitutional. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the majority's opinion saying the student must be treated based on his or her experiences as an individual, not on the basis of race.
But Justice Sonia Sotomayor, in the dissenting opinion, wrote, this court stands in the way and rolls back decades of precedent and momentous progress. Reaction to the ruling was swift and along party lines.
Joe Biden: We cannot let this decision be the last word. Discrimination still exists in America. Today's decision does not change that.
Lisa Desjardins: But Republicans, like South Carolina Senator and Republican Presidential Candidate Tim Scott celebrated.
Tim Scott: This is the day where we understand that being judged by the content of our character, not the color of our skin, is what our Constitution wants.
Lisa Desjardins: And there was joy and hope from those who brought and won the lawsuit.
Calvin Yang, Member, Students for Fair Admissions: Today's victory transcends far beyond those of us sitting in this room today.
Lisa Desjardins: Buckle up. We start there with a phenomenal panel. Eugene Daniels is Politico's White House correspondent and co-author of Politico playbook, Ariane De Vogue is a Supreme Court reporter for CNN, Seung Min Kim, the White House reporter at the Associated Press, and John Yang, my colleague on PBS NewsHour and anchor of PBS News Weekend.
Ariane, I want to start with you. This affirmative action case seems to have sparked the most headlines. Does it have the most impact of the decisions this week?
Ariane De Vogue, Supreme Court Reporter, CNN: You have to think that it does, for several reasons. First of all, it totally makes these schools now have to go back, revamp, figure out new ways to try to get diversity in their campuses, race-neutral means. But there was lots of messages, too, messages about what it means to have a diverse campus and why the schools argued so hard for diversity, not just for the kid in the classroom, but for the teachers, for the fact that the school is a pipeline to society.
And so the graduates go on to society, go into the medical fields, Corporate America in different areas, really such a vitally different way to look at the America on the two sides of this issue. So, it just seems so impactful.
Lisa Desjardins: I love that point. It does seem to be at the collision point of sort of these political and cultural debate we've had a long time. And, John, you raised two quotes that you saw to me earlier. obert's quote, he wrote, eliminating racial discrimination means eliminating all of it. However, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson in her dissent, wrote, our country has never been colorblind. Can you take us through this fault line and what you read from the justices about how do you define discrimination?
John Yang, Correspondent, PBS Newshour: Well, Chief Justice Roberts has wanted -- has been skeptical of race-based programs ever since he was a junior attorney in the Reagan White House. This is something I think he really wanted to happen. It took him a while to get the majority. Not only that, now he has a majority, he has a supermajority.
But that debate over society and race-based programs really was evident in the dueling opinions from Clarence Thomas' concurring opinion and the two dissents from Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, and especially between Jackson and Thomas, because Thomas, they both agreed that affirmative action was to right the wrongs, the historical wrongs.
But they have very different views of how it works, of the effect of it. Clarence Thomas saw it as a burden. He says that it took away the accomplishment, that it tells people of color they're inferior, that it's an anchor. Well, Jackson was saying, no, it lifts you up, it lifts all of us up. And Sotomayor made note of the fact that the three women -- the three women justices of color on the court, she says, we are all products of affirmative action.
Lisa Desjardins: So, I mean, this is the Trump legacy, right, seven, yes. And so my question here is who do you think politically benefits more? Is it Republicans who wanted this and are celebrating, or is it Democrats who there's maybe anger base?
Seung Min Kim, White House Reporter, The Associated Press: It really depends. I've been trying to think through what kind of immediate political impact we will see as a result of this ruling in the 2024 elections, because you are right, it is actually anger that motivates voters to turn out and go to the polls. We saw that a lot with the abortion rulings. And we will almost see the continued political impact of the Dobbs decision from last year in next year's presidential election.
But affirmative action is a little bit trickier to figure out. And what I was actually looking at is what's going to be the immediate impact of this decision in other ways. I think there's a sense that this could galvanize other legal challenges to, for example, corporate diversity policies and challenging those types of decisions and policies in that arena. And I do think that this gives opponents of policies, like affirmative action, like a galvanizing sense to go after it, go after those sorts of diversity policies in the legal arena, in legislation and in other areas as well.
Lisa Desjardins: Eugene, the President said this is not the last word, and that was echoed by other people in the Biden administration. Okay. What does that mean?
Eugene Daniels, White House Correspondent, Politico: It's unclear because there's not a lot of levers that they have to pull, right? Because this is the Supreme Court essentially saying that racism is a thing of the past when it comes to this country, which is something that, if we're all being honest around this table, we know that is not true.
And so the question that a lot of voters have and will continue to have for the administration is what are you going to do about it. There are -- you talk to them and you try to figure it out. They don't seem to have a great handle on what they're able to do. Something this administration does do quite often, kind of send out fact sheets, lots of them, to colleges and universities or whomever to say, these are the things you can do to kind of get around this law or get around this ruling.
For example, I was a high school student in Texas, and every student in the top 10 percent could get into the U.T. system, right? And so that means if you went to a school of all black students, 10 percent of that student body went straight -- could go to U.T., right? And that's the best -- one of the best schools in that state.
So, that's something that they could try to use to get around that, but they have yet to really signal what's the next step here.
Ariane De Vogue: And that will be challenged?
Eugene Daniels: Yes, exactly.
Lisa Desjardins: That's the next question, yes.
Ariane De Vogue: Those things are going to be challenged. And the next challenges that are going to come here are race-neutral programs. Can you have a race-neutral program? Is that really hiding the ball? We've already seen some challenges touching on that in the lower courts and be sure that those issues are going to come back to the court, so it's not over that way.
And the schools, meanwhile, are sitting and waiting to figure out what to do. My daughter graduated recently. Her college sent her the day the decision came down, said, we're looking at this. Give it a few months. We're looking at what do we do, what can we do?
John Yang: College officials are trying to figure out what they can and can't do, even in recruiting, even in going out and talking to students. Because one way Berkeley has gotten around this, they had a ballot initiative that ended racial preferences in both universities and public hiring is that they've expanded the funnel, as they say. They're looking in different areas.
And the other thing that a lot of college officials I've talked to are girding for is a challenge based on race -- based on sex, rather, because if you look at the college applications, they are predominantly women. When you look at the campuses, it's more even.
Lisa Desjardins: I want to get back to what Seung Min was saying is, could this have a wider impact on, say, businesses? And let me start with a ridiculous premise to see what you guys say. Let's say that you are a member of a political party whose presidential candidate says his vice presidential nominee will be a black woman. Is that the kind of thing that could fall? Would Amy Klobuchar be able to sue in this situation? Where do you all think court reporters, businesses, how far do we think this could go?
Ariane De Vogue: Well, I think as far as -- are you looking at challenges like what businesses can do?
Lisa Desjardins: Yes, diversity programs in businesses, for example, internships at law firms, those kinds of things?
Ariane De Vogue: Well, certainly the seed has been planted here, and that's not only -- I mean, we talked about the fact that businesses are going to be affected by this decision, right? They're going to be affected because they may suffer from diversity if it's not coming through the pipeline. But, yes, we're going to see a lot of other different kinds of challenges. I think this is just sort of the beginning.
Eugene Daniels: Because it's a signaling right to kind of everyone that, one, the Supreme Court is open to these kinds of things and very willing to go out on a limb and do something that maybe some Americans don't agree with, but it's also it shows that the American people, as they try to we have this conversation about race, the backlash has been swift, and that means that not just the political or legal aspect of our country, the cultural aspects of our country are going to be taken all under this. And like you said, it is the very beginning of it.
Ariane De Vogue: And plus the fact Roberts in a footnote said, oh, this doesn't apply to military service schools. So, wait, what? And you saw some of the dissenters say, well, wait a minute, why? What is the real rationale there? He didn't say much. He said that they didn't bring this. They weren't a part of this challenge. This won't apply. But the Biden administration, when they went in and argued this, their entire oral argument for a bit of time was all on the military.
Now, they were trying to say, look at how important it is in the military. It's got to be as important for the rest of the country. But the conservatives on the court didn't buy into that. They just looked at the military itself. So, that will be interesting.
Lisa Desjardins: Another big PBS broad question, Seung Min, I'm curious. Race has been a fault line in this country for forever, but especially now in these past few elections, I wonder, what do you think this does for this divide over race. It's obviously too early to know, but what are you thinking about?
Seung Min Kim: I mean, it certainly intensifies the focus on the issue of race, just having this blockbuster ruling out there and just all of the implications that it has, not just in college admissions, but in politics and in other policies. I think it certainly keeps the issue at the forefront for a really long time.
And I wanted to go back to kind of just what the earlier argument that we were making, just kind of about what President Biden and his administration can do in terms of channeling that anger and just trying to turn it into an electoral plus.
He's actually not doing one thing that he conceivably could do, which is to embrace proposals to change the court and to reform the court. Because that is if you're looking at kind of the reaction from Democratic lawmakers, from activists, especially not just on this, but on the student loan issue, which I know we'll talk about later, they are taking their anger out on the Supreme Court, a Supreme Court that many of them feel is not legitimate because of the way that particularly one of the justices got on the court, because Mitch McConnell holding that seat open for more than a year.
And in theory, President Biden could say, well, he did say this was not a normal court and that he strongly disagreed with the rulings that came out today. But he is still resistant to, for example, embracing term limits for justices or expanding the court, like so many in his base want to do. We have asked the White House over and over in the last couple of days if this changes the president's view at all on those Court so called court reform changes, and it really doesn't. He kind of punched it to a commission earlier in his presidency, and that's where it will remain.
Ariane De Vogue: But he knows, too, don't forget how many years he spent on the Senate Judiciary Committee. He saw enough nomination hearings to know that if somebody else was in the White House and they expanded the number of justices on the court, that's --
Lisa Desjardins: It's a guardrail.
Ariane De Vogue: I mean, he's done it for a lot of years. He knows that that's --
Seung Min Kim: And he's an institutionalist at heart.
Lisa Desjardins: We have so many other decisions to talk about. I want to talk about the student loans decision, and let's look at quite a bit more of the other decisions. I want to list them for our viewers so they can understand gay rights. The court ruled that some businesses can refuse to work for same sex couples and potentially other groups of people. Student loans, as you mentioned, the court blocked President Biden's loan forgiveness plan. Election law, earlier this week, the Court ruled against the controversial independent state legislature theory, rejecting a Republican-led attempt to have more power over federal elections. And the court agreed that Alabama and Louisiana each need to add at least one more minority district.
So, the question here on all of this is, as Ariane said last, you thought affirmative action was this kind of most impactful case. Does anyone think student loans might be the most impactful case?
Seung Min Kim: It is the most direct challenge to President Biden himself, which is why I think we're taking a particular interest in it, because there are so many implications for him on a policy level and politically.
I mean, remember the timing that they rolled out the student loan relief plan. It was a couple of months before the midterms. It was certainly a way to galvanize young voters who have been a little -- a bit more lackadaisical on President Biden than perhaps other demographics in the Democratic Party.
And I recall that program came out around the same or that initiative came around the same time that this administration announced it was forgiving marijuana penalties for many offenders. And that was really seen as a way to get young voters excited.
And I have to tell you, I do a lot of voter interviews for A.P. polls that we have. And when I talk to voters about name something that Biden has done that you really like, it's not the infrastructure law, it's not the Inflation Reduction act. It is, he is going to forgive my student loans.
This matters so much to voters, which is why they have to keep showing like they did today, that they're continuing to fight. They're finding other ways to at least make the burden of payments a little bit easier, that they're still going to keep on fighting legally for full relief like they did today. But, again, with the makeup of this court, that is going to be a very unlikely option.
Eugene Daniels: Yes. And, I mean, voters of color also, right? Because voters of color, black and brown folks, they are disproportionately impacted by high student loan payments, the need to take out more student loans when they're going to college. And so that is something they have to deal with.
You talk to Democrats across the country, they're already a little bit worried about the lukewarmness, not just from young voters, but from voters of color. Because when you talk to them, the voters say, what have you done for me lately, right? The White House has talked about all of these things they've done over two and a half years, but voters want to know, what have you done for me now? And so, politically, this is going to be something this White House and this campaign is going to have to deal with head on.
And I was in the briefing room today when Secretary Cardona kept saying, we're fighting, we're fighting, we're fighting, like 800 times, but the thing is --
Lisa Desjardins: But he said, send your payments then.
Eugene Daniels: Exactly, send your payments, you owe us money, right? Like that doesn't really sell that well. And so as they move through this kind of regulatory process that's going to take a long time to get to the end result they want, like you said, the Supreme Court may knock that down, too.
So, I was just as I was walking in here talking to an advocate, and so they're, like, cautiously optimistic. They're worried about the timing, but they say, at the end of the day, it is good to see President Biden doing something. They're always a little worried that this institutionalist will kind of sit back and not do, exactly.
Lisa Desjardins: Another mammoth ruling that we had, of course, is on same sex marriage, or at least that's what the technicalities of the ruling are about. This idea in a Colorado case that a woman with a graphic design firm does not have to design graphics for same sex weddings, the court ruled out of First Amendment free speech clause.
John, I'm curious, do we know how wide this ruling could be? Could this affect is this particular to just same sex marriage? Is it much larger than that? Do we know?
John Yang: It could go wider. It could -- I mean, even in the oral arguments, they were asking about where do you draw the line, coming up with hypotheticals asking about a black Santa at a mall or someone who believes that the Bible teaches you that races shouldn't be mixed. What happens if a mixed race couple comes in?
But the other thing that some LGBTQ-plus advocates told me this afternoon is that it's so narrow. It has to be something that has a creative or expression that they think they may be okay. But I wonder if businesses aren't going to try to redefine themselves, like can a chef say that cooking a meal, I'm expressing myself, this is me.
Ariane De Vogue: That's exactly what Elena Kagan brought up in oral arguments. And they can say that this is narrow, but the baker believes he's an artist. The jewelry maker, is that an artist? What about the limo driver? And Elena Kagan ticked through all this at oral arguments, really pressing them and sort of saying, where do you draw the line with this opinion?
So, they may say it's narrow, and they did all day long, but there's a way where you could see a lot more challenges, a lot more people trying to sort of define what they did or do on the basis of speech, and that could open up a box.
John Yang: And the other point about this decision is something that Justice Sonia Sotomayor said in her said in her dissent is this is the first time the Supreme Court has said that a business has a right not to serve a protected class.
Ariane De Vogue: The sort of other interesting thing about this, Justice Neil Gorsuch, right, three years ago, he was a hero to LGBTQ rights. He wrote this opinion. He joined the liberals, and it was an opinion that bolstered the rights of workers, and everybody was surprised. So, today, he becomes the villain.
In his opinion, though, you don't see a lot of language about the LGBT community. He weds the entire thing on speech. He says this is just about speech. And that's where you again see the divide on this court, because that is not how the other side sees it.
Lisa Desjardins: Moving along our buffet of history that we've been served up by the Supreme Court this week, I want to talk about congressional maps. And, first, the state legislatures, the Republican-led, will not be able to sort of have increased power over election law then, and also Alabama, Louisiana could see changes, likely we'll see changes in their maps. Seung Min, you and I were texting about this. My sources, they were into these cases. Why does this matter?
Seung Min Kim: Well, it matters first of all, that it was just interesting because it was surprising. It kind of went against what you expected a conservative majority of the Supreme Court to do. But it's really fascinating in terms of the 2024 elections. You're looking at the maps in Alabama and Louisiana.
So, in Louisiana, there are six Congressional districts. Five are majority wide, even though the population of Louisiana, I believe, is one-third African-American. A similar breakdown in Alabama, where you have seven congressional districts, a quarter of the population is African-American, but yet six are majority white.
So, the Supreme Court tells them, no, you have to redraw the maps to make it more fair. In theory, this could add one more majority black districts. We know black voters are very pro-Democratic, lean more towards the Democratic Party.
So, normally, I'm a Senate gal, not usually interested in the House. In this narrow majority, in Kevin McCarthy's House, where he controls just a five-seat majority, every seat is going to matter. So, if you can pick up a seat in Alabama or Louisiana, where Democrats were not expecting, this could be a very, very interesting House election.
Lisa Desjardins: And this could be forever seats too?
Seung Min Kim: Exactly.
Lisa Desjardins: 2024 of it all, Eugene. Seung Min was talking earlier about the Biden administration or President Biden not tackling reform to the court. But 2024, the Supreme Court itself, how much do you think an issue that could be? How much is the Biden White House going to try and sell the idea that we have got to keep ready to replace justices?
Eugene Daniels: Yes, I think that it's going to be central, right? Because to them, and they did it in 2022, right, they say, give us senators who will let us get around the filibuster, give us the House so we can do what we promised. But voters are getting sick of that, right? Like, voters are like, we went to the polls. We gave you the White House, the Senate and the House, they don't care about arcane rules of the Senate, how things work in the House, they want to see results.
And so this administration and this campaign will have to figure out how to say to voters, no, this is actually what we're going to do. We promise it. And that aspect that you could have these congressional districts, where they could have that, getting voters to the polls based off of abortion, based off of student loans, based off of all these things that this administration has been saying they want to do and is very popular with the American people, Democrats aren't always very good at that, getting people angry, it seems like they're changing that up. There's an opportunity for them, but they have to do it right.
Lisa Desjardins: I am trying to fit a lot into a very few pages left, but I want to, in our last minutes, ask each of you briefly to say, how consequential do you think this Supreme Court term was, John?
John Yang: They have redefined and reshaped the contours of society in really big ways. I mean, not just the abortion ruling, the affirmative action. There are just so many places they have made such a huge impact on people.
Ariane De Vogue: Second Amendment, religious liberty, got another second Amendment case.
I think one of the most interesting thing, having covered so many nomination hearings when Donald Trump really moved to change the face of the courts and a lot of people weren't paying a ton of attention during these nomination hearings. Well, guess what? Now you're really seeing that this is Donald Trump's most lasting legacy.
Eugene Daniels: Big, because, I mean, they're also chipping away at the administrative state, right? They are doing things where the executive actions don't hold as much teeth. And so how do White Houses in the future deal with that?
Lisa Desjardins: Last word to you.
Seung Min Kim: Right. And it's just so many like tangible, practical impacts. You have college admissions offices rushing to revise their procedures or figure out the impact, but yet all the political consequences of all these rulings, really interesting to watch for all of us.
Lisa Desjardins: Among the consequences, I suspect, is exhaustion for Supreme Court reporters. We are very grateful to both of you and to everyone here for your time.
And we have to leave it there for now. Thank you to everyone on the panel for joining us. I hope you all are having some time offs soon. I know some of you are. And thank you to all of you at home for joining us as well.
Don't forget to watch my colleague, John Yang, on PBS News Weekend on Saturday for a look at the serious global health risks posed by increasing interaction between humans and bats.
Have a wonderful 4th of July weekend, everyone. I'm Lisa Desjardins. Good night from Washington.
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