[Jonathan Franklin Mitchell] Meet the Most Dangerous Man in America

If You're a Woman, Gay, Trans or Just About Anyone but a Gun-Totting White Male, He Wants to Take Away Your Rights ... and, So Far, He's Winning.

URL https://Persagen.com/docs/
Sources Persagen.com  |  other sources (cited in situ)
Source URL https://www.dcreport.org/2021/09/28/meet-the-most-dangerous-man-in-america
Authors Terry H. Schwadron
Date published 2021-09-28
Curation date 2021-09-29
Curator Dr. Victoria A. Stuart, Ph.D.
Modified
Editorial practice Refer here  |  Date format: yyyy-mm-dd
Summary Jonathan F. Mitchell is an American attorney and former government official. Mitchell has helped to author anti-abortion bills. In 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court issued an order declining to block a Texas anti-abortion bill, which effectively banned abortion in the state, from going into effect pending the resolution of constitutional challenges against the law.
Main article Jonathan Franklin Mitchell
Key points
  • Abortion abolitionists now seek to re-open (reverse) gay rights.

Related
  • Christian right
  • Supreme Court of the United States
  • Heartbeat bill, U.S. abortion restriction legislation which makes abortions illegal as soon as the embryonic or fetal heartbeat can be detected.

  • The Texas Heartbeat Act of 2021, introduced as Senate Bill 8 (SB 8) and House Bill 1515 (HB 1515) on March 11, 2021, and was signed into law by Governor Greg Abbott on 2021-05-19. It is the first six-week abortion ban in the United States, and the first of its kind to rely on enforcement by private individuals through civil lawsuits, rather than by the government through criminal or civil enforcement. The Act establishes a system in which members of the public can sue anyone who performs or facilitates an illegal abortion for a minimum of $10,000 in statutory damages.

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Jonathan Franklin Mitchell
jonathan_f_mitchell-cspan.jpg
Image source.
 
Professional / Career Details
 
Name Jonathan Franklin Mitchell
Description 5th Solicitor General of Texas (2010-12-10 to 2015-01-05)
Profession
 
Personal Details
 
Name Jonathan Franklin Mitchell
Born 1976-09-02
Birthplace Upland, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Siblings
  • Brother(s): 6
Education
Affiliations
Religion Christian (devout)
Ideology
Contents

Background

Jonathan Franklin Mitchell (born September 2, 1976) is an American attorney and former government official. From 2010 to 2015, he was the Solicitor General of Texas. Jonathan F. Mitchell has argued four cases before the Supreme Court of the United States, and authored more than one hundred briefs.

Jonathan F. Mitchell has helped to author anti-abortion bills. In 2021, the U.S. Supreme Court issued an order declining to block a Texas anti-abortion bill, which effectively banned abortion in the state, from going into effect pending the resolution of constitutional challenges against the law.


Main Article

Just in case you may have been led to believe that the pending U.S. Supreme Court challenge from Mississippi is a singular, heartfelt moral argument over abortion, a legal brief filed in the case last week attempts to broaden the challenge to an attack on same-sex marriage and LGBTQ rights as well.

Indeed, the argument from the guy [Jonathan Mitchell] who designed the recent Texas law that has all but banned abortions in that state is a broadside against judges making any decision not specifically in black ink of the Constitution.

The author of the brief is Jonathan Mitchell (a one-time clerk to Justice Antonin Scalia), the former Texas Solicitor General and conservative attorney, who argues in the abortion case brief that not only is Roe v. Wade unconstitutional, but that the cases underscoring LGBTQ rights are "as lawless as Roe" and should be eliminated.

So, the people who brought you anti-abortion laws now want to re-open gay rights - another settled legal precedent. Or so we have thought.

Judges Shouldn't Judge

As MSNBC's Jessica Levinson argues in a column this week, "After scoring an initial victory in their mission to eviscerate women's constitutionally protected right to obtain access to an abortion, some in the conservative movement have already explicitly moved on to attacking LGBTQ rights, which suggests they're gunning for all your constitutionally protected rights - at least those not dealing with guns."

Levinson, a Professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, also the Director of its Public Service Institute at Loyola Law School, co-director of Loyola's Journalist Law School, and former President of the Los Angeles Ethics Commission, explains that Mitchell - who now runs his own one-man law firm - is dead set against both and the cases governing same-sex rights because "they're based on judges, well, judging."

The same Jonathan Mitchell who is seeking termination of abortion as legally valid argues in his Mississippi abortion case challenge due for hearing in December 2021 that women can have no protected right to abortion because it was never written in the Constitution.

Further, in the same brief, Mitchell suggested he's coming for    Lawrence v. Texas, the 2003 decision in which the Supreme Court ruled that laws that criminalize sodomy are unconstitutional, and Obergefell v. Hodges, the 2015 ruling in which the court concluded that the Constitution protects the rights of same-sex couples to marry.

Mitchell describes these outcomes as creating "court-invented rights to homosexual behavior and same-sex marriage." He concluded, "These 'rights,' like the right to abortion from Roe, are judicial concoctions, and there is no other source of law that can be invoked to salvage their existence."

One Man, One Influence

Apparently, it was the deeply religious Mitchell who advised Texas lawmakers to devise their anti-abortion law with a legal loophole - essentially giving enforcement powers to file damaging lawsuits to ordinary people rather than to state officials. With its ideological balance recast by Donald Trump, the Supreme Court refrained from blocking a new law in Texas that all but bans abortion - a potential turning point in the long-running fight over the procedure, as The New York Times explained.

Mitchell said that people should stop complaining about the Texas law he designed to restrict abortion because if women don't want to worry about needing an abortion, they can just stop having sex. Apparently, women should also not be raped or become victims of incest or use birth control.

Literalist Mitchell would say nothing governing such behaviors is written in the Constitution.

Likewise, the Constitution, brilliant as it may be among constitutional democracies, does not specifically grant rights to same-sex couples or lots of other issues. That's of course why we have judges and courts to apply broad principles to specific cases. Of course, one could argue the same about guns for use by anyone other than "regulated militias," but why insist on consistency?

The 14th Amendment guaranteeing citizen protections, cited to allow for    Lawrence and Obergefell v. Hodges, talks of privileges and of equal rights against undue government restrictions. It doesn't include a list of those rights and leaves it to judges to err on the side of stopping undue intrusions.

Clearly, Mitchell is among those who think judges have gone too far in interpreting the Constitution.

The point for today is that what is really at stake here goes well beyond the specific time-limitations of various state abortion laws or even the methods for enforcement. Hollowing out rights is a danger to democracy, and the same thinking that created the Texas abortion law is now being aimed at LGBTQ communities. You don't even have to squint to see equivalent concerns for transgender rights, voting rights, affirmative action, and civil rights of all kind. Just whose rights are we protecting under these theories?

Who's the next target for these people?


Additional Reading

Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution

The Fourteenth Amendment (Amendment XIV) to the United States Constitution was adopted on July 9, 1868, as one of the Reconstruction Amendments. Often considered one of the most consequential amendments, it addresses citizenship rights and equal protection under the law and was proposed in response to issues related to former slaves following the American Civil War. The amendment was bitterly contested, particularly by the states of the defeated Confederacy, which were forced to ratify it in order to regain representation in Congress. The amendment, particularly its first section, is one of the most litigated parts of the Constitution, forming the basis for landmark Supreme Court decisions such as Brown v. Board of Education (1954) regarding racial segregation, Roe v. Wade (1973) regarding abortion, Bush v. Gore (2000) regarding the 2000 presidential election, and Obergefell v. Hodges (2015) regarding same-sex marriage. The amendment limits the actions of all state and local officials, and also those acting on behalf of such officials. ...


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