The Problem With Jon Stewart - The SEC Was in Trouble. Now They’re Screwed.
Episode Date: June 9, 2022Jon is joined by the hosts of the Strict Scrutiny podcast—law professors Leah Litman, Melissa Murray, and Kate Shaw—to discuss the Fifth Circuit Court’s recent ruling on the SEC. Could ...it signal the demise of government as we know it, even though it’s gibberish to most of us? Staff writers Jay Jurden and Alexa Loftus also drop by to help balance our lawyer-to-layman ratio.CREDITSHosted by: Jon StewartFeaturing, in order of appearance: Jay Jurden, Alexa Loftus, Melissa Murray, Leah Litman, Kate ShawExecutive Produced by Jon Stewart, Brinda Adhikari, James Dixon, Chris McShane, and Richard Plepler.Lead Producer: Sophie EricksonProducers: Zach Goldbaum, Caity Gray, and Robby SlowikAssoc. Producer: Andrea BetanzosSound Engineer & Editor: Miguel CarrascalDigital Coordinator: Norma HernandezSupervising Producer: Lorrie BaranekHead Writer: Kris AcimovicElements: Kenneth Hull, Daniella PhilipsonTalent: Brittany Mehmedovic, Lucas ThimmResearch: Susan Helvenston, Andy Crystal, Cassie MurdochTheme Music by: Gary Clark Jr.The Problem with Jon Stewart podcast is an Apple TV+ podcast, produced by Busboy Productions. https://apple.co/-JonStewart
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's so nice to see you guys.
You know, we haven't really been in the office because COVID is now, I think it's Omicron,
point, three, four, I think there was just an update.
It's now like version 5.12 or something.
Yeah.
I think it's the, it's the Legos and M&M's collab that they're releasing as well.
That's right.
Oh, wow.
It now all comes.
This is an every new virus you get with a sous-saint of monkeypox.
So that's, I'm going to guess sous-saint is like French for like a little sauce.
Like just a little hint, just a flavor.
It's like monkeypox is the saffron in the COVID paella that is our life.
Hello, everybody.
Welcome to the podcast.
It's been a while.
It's been 11 years.
We're here with our writers, Jay Jordan and Alexa Loftus.
It's, we're talking today.
It's a very exciting podcast.
We're talking to three constitutional law scholars, professors actually,
co-host of the podcast, strict scrutiny, which is very difficult to say.
Strict, Kate Shaw, Leah Lippmann, Melissa Murray.
There's an awful lot to talk about, obviously, Roe v. Wade, all those different things,
but there's some SCC shit.
By the way, for the SCC, we did do the episode on, on Wall Street on the Apple TV plus show.
There's a link in the episode description, I think you should check that out.
Cause as you know, we spoke with Gensler.
SCC chairman, Gary Gensler, you went to the belly of the beast, John.
I'm not going to talk about that.
I went to the belly of the beast, John.
I went into their belly.
Oddly enough, their belly was empty from lack of food.
Oh, malnourished.
They were malnourished.
Do you remember when we went down to the SCC, there was a little sign in their coffee room
that said, we accept donation.
Like the SCC in charge of regulating Wall Street didn't have enough discretionary funding
to get themselves like some Nespresso pods.
They had a GoFundMe.
That's something.
For their coffee, they did actually after that show have a GoFundMe.
Meanwhile, there's a whole big hullabaloo online right now.
They put out a, they made like this big commercial, like making it look like
the retail investors have no fucking idea what they're doing.
Like it's a commercial that's like, you know, you can research stocks
and the retail investors like, what?
They could have used some of that commercial budget for some coffee.
But okay, so SCC, as a southerner, I instantly thought Nick Saban, Jimbo Fisher,
but we're talking about the Security Exchange Commission, correct?
That's correct.
The SCC with Fisher and Saban, they are not underfunded.
I don't know if you know this.
Their coffee bars are made of gold.
The Alabama football team has a couple of coffee bars just in the training facility.
That's right.
Nick Saban can just think about a latte and it can conjure.
It will just appear they have the neuro link from Elon Musk.
He thinks about it and boom, it's right there.
So this court case that we're going to be talking about,
I think it's a fifth circuit court of appeals, Jarkezy versus the SEC.
Jarkezy is one of those names that you really do think like,
I almost think that name is an insult.
This motherfucker is such a Jarkezy, you have no idea.
Language, language.
Exactly.
That's what I'm talking about.
We saw how relatively feckless the SEC looked.
Basically, they can levy a fine or two, but most people,
they basically made a deal that they're outgunned by the Wall Street.
I believe that you said you're the top cop.
And he said, yeah, and you said so.
I'm not here to talk about criminals bad and he went criminals.
John.
John.
John, I'm not here to talk about crimes.
I'm here to talk about K cups.
I'm here to talk about Maxwell House.
We prefer to think of them as the financially law challenged.
We don't like to think of them as criminals.
Gary Gensler is a kindergarten teacher.
We don't give out Fs.
We don't give out Fs.
I love the passion they have.
I just wish we could direct it.
That's right.
But it's very clear that they have financial institutions taking ethics
classes past fail.
And they don't generally do anything to do that.
They did recommend, I think, Arkego's recently to the DOJ,
but very unusual for them to do that.
They're trying to regulate crypto.
They're trying to regulate crypto.
So they're utterly outmatched, outgunned.
I'll break into a Hamilton song if I have to.
Outplanned, outmanned.
And so given that, I walked away thinking, oh,
the SEC is an abacus in a calculator world.
Now this calculator, TI-84.
TI-84, the kind that goes on your pen that your teacher doesn't even know you have.
So you got all that going.
This court ruling, it's fascinating.
It's the Fifth Court of Appeals, which, as you know, is occupied by,
I guess the term is crazy people.
Yeah, Foghorn Leghorn is the Chief Justice.
Foghorn Leghorn is the Chief Justice, and the Duke boys are the other two.
I honestly didn't even know there was a Fifth Court, Fifth Circuit Court.
It comes right after the Fourth Court.
There's the Fourth, and then there's the Fifth.
How far does it go?
I don't even know.
I think 11.
Okay.
It's all regional.
I thought you were going to sing Hallelujah.
I thought this was just a brilliant way for you to get into another song bit.
So I was like, if he sings Hallelujah, you're like, it goes like this, the Fourth, the Fifth.
That's what you did.
I want you to know that's what I heard.
Okay.
Jay Jordan's gone.
Nick Saban and Leonard Cohen in the same podcast.
That clearly is gold star work.
I had a boyfriend ruin Leonard Cohen for me.
This is a tangent.
But this is actually important.
How did that happen?
So we were dating.
We were listening to a Leonard Cohen album, and I was like, I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I was listening to a Leonard Cohen album, and I was like, yeah, I don't know if it's really my thing.
And he's like, well, you haven't gone through enough breakups.
Wow.
And I was like, what does that mean?
And then we broke up.
Wait.
Can I ask you a question?
Did Leonard Cohen make sense at that point?
All of a sudden I was like, it's genius.
Alexa, no.
So I don't know.
I should revisit.
I have to say, though, I get his point a little bit in that Tom Waits had a little bit of that for me.
There was occasions when I would break up with somebody and I would be so sad and I would just be sitting feeling sorry for myself.
And I would get Tom Waits on.
Piano has been drinking something like that.
And I'd get a bottle of my favorite tequila or whiskey.
And I would sit alone in a room until my sadness became hilarious.
Everyone has their process.
If we want to talk about music, we can talk about this case because there's a musical element.
John, we've been sitting on somewhere.
Very fun information for you.
There's a blues element to this case.
I don't know if John knows this.
A blues element.
The guy who is at the center of this case, Drakizzi, he is an amateur blues artist.
And he actually has a song called The Obama Blues.
What?
I'm not making it up.
Bad Obama Blues.
The Bad Obama Blues.
Now, Jay, I'm going to ask you, this is just an etiquette thing, protocol maybe.
Are white guys allowed to write blues songs about black guys?
I know we're allowed to take the chords and I know we're allowed to profit off them.
Are we allowed to actually write them about black guys?
I mean, writing a blues song about a black man as a white man,
that is like a Christian writing the music to a musical about how much they hate Jewish people.
Holy shit.
What is it?
So, and the song is like, Obama sucks.
You're not far off.
We can actually listen to it, I think.
Do we have it queued up?
For real?
I think we do.
I think we do.
A man starts with nothing.
Wow.
But by the sweat of his brow.
This is passion.
Bills himself a good business.
Ooh.
Makes his mama proud.
But more and more and more.
The government takes control.
You know what I like about that?
Yeah, let's, let's, let's, let's, let's get out of that.
Let's listen to the whole thing.
I would think that that alone would make him lose almost any court case.
Yes.
Play the song.
It's over.
The judge is like, what do you have to say for yourself?
A man's bum with nothing.
All right.
We can, we can, we get this out real quick.
Only the fifth circuit, which by the way, like if they were to put out a playlist, that would be on it.
Like the fifth circuit is so out there.
But, but generally the idea was that this guy was challenging the SEC's right to regulate.
And that is why that brings us to our podcast team that's here today.
They're going to explain to us what the ramifications of this are because the court found in favor of the blues man,
which basically means our government is actually useless.
So we're, they have no teeth and we're still pulling teeth.
Zero teeth.
Also, Robert Johnson did not sell his soul at the crossroads for that to become blues.
Do you think the devil would have brought that up?
He would have said, you know, I'm going to use this for white guys, right?
The devil is going to be like, I'm going to set a precedent here.
All right.
So here's what we're going to do.
I've enjoyed this very much.
As I always do talking to you guys, but we're going to talk about,
it's the fifth circuit of appeals, Jarkezy versus SEC.
And it found that the main way that the SEC goes after and penalizes securities fraud is unconstitutional.
You guys going to listen?
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
I'm going to eat you.
All right.
That's exactly right.
Let's bring in the team from the podcast is called strict scrutiny.
Hello, strict scrutiny.
You're Kate Shaw, Leah Litman and Melissa Murray.
That's us.
We are.
Thank you for having us.
First of all, tell me the podcast, strict scrutiny.
How did it come about?
What is your area of expertise?
How do you know each other?
How did this come to be?
Well, our origin story is a little bit like the Marvel Universe.
We came together like basically gems in an Elstone that some massive Titan put together because we realized that there weren't...
You are talking my language, Melissa.
I'm trying.
I'm the mother of a 10-year-old boy.
This is all the language I know.
Yes.
Then you get me.
You understand me.
I do, John.
So we came together because we looked around and we realized the only people talking about the Supreme Court for the most part were a bunch of white guys.
And they often didn't talk about the things that we thought were relevant for the court and that other people wanted to hear about the court.
So we figured that why shouldn't we start talking about the court?
We talk about the court for our jobs and now we've decided to make it much more public.
So this is really Leah's brainchild.
So she started the podcast and she brought all of us together and we have been dropping constitutional knowledge ever since 2019.
So we're well into it at this point.
First of all, Melissa, you will be my phone a friend in any instance where I need knowledge.
Well, John, I'm a Jeopardy alumna, so I'm ready to assist you.
Are you really?
I really am and I'm ready to help you anytime you need a phone a friend.
We will get back to the court case, I promise you.
How was that experience?
Did you do it with Alex Trebek?
It was with Alex Trebek.
It was when I was a teenager.
I was on the teen tournament and I did not win, but I wore a fuchsia suit with enormous shoulder pads because it was the 90s.
And I went to the tempo casual as they asked them for the kind of suit that a woman going to a powerful business meeting would wear.
And that's what I wore on national television.
Melissa, you couldn't have done better as someone who worked in the stock room at Ormans in 1980.
I know exactly what you're talking about.
I listen, I was probably cleaning the carpets in the store as you were getting that suit.
It was flammable.
Good times.
So what you're doing, the court system right now has skewed so far to the right that and I love the fact that they don't consider it activist.
They're just getting back to the original intent of this document, which they and only they can conjure.
This particular case, I know it hasn't really hit the mainstream in the way, obviously, Ro and some of these other cases.
And we can talk about that a little bit as well.
But this case seems to strike at the heart of the government's ability to regulate anything.
Clean air, clean water, food, anything seems that that will now be in question.
Like if you put E. coli in a can of creamed beef, you're now going to have to have a jury trial for them to get you to clean up your factory.
No, that's exactly right.
This decision found the current method that the SEC uses to enforce basic consumer protection rules that protect people who buy stocks in publicly traded companies unconstitutional for not one, not two, but three independently crazy reasons.
And I think it's worth understanding the different reasons because all of them would really spell the demise of government as we know it today.
So let's back up for a little bit.
Why did the SEC go after this down on his luck blues man?
It actually wasn't because he's a bad blues musician.
Interesting.
You know, that could have been an alternative theory.
They actually found that he materially misrepresented his company and its financial state.
And that caused people to invest in the company based on incorrect information.
So basically he did what some of the banks during the subprime mortgage crisis did.
He misrepresented the health of like a financial product that he was selling or something like that.
People bought into it.
He profited from that fraudulent representation and the SEC brought him up on charges and found these allegations credible.
Exactly.
So it was, you know, not an enormous case, but, you know, a routine case of the sort the SEC brings all the time.
And a routine case of the sort that in my mind is exactly what's wrong with the SEC.
That you can commit fraud and the SEC after an investigation will say you committed fraud.
Give us some of that money.
Just give us like give us a cut off the top and you can go about your merry way that somehow white collar crime because it's crime.
And because it's not chaos in the street crime, we find it and everybody moves on and there's no deterrence.
So that's my own personal beef.
And it turns out that's still too much for the Fifth Circuit.
Leah, that is a lot of Nespresso pods.
So it's a lot of Nespresso pods.
Exactly.
So he says he doesn't challenge the fact that he committed fraud.
Is that correct?
No.
He challenges the fact that you're not the one who can tell me or you're not the one who can levy a fine.
Just everything about you is unconstitutional for a bunch of different reasons.
That was the crux of his argument.
You agency are unconstitutional in these three distinct ways.
So you have no power to impose this fine on me.
It's worth noting here that there has been a concerted effort among the conservative legal movement to challenge various aspects of the regulatory state.
And even sort of small bore cases like this one that only resulted in a fine can nonetheless be a really powerful vehicle for challenging the authority of an administrative agency charged with enormous regulatory power over corporate interests and business interests.
So yes, it is a small bore case, but it's an enormous action and an enormous opportunity if you're seeking to find an appropriate vehicle to begin the process of dismantling the regulatory state.
Now, to be fair, there are legitimate concerns about government overreach in regulation, about the bureaucratic state, about its ability to, and there has to be oversight over that.
But this case isn't about oversight.
It's about their ability to exist.
Is that correct?
Yes.
All right.
Leah, tell me what were the three pillars of this case?
So the first one involves something that's called the non-delegation doctrine.
And this has really become one of those en vogue things that the conservative legal movement has developed in order to undermine and undo the administrative state.
And this theory goes something as follows.
Congress is the legislature.
They're supposed to be the ones that make rules telling private citizens what they can and can't do.
But Congress can't make the rules in detail about everything and everyone.
And so what Congress does is it will pass a statute that authorizes some administrative agency with expertise over a certain area.
Here the Securities and Exchange Commission to make more specific rules about more specific industries, about what they can and can't do.
So here the SEC told publicly traded companies, here's what you can and can't do when you are transmitting information about your company to potential investors.
What this case is saying is that Congress doesn't have the right to delegate their authority for regulation to an administrative, even if it's one with expertise.
So basically they're saying is Congress, if you want to regulate this guy's financial dealings, you've got to do it yourself.
That's generally true, although I think even most courts, even the Fifth Circuit, would understand that that's actually bonkers.
Can you imagine if we charge Congress with issuing passports to individuals or alternatively we ask a congressman like Marjorie Taylor Greene, for example, to do policy about environmental concerns, things like that.
Maybe it's worse than that. Maybe she they think Marjorie Taylor Greene has to go to the Cuyahoga River and actually get the kit and go in there and say, I think there might be dioxin in here.
That's what that would mean. You can't delegate any authority.
And they know that that's actually impossible to do. You cannot run a government of this size and scope on a principle like that.
So what the non-delegation doctrine provides is that delegations from Congress to executive agencies like administrative agencies are permissible only where Congress provides the agency with an intelligible principle to guide its use of the delegated power.
And typically the Supreme Court has held that that intelligible principle can be pretty broad. It just has to be there.
But what we are seeing from many of these courts that are now stacked with more conservative judges is a sense that the intelligible principle that guides the agency's use of this delegated authority actually has to be pretty particular and specific.
And again, it's hard to get that kind of specificity in order to guide an agency if you want the agency to actually do the work within its expertise.
But their guiding principles seem relatively clear. It's for investor confidence and capital formation.
Yes.
All right. So that's a non-delegation goal. So the first thing they're saying is you are not able to delegate that in the non-specific way that you are even to an administrative.
So now you're talking about if the SEC can't do that, clearly the FCC can't do it. The FAA can't do it.
Like we don't have agencies anymore if that is the case. And did they find that that's the case?
The specific argument the court bought here was that what was wrong with the kind of delegation to the SEC was basically the way it went about enforcing these securities laws.
SEC enforcers have the choice to either initiate an administrative action or file a suit in federal court and giving administrative actors that discretion violated the non-delegation doctrine.
So it's a wedge. It's a very specific finding about this particular kind of authority being problematic from the perspective of the non-delegation doctrine.
So they don't say the whole agency is unconstitutional.
We don't buy your authority then to levy a penalty. Now, put that way, that doesn't sound crazy.
It has the seeds of crazy in it. And that's, I think, part of what is dangerous about it is it sounds almost reasonable.
Well, maybe it is too much power to give an agency actor the authority to bring these enforcement actions inside the agency.
Like that feels like an unfair home court advantage for the agency enforcer, right?
Right. Who's got oversight over that agency then?
Well, what's the appeals process? Is there an impartial body that will look at that and say that was decided incorrectly?
Two things. One, there's a judge inside the agency, an administrative law judge that has these structural protections that guarantee independence inside the agency.
But if you're still unhappy with what happens inside the agency, you can appeal to federal court.
So it's not as though the agency has this kind of unilateral authority to levy fines, and that's the end of the story.
You can always go to federal court.
So it's checks and balances.
Yes.
Okay. So on count one, I find, fuck this guy. That's my finding. That is my ruling.
That ruling is final. This is clearly being done as a wedge.
Give me number two. What's number two?
So number two has to do with the administrative law judge inside the agency that I just mentioned basically has these protections that guarantee independence.
As they're called, can't be removed for political reasons, right?
They're supposed to be independent for the reasons that we were just alluding to so that, you know, people appearing before them get a fair shake.
But the argument that Charquisee made was that it's a problem to have officials like administrative law judges inside administrative agencies who are not subject to kind of direct supervision by the president.
That the president has needs to have under article two of the Constitution and what's called the take care clause, the president needs to have the authority to unilaterally remove if he wants to agency officials because he's the elected head of the executive branch.
They're inside the executive branch. All power has to flow back to him. He's the one that people selected, you know, asterisk the electoral college, not always, but that's the fiction anyway.
And so it's a problem from the perspective of presidential power to have these officials insulated from direct presidential removal authority.
But legislative authorities would create the agency. So isn't that a balance?
They're elected too. Congress is elected. They created the agency.
Let me go one step further. If the president has the ability to unilaterally remove judges, does the Fifth Circuit understand that they're judges?
Well, they're article three judges, so they're a different kind of judges. The president can't remove them because they're in a separate branch of government.
But the argument is these guys are in the executive branch and the president gets to decide, at least at the senior level.
But they were given their authority through the legislative branch. So why aren't they considered in the legislative branch?
All agencies are creatures of Congress. Congress makes them, but these are considered officials within the executive branch.
Now, technically, the SEC is what's called an independent agency, which is in a little bit of a sort of unique posture.
It's kind of, some people think of it as its own fourth branch of government, the SEC, the FCC, the FEC, all these independent agencies.
But these are their executive branch officials like Gary Gensler, right, nominated by the president. So they're inside the executive branch.
They're saying that what they would call the deep state has to always be partisan, that it's only constitutionally legal if it is staffed by the ideologues that went to Regent University.
Yes, more or less.
Unless a Democrat is in office, which obviously is not legitimate, and then they'll figure out something else.
So the two pillars we have right now is the SEC doesn't have the regulatory authority to levy those things, and that the judge who levied it actually should be able to be removed by the executive.
But what's number three?
Number three is that the SEC actually can't hear these cases, that is, it can't be an administrative law judge of the kind that Kate is describing that decides whether to impose a fine or not.
Instead, those cases have to be heard by a jury in federal court.
Get the fuck out of here.
They're saying that every administrative case of fining has to be heard by a jury.
Well, they have to be heard by a jury, otherwise it violates the Seventh Amendment right to a jury trial.
To a process.
Right.
Where they stem from sort of common law, like, common law claims that would ordinarily be heard by a civil jury.
So in this particular case, the Fifth Circuit said that because the underlying claims sort of sounded in the register of common law fraud claims,
they said that they were levying civil penalties.
Civil penalties are the kinds of things that would flow from a civil jury trial, not from an administrative hearing by an ALJ.
So that's where it is.
Let me tell you something.
Be careful what you wish for.
This case, do they have any idea the hornet's nest that they're opening up here?
Do they really believe that a jury that hears the case about defrauding investors is going to be as lenient as an administrative state that is overwhelmed and is just trying to pass shit through?
Like, do they have any idea what they're about to get into?
If you brought this to a jury trial, it wouldn't even be a civil case.
It would be a criminal case about fraud and that dude would go to jail.
Well, I think the problem is that you mentioned administrative agencies are overburdened, so too are federal courts and juries.
In some places, you file a case in federal court.
It's not going to be heard at the earliest for like a year and a half later.
Sometimes the trial process might take years.
And so it can be really expensive and burdensome to try to make all of these cases into jury trial cases.
So let me ask you this.
In your mind is the motivation here, a constitutional principle.
One thing I've noticed about the conservative movement that's really brilliant is if they can't make what they want illegal, they'll make it impossible.
So in other words, like when you talk about forcing women to carry babies, even though that may kill them.
They can't make it illegal because the majority of people would support it.
As a legislative process, it'd be very difficult to criminalize it, right?
So what they do is they put in regulations that say, okay, if you run an abortion clinic, you've got to have two anesthesiologists and your hallway has to be 50 feet wide.
Now, they've just undermined their ability to regulate that by bringing these court cases.
That's besides the point.
Second of all, what it sounds like they're doing is they want to make the government's ability to regulate anything not illegal because most people would support clean water and air and healthy food.
They want to make it impossible.
I think that's totally right.
That's true of both the non-delegation argument.
If you require Congress to write all of these specific rules, they're not going to be able to do so.
You've just made it prohibitively difficult for Congress or anyone to actually regulate these industries, and it's also true of this civil jury trial argument.
You're not saying it's necessarily illegal.
You're just saying these cases have to be heard before juries, but that would overwhelm the federal courts and just be practically impossible to actually bring all of these cases.
We'd all be jurors.
That's all we would do.
None of us would have jobs.
But for the conservative legal movement, John, this is really about what they call the Constitution in exile.
The ultimate goal of all of this is to restore the constitutional landscape to its pre-New Deal status quo, where there was very limited government and certainly not an expansive regulatory welfare state.
We've already seen the attack on the welfare state from the 1980s forward, but this is the next phase of the program, which is to say rolling back the kinds of regulatory interventions that make the business landscape, the corporate landscape,
more amenable to ordinary citizens and require that corporate interests be subject to some kind of government regulation.
This is all an effort to undo all of that regulation.
And even if you sort of take it in tandem with everything else that's going on, it's really an effort to kind of roll back the 20th century.
So, well, I'd go even further.
I'd say roll back the Enlightenment.
But what they're basically saying is our founders foresaw a robber baron situation, and that's kind of how it's supposed to go.
Because in the 18th century, white male property owners were the deal, and that's the deal.
Is that what we're dealing with?
That's basically how former Trump White House counsel, Don McGahn, described their judicial nominations.
He called their judicial nominations part of a larger deregulatory plan, saying there is a coherent plan here where actually the judicial selection and the deregulation effort are really the flip side of the same coin.
They viewed the federal courts as the way to accomplish the deregulatory agenda.
Right.
Look, now, to be fair here, there's no question that there is administrative and bureaucratic bloat, that the efficiency of government agencies can sometimes be called into question, that a regulatory regime is oftentimes written by the very industries that they're trying to regulate.
And so they're overly complex, purposefully so, obtuse and very difficult to penetrate if you're a small business owner or you're trying to just get something off the ground.
So I am sympathetic to the idea that we need to reexamine the simplicity of how we regulate and the cost that it brings to bear.
But this sounds like something very different, which is to say, government has no role.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's not the spirit of this lawsuit or it's lawsuits of this ilk, right?
It's like actually acknowledging inefficiencies and redundancies and working to improve governance and governmental capacity.
It's literally just to burn the whole thing down, right?
The SEC has been around since 1933, right?
It's a response to the stock market crash and the Great Depression, the idea that...
What would they say the role is?
What would they say the role the SEC should be?
Making coffee.
Buying Nespresso pods.
Listening to blues music?
This agency has been around for a hundred years and they're saying no one ever noticed, but the whole thing is just completely unconstitutional.
And just like the arrogance of these judges sort of announcing, like we and we alone have seen through this agency that's been doing...
I mean, I think you're right, John, like under enforcing.
Like in some ways, like the fact that it is a paper tiger in many ways, it's being painted as just like administrative leviathan in this opinion.
Like it's doing all of this vast overreaching and like it's not really doing that much at all.
So Kate said something about the judges and Leah, to mention something about this too, we should tie together.
Leah noted that there has been a concerted effort to stock the federal judiciary with these judges who believe very much in this theory of the Constitution and exile and the project.
That's all from the Federalist Society and Regie University and all that.
It's really been in place since George W. Bush's administration and it really picked up steam in the Trump administration.
This case is decided by a three-judge panel of the Fifth Circuit and the two judges who are in the majority here very much reflect that conservative legal movement.
One is appointed by George W. Bush, the other is a Trump appointee.
The dissenter, the lone dissenter here is a Gerald Ford appointee.
No, I mean all the way back from the 1970s, a Gerald Ford.
How old is he?
He was born in the 1930s.
He's an older individual.
He's born in the 1930s, Judge Davis.
But yeah, he's the dissenter here who's sort of like, and he knows what the regulatory state should look like because he's been around for much of its development.
And I don't mean that to be glib.
Let me, okay, so let's, this court does that.
Now we all know that circuit courts and things like that sometimes make cases that are, they do so with a reason to provoke, that they're attempting to be provocative or they're attempting to make a thing.
But I don't understand how the SEC survives because I can't imagine a Supreme Court with Gorsuch, Alito and those others saying, no, they have the authority.
I can't imagine it.
Neil Gorsuch has basically been salivating since his days from prep school, just waiting to knife the administrative state in the back.
I mean, this is the project that he cares.
It's an easy target.
Nobody likes the administrative state.
Well, Kate actually has a theory, but it's like a sort of like origin story about Neil Gorsuch's antipathy for the administrative state.
I'm still workshopping at Melissa, but I will share it in early form, John, which is that, you know, his mom was Reagan's EPA administrator and Gorsuch Burford.
And there's some family psychodrama there that I don't yet fully understand.
But she left after being the first cabinet secretary to be held in contempt of Congress because of a refusal to turn over some documents to the House Judiciary Committee.
These were the events that led to another big important Supreme Court case, Morrison versus Olson.
Oh, sure.
Morrison versus Olson is a, that's a big one.
We'll talk about it next time.
But anyway, there's a family story there that, again, I'm still fully sort of fleshing out, but he's not a stranger to the administrative state.
So basically, we're not going to be able to have functioning aircraft because Neil Gorsuch's mom got a raw deal.
You know, that's basically right.
It's incredible when that happens, that that anger permeates.
You know, they say that Kushner is the same way, that it was his father's court case and how that, like, I feel like we're living in Gotham City.
And it's all just like, how that guy turned.
You're like, well.
Or a Greek tragedy.
This is very at a pole.
Yes.
So if the Supreme Court takes the case or it's appealed, what are the ramifications of it?
And how can it be countered?
And who would even counter it?
So it's an open question whether the SEC will seek a further appeal on this case.
I mean, you know, recognizing that the court itself might be amenable to exactly what the Fifth Circuit has done.
So, you know, there are a couple of possibilities here.
If the SEC seeks a review of this, there could be a review by the en banc.
Fifth Circuit, which is to say all of the judges of that court would get together and they would hear the case and make a decision all together as opposed to this three judge panel.
And if that were appealed, then it possibly could go to the Supreme Court if the court agreed to review it.
I think you really have the kind of familial psychodrama that Kate has outlined, but is unwilling to stake her academic reputation on.
I will.
I'm just not quite ready.
And let me tell you something.
Your academic reputation speaks for itself.
This is the first line of my resume going starting tomorrow.
I really appreciate you guys staying here.
I really appreciate you laying out the stakes to this.
Obviously, there's Roe v. Wade and Alito.
I don't have time to get into that today, but just briefly, do you have any hopes that this has somehow been overstated?
Or do you believe this comes out and abortion is no longer legal for women in America?
That part.
The last part.
That part.
Let me throw something out to you to see if you believe, because what they're saying is there is no constitutional right.
Yes.
Right.
To that.
Yes.
They're saying the government has no legal rights.
So let's tie it into the SEC case.
The government has no legal right to regulate anything but your uterus.
Why can't your uterus sue to say that I deserve a jury trial?
Because these states will happily put women and their uteruses before juries in order to send them to jail because they're not just seeking civil fines.
They want to throw them in jail.
They're smarter than that because they know if they play out their game that it becomes untenable because here's the thing.
Women die in childbirth and not with notice like they die.
So who's then responsible for that murder?
If you force somebody to do something that kills them, who's responsible for that?
Here's another thing they might try.
What's the amendment about quartering soldiers?
Third.
The third amendment.
Third amendment.
How do you know that that fetus isn't going to be a soldier?
How can you be forced by the government to quarter a soldier inside you?
These are the things the progressive legal movement needs to be thinking about over the next several decade horizon as we are developing our own constitution in exile.
In exile.
Boy, I got to tell you guys, I was thinking you'd be a little bit more optimistic or fired up about what some of the ramifications, like the resilience of this and how it could be fought back.
But I'm not sensing that at all.
No.
So I think the reality is there isn't a single shot easy solution that you can just do on say the federal level or national level in order to address the conservative takeover of the federal courts, the Supreme Court and the lower courts.
I think progressives need to get in the habit of making courts a more regular part of their life and going to the polls in order to select politicians who will appoint federal judges who are not out to destroy the administrative state or women's right to bodily autonomy.
The reality is, as Melissa was saying, this has been a project of the conservative legal movement and conservative politicians exactly for several decades.
This is a long term project that will be met in small gains and increments over a long time horizon.
And people just need to be ready to stay in the fight for that time period.
And it's also inextricably linked to the effort to limit the vote and to basically redraw all of the districting maps.
I mean, you don't get a law like the one that's being challenged in the Dobs case out of Mississippi unless you've completely gerrymandered a state so that the progressive influences that would object to such a law cannot have their voice registered in the state house, right?
And the court has essentially insulated itself from the inevitable backlash it will receive from the public by making it possible for states to pass suppressive voter laws that make it harder for you to register your objections at the ballot box.
Like, this is a project that is comprehensive in ways that I don't think we have fully appreciated.
It touches not only on reproductive rights, but it involves voting rights.
It involves dismantling the welfare state and involves dismantling the administrative state.
It's a completely joined up project.
You know, and I don't think we should soft sell the fact that there is a built in home court advantage for the conservative movement based on the Constitution's redistribution of power to rural, generally, wider states.
When this was designed, because it was designed with a certain compromise in mind to keep the southern states in the union, the compromises that they made in that moment have set the stage for this kind of power grab.
It's why you can win the popular vote in America by seven million and still barely eat by in the electoral college.
And why the Senate has a 60 vote rule and Wyoming has the same amount of senators as New York.
It's affirmative action for rural America.
It's a socialist redistribution of power.
And it's replicated on the court, right?
You see, so Kavanaugh is confirmed to the court by senators representing like, you know, 42, 43, 44% of the American public.
So it is the structural advantage that the conservative.
So how do you, how do you battle that structural, how do you battle the home court advantage?
It's really, I mean, a lot of it, you're right, is baked into a deeply problematic constitution.
The Senate and the electoral college, which replicates the, you know, the advantages that under populated states have in the Senate are an enormous problem.
So, I mean, getting rid of the electoral college would be a hugely important start.
Amending the Constitution is also a problem.
The difficulty of amending the Constitution is also an enormous problem with the Constitution.
But to my mind, that's the single most important thing.
So, I mean, to play that out in a dystopian way, we're talking about permanent minority rule.
I tend to be more upbeat, but I think that there is, it is an uphill battle to overcome the structural disadvantages that the Democratic Party and progressives.
Just have to bear as a result of the design of our Constitution.
I don't think they're insurmountable, but I think it is going to be a tough fight.
All right.
I think it's just helpful to know that you are working against things.
There are things you can do at state and local level, right?
Like trying to amend state constitutions in order to bar partisan gerrymandering or in order to have independent commissions draw district lines.
They're going the opposite way, though.
What they're basically saying is now these partisan legislatures have the ability to go in and just say, yeah, that vote's wrong.
So, we're not going to abide by it.
We're just going to throw it out, do something else.
Yes.
That is, again, maybe a topic for a future episode is all of the ways in which court seems...
Let's do it!
Come on!
Seems likely to overthrow basic artifices of democracy.
But at least for the time being, there are goals that you can try to shoot for at the state and local level in order to make elections more representative and in order to make exercising political power by the people who win the popular vote possible.
Right.
Okay.
Well, listen, that's...
At least you're laying out kind of a game plan, which I think is really smart.
I will count on the three of you to save us.
Oh, yes.
Please.
Please.
Strict scrutiny.
Save us.
Hey, hey.
Before the guests go away, let's have Jay and Alexa come back.
Just make sure if Jay Jordan or Alexa Loftus has anything they'd like to add in.
Hey, guys.
Hello.
Hey.
Come on here and tell.
First of all...
Strict scrutiny.
These guys are great.
This was so informative.
So great.
Very helpful.
So helpful, so informative.
You're thinking on it is so clear that a layman is able to understand.
Jay and Alexa, take away his thoughts.
Well, since we're just spitballing new legal procedures, what if we got Margaret Atwood
to sue the Supreme Court for IP infringement because they're stealing all their ideas from
Handmaid's Tale?
We got to really think about how we get into this.
Okay.
I like the no quartering of soldiers.
Yes, that's great.
I love that.
I like your idea there.
Just out of curiosity, this is a real question.
How can they make a decision like that when it, to me, clearly violates equal protection?
When you regulate something that women have, like forget about right to privacy.
How is this not an equal protection issue?
Melissa has a beautiful brief in the Supreme Court that made this argument that Alito cited
to just say, don't worry about that, but didn't actually respond to it.
Come on, Melissa.
Talk to me.
I think you're exactly right.
I think abortion restrictions are a species of pregnancy discrimination, which is a species
of sex-based discrimination that violates the equal protection clause.
And unfortunately, there are not five people on the Supreme Court who would agree with
me and Justice Alito in that weak draft opinion kind of laid waste to the equal protection
clause.
There's nothing to see here and kept it moving.
So, yeah, I mean, I think every woman in America should be asking why this isn't an
equal protection problem given who gets pregnant and who has principal responsibility for child
bearing as both a social matter and, in many cases, often a legal matter.
If this goes through, if I need a kidney, will I be able to force a person to give me their
kidney?
No, because you're a Democrat.
And obviously so, that's the problem, if you could hide it more.
If everyone else who lives in my town needed a kidney, because I see the flags, if everyone
else in my town needed a kidney and my kidney was a match, why is my bodily autonomy in
any way different than a woman's bodily autonomy when it is a matter of life and death?
Well, I think you should really be channeling Justice Amy Coney Barrett.
And instead of asking about kidneys, ask about vaccines, because that is an area where, apparently,
we are already willing to deviate from concerns about bodily autonomy, according to Justice
Barrett.
And abortion should also be one of those places where we can impose our will on others.
This is wild stuff.
I can't thank you enough for being here.
The podcast is called Strict Scrutiny.
It's not easy to say, I'm going to have a call with your marketing people.
That would be us.
I think your podcast deserves a name that can be said by those with less adept linguistic
skills.
Strict scrutiny.
Yeah, tune in to the podcast.
Red leather, yellow leather.
Kate Shaw, Leah Litman, and Melissa Murray, thank you very much for joining us.
We very much appreciate it.
Thank you so much for articulating all this for us and giving us a much clearer picture
of what's at stake and some of the things that we can do to remedy it.
We really do appreciate you guys being here.
Thanks for having us.
Thank you.
Thank you so much.
All right.
Take care, guys.
All right.
That is the show.
Wowza.
Woo.
I'm wildly upsetting.
Can I just say the idea of, let's say, Marjorie Taylor Greene being charged of, let's say,
our drinking water, it does worry me because I feel like she only drinks Powerade.
And she doesn't have a favorite flavor.
She has a favorite color.
Yeah.
Yeah, blue.
Oh, it's definitely blue.
Oh, yeah.
I'm gonna go into the water that we finally get that damn fluoride out of it.
It's controlling your brain.
You know, John?
That's what I'm talking about.
Yeah.
It just makes you want to sing.
It makes you want to sing a blue song.
The election was stolen.
You got to get a little bit of gravel in your voice.
Little bit of growl.
CRT is alive.
All of my favorite superheroes are now gay, lesbian or bi.
Come on, it writes itself, J. This is perfect.
We're going to come back.
I don't know what our cadence is now on podcasts.
I think we do one whenever we feel like it.
But we want to thank Kate Shaw, Leah Litman, Melissa Murray for joining us.
Their podcast is called Strict Scrutiny, and we will be back soon.
Please let us know on Twitter or however else you do.
Let people know things, what you think, and what are some of the things you'd like to
be hearing about.
I look forward to seeing you all at Jay's concert, his blues show.
I heard tickets are already sold out.
They're already on sale.
It's done.
It's already sold out.
All right.
See you guys soon.
Take us out, Jay.
Give teachers guns, take books away from kids.
I'm not scared of no virus.
Okay, I'm a little scared.
I'm a little scared.
All right.
00:51:23,600 --> 00:51:37,000
All right.