Indeed, more broadly, CAC’s text-and-history briefs recently helped secure not only this big win for workers, but also wins for consumers and victims of financial scams.
First, in Flowers Foods v. Brock, the Supreme Court unanimously held that “last-mile” delivery drivers who transport goods between two points in the same state to their final destination cannot be forced into arbitration procedures where the deck is often stacked against workers and can instead have their day in court. Although Congress made agreements to arbitrate enforceable in the 1925 Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), the law exempts from forced arbitration transportation workers who are “engaged in . . . interstate commerce.” Our brief argued that even if the driver or vehicle in the last leg of a journey doesn’t cross state lines, they are a part of the chain of interstate commerce and therefore fall within the terms of the exemption. That’s how “engaged in . . . interstate commerce” was understood when the law was written. The Court unanimously agreed. Justice Gorsuch’s opinion for the Court drew heavily on the textual and historical evidence CAC presented in our amicus brief. As Harith explained in Slate, “The repeated success of the Gorsuch brief does lay out a real, repeatable path for progressive advocates to win conservative votes at this Supreme Court—one that traces the justice’s own stated methodological commitments. When the original meaning of a statute favors progressive outcomes, the Gorsuch brief invites the justices to take to the ground they say they stand on.”
Just days later, a CAC text-and-history brief helped secure another win at the Court. In a unanimous decision in Sripetch v. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Court held that the SEC could order disgorgement, meaning that bad actors had to pay back their ill-gotten gains, even if it couldn’t be proven that investors had suffered a financial loss. CAC Legal Fellow Simon Chin noted that “Justice Gorsuch’s opinion for the Court echoed the central argument of the amicus brief we filed on behalf of five of the nation’s leading remedies scholars—that disgorgement has never required a showing that the plaintiff suffered financial harm. For three centuries, courts have stripped wrongdoers of profits obtained by violating another person’s legally protected rights, whether or not the victim could prove any financial loss.” The Court’s decision affirmed this central principle and protected the SEC’s ability to hold wrongdoers accountable to the law.
That same morning, the Supreme Court also ruled against big business interests in Federal Communications Commission v. AT&T and Verizon v. Federal Communications Commission, again echoing our brief. In these consolidated cases, AT&T and Verizon allegedly betrayed the trust of their customers and broke the law by mishandling sensitive location data, and the Court was asked to decide whether the FCC’s two-stage civil-enforcement process violated the Seventh Amendment. The Court agreed that the FCC’s process was constitutional. CAC Senior Appellate Counsel Smita Ghosh explained that the Court drew on our brief: “Echoing the amicus brief CAC filed in the case, the Court observed that the process fits ‘comfortably within’ historical precedents.”
Of course, we know that the Court’s conservative supermajority doesn’t always follow text and history where it leads. Last month’s decision in Louisiana v. Callais was a devastating attack on the Voting Rights Act and the Reconstruction Amendments. Yet even in the wake of this grim news, CAC’s legal scholarship is charting a possible path forward. CAC’s David H. Gans, Director of the Human Rights, Civil Rights, and Citizenship Program, wrote in Slate about how the Constitution’s Guarantee Clause, which provides that “the United States shall guarantee to every state in this Union a Republican Form of Government,” could be “an important hook for congressional action to safeguard an inclusive, multiracial democracy.” As David explains, Congress can still “stamp out state efforts to decimate Black representation, manipulate electoral outcomes, and leave communities of color without an equal voice in government.”
Though the Court’s commitment to text and history can be inconsistent, CAC’s commitment to that approach isn’t. We know that approach continues to bring real wins for everyday Americans. And when the Court turns its back on the text-and-history arguments we present, we’ll explain the problems with those decisions and keep fighting for the progressive promise of our Constitution.