[Note, I was having trouble getting the video segments to start and stop where I wanted, so while I'm leaving this up, I'm also making some changes. LATER: I think I've straightened it out. But I'll be revising through tomorrow if necessary.]
My last post organized my thoughts about the Supreme Court hearing for the redistricting board cases into three categories:
1. PRACTICAL/POLITICAL: WHAT WILL THE LEGISLATIVE MAP OF ALASKA LOOK LIKE FOR THE NEXT TEN YEARS?
2. LEGAL: WHAT LEGAL PRINCIPLES ARE THE ATTORNEYS AND JUDGES DEBATING/WEIGHING AND HOW DO THEY IMPACT #1 AND FUTURE BOARDS?
3. PERSONAL: HOW DO THE SKILLS, STYLES, MOTIVATIONS, AND EXPERIENCES OF THE ATTORNEYS (AND TO SOME DEGREE, THE JUDGES) IMPACT THE DECISION MAKING?
I've realized a couple of things as I struggle to write the follow up posts:
- While I've separated the three categories for clarity of discussion, they are very closely interwoven. You can't talk about one without the other two.
- There are almost four hours of video tape to repeatedly review to start to get all the points
- There's way too much content here for even hard core redistricting nerds to read and for this blogger to cover
- What I really want to write about most is how the Board's attorney, Matt Singer, presented his case
"Mansplaining—when a man talks condescendingly to someone (especially a woman) about something he has incomplete knowledge of, with the mistaken assumption that he knows more about it than the person he's talking to does."
- condescendingly
- about something he has incomplete knowledge of
- with the mistaken assumption he knows more about it than the person he's talking to
"I finally figured out why it's so tedious to listen to him at trial. There's a smugness in his voice. Disdain. He knows the truth and he sounds like he's tired of having to correct all the plaintiffs' errors. That this all is a waste of his time. (A lucrative waste.) I didn't figure this out until the Calista case today when Lee Baxter took the role of the Board's lawyer. In contrast, he sounds respectful and sincere as he tries to counter the plaintiff's arguments."
So, at least, the condescending part was pretty clear then. [I'm having trouble embedding the part of the video I want. But it starts at the beginning, so you should listen until he gets to calling Judge Matthews decision absurd. Then stop and read. After that you can then play the next few minutes as the judges ask Singer questions.] [I now seem to have got it right and it should stop there on its own and the second section of the video is below.]
He begins by talking about the court's 'usurpation of the power of the board.'
"The first error the trial court made" was in recasting the core role and purpose of the Board. In Judge Matthews' interpretation, the Board has no special expertise to make redistricting decisions because its members need only be Alaska residents for one year. Based primarily on the absence of a longer residency requirement the trial court opined that the spirit if not the letter of the Constitution compels the Board to adopt a number of equally constitutional plans and then let the public have a say after which the Board must follow the public's bidding unless doing so would be illegal. This court has repeatedly said over decades that it will not substitute its judgment for that of the Board. It's said that its role is to evaluate the plan adopted by the Board, not plans that were possible or preferred. Implicit in that standard of review is a recognition that the Board and its members have judgement. They get to exercise judgment. The trial court's reasoning that it should not exercise its own judgment because the Constitution does not require a longer residency is also factually absurd.
Then he goes on to discuss how the Board appointments are made. And describes the members as having 200 years of collective experience in Alaska.
So, let's first look at the parts marked in red. This is just the beginning of Mr. Singer's morning before the court. He starts out talking about "the first error the trial court made." OK, this doesn't sound too bad, but he is unequivocally telling the Supreme Court justices that one of their brethren judges has made a number of errors (he'll enumerate others down the line.) and ends this opening by saying the trial court's conclusion is 'absurd.' The parts in red deal with the "condescendingly" part of mansplaining.
I get that it's the attorney's job to point out errors in his opponent's argument. But it helps
- if you focus on the argument, not the person,
- if you do it with a little more grace and respect.
- if the person you complain about actually did what you said he did.
Singer does none of these. Absurd is a strong word. Dictionary.com defines it this way:
"utterly or obviously senseless, illogical, or untrue; contrary to all reason or common sense; laughably foolish or false"
He's saying that Judge Thomas Matthews was utterly senseless, illogical, contrary to all reason or common sense, laughably foolish!
There are times when 'absurd' is appropriate. This is not one of them. Mainly because the judge never said what Singer alleges. He never said, "The Board must do the public's bidding."
And he's saying this to the judge's judicial brethren. It's like bad-mouthing your former employer in a job interview with your potential new employer. It can't make a good impression.
Moving to the blue now. Judge Matthews did say that the Constitution assumes that the Board members don't have special expertise because they're only required to have one year's residency. But he didn't say that this Board has no expertise. He didn't say the board 'has to do the public's bidding' because of the one year residency requirement.
In fact, Mr. Singer cherry picks one idea and takes it out of context to reach conclusions that grossly mischaracterize what trial court Judge Matthews actually wrote.
Judge Matthews spent a lot of time discussing the role of public testimony and how the Board is to consider it. He never says that the Board should simply adopt the majority opinion of the public testimony. Rather, he concludes the Board shouldn't substitute its own personal preferences when they are contrary to the overwhelming majority of public testimony. Rather than using personal preferences, the judge wants to hear how the facts of each district fit the criteria. And if the Board feels it must override the overwhelming public testimony, they need to document why. In this case, the board didn't do that.
In this section of his ruling, he reviews the minutes of the Constitutional Convention, Judge Matthews quotes Delegate Hellenthal (I've only copied part of Hellenthal's statement below):
click to enlarge and focus |
I doubt Mr. Singer has been asking himself Delegate Hellenthal's question: "What can I do to help the greater good of the State?" Rather, it seems he's been asking, "How can I win this case?" And that is his job in court. But I don't think he was thinking about the greater good of the State when he was advising the Board either.
Then he reviews how past Supreme Court cases discussed the role of public testimony:
- 57% white in South Muldoon is very different from the Eagle River districts which are among the whitest districts in Alaska - in the 90% range.
- Voting Republican two-thirds of the time means they vote Democratic one-third of the time, while the Eagle River districts NEVER vote Democratic.
- There are different types of Republicans. Eagle River elects Republicans like like Lora Reinbold and Jamie Allard - both extreme Right anti-maskers who are cozy with White Nationalists. And in comparison to Allard, one of Eagle River's Anchorage Assembly members, East Anchorage is represented in the Assembly by Forrest Dunbar and Pete Peterson, both Democrats, both former Peace Corps volunteers, and strong advocates for masking and LGBTQ rights and other progressive values.
- When the 2011 Board paired an East Anchorage seat with Eagle River, it effectively ended the state Senate career of Alaska's (then) only black Senator, Bettye Davis, who was beaten soundly by Eagle River voters
[March 26, 2022: The Supreme Court rendered its ruling yesterday. You can see it on this post. While Singer lost the fight over the Eagle River Senate pairings, he won the Skagway case. Another change the Supreme Court is requiring (though the trial court didn't) is putting Cantwell back into the Denali Borough.]
Fascinating video, Steve. But, I think the two videos are flipped. The opening is second and the Supremes' questioning is placed first. Thank you so much for this. You are doing an incredible job.
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