This election is a moral checkpoint for the country, where the right to vote, America's great equalizer for nearly 250 years, feels fragile.
The courts are deciding the country's direction, and voters have a chance to push back with their ballots.
The Supreme Court has stopped interpreting law and upholding the Constitution, instead reshaping decades of precedent to fit an ideological vision, as seen in cases like Roe v. Wade and the weakening of environmental protections and voting rights.
These justices are unelected, yet their rulings determine who controls women’s bodies, who breathes clean air, who gets a fair shot at casting a ballot, and more.
Pennsylvania's state court elections this year matter more than most people realize, giving voters a chance to make a difference.
Author's summary: Voters can push back against the courts' direction with their ballots.