"The Paradox of McDonald v. City of Chicago" (
http://hq.ssrn.com/Journals/RedirectClick.cfm?url=http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1653524&partid=47512&did=81758&eid=105223053
) 
George Washington Law Review, Forthcoming (
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)
Drexel University Earle Mack School of Law Research Paper No. 2010-A-12
(
http://hq.ssrn.com/Journals/RedirectClick.cfm?url=http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/PIP_Journal.cfm?pip_jrnl=1086727&partid=47512&did=81758&eid=105223053
) 

DAVID S. COHEN (
http://hq.ssrn.com/Journals/RedirectClick.cfm?url=http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=658303&partid=47512&did=81758&eid=105223053
), Drexel University - Earle Mack School of Law
Email: david.s.co...@drexel.edu


On the last day of its 2010 term, the Supreme Court issued its landmark
decision of McDonald v. City of Chicago, holding that the Second
Amendment was incorporated against state and local governments. On its
face, the 5-4 decision is simple enough, as a majority of the Court
concluded that its 2008 decision in District of Columbia v. Heller,
which held that the Second Amendment protects an individual’s right to
own a handgun, applied to state and local governments, such as the city
of Chicago, just as it applied to the federal government and its
territories, such as the District of Columbia. However, this simple
statement of McDonald’s holding masks a much more complicated reality –
that its outcome, an instance of a rare phenomenon called a voting
paradox, turned not on grand theories of constitutional law, history, or
doctrine but rather on the minutiae of Supreme Court vote counting. In
fact, only because the Court reaches a conclusion based on each
Justice’s vote on the case’s outcome, as opposed to voting on the
case’s individual issues, were the headlines following McDonald that gun
rights prevailed and gun regulation lost rather than the other way
around.

In this essay, to be published in the George Washington Law Review's
Arguendo, I explain why McDonald is an important example of a voting
paradox. I first walk through the opinions in McDonald and then place
McDonald in the context of relevant social choice theory that models
voting paradoxes on multi-member judicial bodies. Having described how
McDonald fits into this literature, I then use the remainder of the
essay to discuss three significant lessons that come from viewing
McDonald as a paradox. First, McDonald illustrates the importance of the
Supreme Court’s voting rules that decide cases based on outcome voting.
Second, McDonald is a lesson to litigators of the value of including
additional arguments. Finally, McDonald shows the considerable role of
precedent-in-flux in creating voting paradoxes. 
 

*****************************************************************************************
Professor Joseph Olson, J.D., LL.M.                                  
o-   651-523-2142  
Hamline University School of Law (MS-D2037)                    f-   
651-523-2236
St. Paul, MN  55113-1235                                               
 c-   612-865-7956
jol...@gw.hamline.edu                             
http://law.hamline.edu/node/784                      
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