Laurence H. Tribe
a government affirmative action program expressly taking the race of individ-
uals into account in allocating benefits or burdens – there, admission slots in
a state’s universities, allocated to achieve educational diversity.
In this chapter, I will not address the merits of that decision, which I have
elsewhere applauded,
118
but I will note that, particularly in the context of char-
acterizing the decision as: (1) going out of its way to decide large constitutional
questions that might better have been left open; (2) being suitably modest and
admirably minimal about how much to resolve; or (3) not going far enough to
button down the constitutional issues left up in the air; it turns out, unsurpris-
ingly, that how observers characterize what the Court did or failed to do seems
more a function of their preferred style of adjudication and degree of judicial
intervention than any intrinsic characteristic of the Court’s ruling.
119
The same can be said of the sequence of Supreme Court decisions along
the path to marriage equality and toward a strong constitutional norm of non-
discrimination with respect to sexual orientation and/or gender identity – the
decisions from Romer v. Evans
120
in 1996, to Lawrence v. Texas
121
in 2003, to
United States v. Windsor
122
in 2013, to Obergefell v. Hodges
123
in 2015, to whatever
future case extends the principles of those holdings to discrimination between
transgender and cisgender individuals. All of those decisions, of course, hung
their constitutional protections on the textual hooks of due process and equal
protection. But they did so by invoking and elaborating underlying principles
of personal liberty, privacy, and equal dignity not to be found anywhere in the
Constitution’s express terms.
124
In that sense, all were children of Griswold v.
and control in the broadcasting industry), overruled by Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 515
U.S. 200 (1995).
118
E.g., Adam Liptak, “Supreme Court Upholds Affirmative Action Program at University
of Texas,” New York Times (June 23, 2016),
www.nytimes.com/2016/06/24/us/politics/su-
preme-court-affirmative-action-university-of-texas.html
[
https://perma.cc/LLW8-PFPZ
].
119
Compare, e.g., Richard Primus, “Affirmative Action in College Admissions, Here to Stay,” New
York Times (June 23, 2016),
www.nytimes.com/2016/06/23/opinion/affirmative-action-in-col-
lege-admissions-here-to-stay.html
[
https://perma.cc/TCU7-BG36
] (celebrating Fisher as a
“huge victory for supporters of affirmative action”) with, e.g., Cass R. Sunstein, “On Affirmative
Action, Supreme Court Rules for Humility,” Bloomberg View (June 23, 2016),
www.bloomberg.
com/view/articles/2016-06-23/on-affirmative-action-supreme-court-rules-for-humility
[
https://perma.cc/N33A-9KPB
] (praising Fisher for its “judicial modesty”).
120
517 U.S. 620 (1996).
121
539 U.S. 558 (2003).
122
133 S. Ct. 2675 (2013).
123
135 S. Ct. 2584 (2015).
124
See Laurence H. Tribe, “Equal Dignity: Speaking Its Name,” (2015) 129 Harv. L. Rev. F. 16,
19–23.
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