“Appeals Court Nominee Janice Rogers Brown Merits
the Filibuster”
by Gene C. Gerard
www.OpEdNews.com
In 2003, President Bush nominated California Supreme Court
Justice Janice Rogers Brown to the U.S. Courts of Appeals.
However, due to her ultra-conservative judicial views, the
Democrats in the Senate prevented her nomination from going
forward by use of the filibuster. Mr. Bush re-nominated her
again in February. Last week, the Senate Judiciary Committee, in
a party-line vote, approved of her nomination, with all 10
Republicans affirming her, and all eight Democrats opposing her.
Unless Republicans elect to carry out the so-called “nuclear
option” of abolishing the filibuster, Democrats will almost
certainly block her nomination again. And for good reasons.
Justice Brown has taken positions contrary to the nation’s
commitment to civil rights. In the 1999 case Aguilar vs. Avis
Rent A Car Systems, Inc., a lower court ruled that the employer
had violated a California employment act by permitting a hostile
work environment. The employer permitted the use of racial slurs
directed against Hispanic employees. Upon appeal to the state’s
Supreme Court, the majority agreed with the lower ruling.
However, Justice Brown dissented, and argued that the right to
free speech protected the use of racial slurs in the workplace,
even when it violated federal laws against racial
discrimination. Her dissent essentially ignored many previous
rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court.
In the case of People vs. Robert Young, Justice Brown authored a
position no other California Justice took. The case centered on
a prosecuting attorney who was accused of violating California
and federal law by excluding black women from a jury, solely on
the basis of their race. Justice Brown argued that it was
permissible for prosecutors to do so, because she saw “no…basis
[that] black women might be the victims of a unique type of
group discrimination….”
She is strongly opposed to affirmative action. She referred to
previous federal and state court decisions supporting
affirmative action to have been “wrongly decided.” In the case
of Hi-Voltage Wire Works vs. City of San Jose, she ruled that
cities may not require contractors to attempt to hire competent
subcontractors owned by minorities or women. This decision was
contrary to many U.S. Supreme Court rulings that under
appropriate circumstances, affirmative action is lawful under
the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Ironically, Justice Brown has
benefited from a form of affirmative action by President Bush,
in that his nomination and support of her is partially based on
the fact that she is an extremely conservative African-American.
Justice Brown attempted to strike down Constitutional rights
that all Americans enjoy. In the case of People vs. Ray, her
opinion would have allowed the police to search an individual’s
house without obtaining a search warrant. However, the U.S.
Supreme Court has maintained that the Fourth Amendment protects
against such intrusion.
But the greatest threat posed by Justice Brown is in regard to
the rights of workers. She consistently rules against workers
and in favor of employers. In the case of Loder vs. City of
Glendale, she ruled that employers had the right to conduct drug
and alcohol tests on all employees. This was contrary to rulings
by the U.S. Supreme Court, which had mandated weighing the
interests of the city government against the rights of its
employees, in deciding if the testing is legally permissible.
In the case of Peatros vs. Bank of America, Justice Brown ruled
that a nineteenth-century law actually permits banks to
discriminate against employees on the basis of race and age.
This decision was contrary to numerous federal rulings that the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Age Discrimination in
Employment Act make such discrimination illegal. In the case of
Stevenson vs. Superior Court, she issued the lone ruling that a
plaintiff could not sue an employer for age discrimination.
Justice Brown wrote, “Discrimination based on age is not…like
race or sex discrimination. It does not mark its victim with a
‘stigma of inferiority and second class citizenship;’ it is the
unavoidable consequence of that universal leveler: time.”
Justice Brown has also attempted to limit legal recourse for a
disabled worker whose employer would not reasonably accommodate
her disability over a five-year time span. In the case of
Richards vs. CH2M Hill, Inc., she was the only justice on the
California Supreme Court to reject the “continuing violation
doctrine,” which held that there may be legal liability for acts
occurring outside statute of limitations if they are
significantly related to illegal acts occurring within the legal
time limit.
Justice Brown was also the sole dissenter in the case of
Metropolitan Water District of Southern California vs. Superior
Court of Los Angeles County. In the case, the courts adhered to
a California law permitting full-time, long-term workers
provided to a municipal employer by an employment agency to be
eligible to participate in the state’s retirement system.
Although President Bush has said he is against judges who
attempt to legislate from the bench, his support for Justice
Brown indicates that he is not troubled when conservative judges
attempt to do so. Because in this case, she attempted to do just
that. Although California law considers these workers to be
eligible for retirement benefits, Justice Brown ruled that the
legal definition of an employee is “obsolete,” and that a
“leased worker is not…[an] employee” eligible for benefits.
In the case of Catholic Charities of Sacramento vs. Superior
Court of Sacramento County, she again attempted to legislate
from the bench. Justice Brown ruled against a state
anti-discrimination law that requires employer sponsored health
insurance covering prescription drugs to also cover prescription
contraception, except for religious employers, since this might
conflict with their beliefs. The law was passed by the state
legislature after a study determined that women spend up to 68
percent more than men in out-of-pocket health care costs, due
largely to the cost of prescription contraceptives and the costs
of unplanned pregnancies, including health risks, the premature
births of babies, and the concomitant neonatal care.
The law permits a religious employer, defined as primarily
hiring people of its faith, not to cover prescription
contraception. However, Catholic Charities of Sacramento
admitted that the majority of its employees were not Catholic,
so they did not meet the legal definition of a religious
employer. Despite this, Justice Brown ruled that female workers
of the Charities should be denied their legal protection,
because contraception conflicted with the Charities’ beliefs.
When Mr. Bush re-nominated Janice Brown, along with 11 other
candidates, to the federal courts in February, he stated, “they
represent mainstream values.” But a cursory review of her
judicial history shows that it doesn’t take a liberal Democrat
to see that she is anything but mainstream. And as a result, she
certainly deserves to be filibustered
Gene C. Gerard genecgerard@comcast.net teaches American history
at a small college in suburban Dallas, and is a contributing author
to the forthcoming book "Americans at War." His previous articles
have appeared in Political Affairs Magazine and Intervention
Magazine.