Thursday, November 01, 2007

Supreme Imbalance

Geoffrey R. Stone

Geoffrey R. Stone

Supreme Imbalance

Posted October 30, 2007 | 03:40 PM (EST)



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We are now several weeks into the Supreme Court's 2007 Term. We should keep a watchful eye on the Court. With Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Alito now firmly ensconsed, we might be on the verge of a significant paradigm-shift within the Court. If their performance last Term is any indication of what is to come, we may be in for quite a ride.

In the media, we constantly read about how "closely divided" the Court is and about how many cases are decided by a vote of five-to-four. There are, according to the media, the "conservative" Justices - Scalia, Thomas, Roberts, and Alito; the "liberal" Justices - Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer; and Justice Kennedy -- the "man in the middle." The impression created by such accounts is that this is an "evenly balanced" Court. This is a fallacy, and a dangerous one at that. What do we mean by "balance"? Why don't the many five-to-four decisions prove that this is a "well-balanced" Court?

The Supreme Court has discretionary jurisdiction. It generally agrees to decide only the "hardest" cases. What are the "hardest" cases? Most often, they are the ones about which the Justices are divided. That, indeed, is largely what makes them "hard." Thus, one can reasonably expect that the Supreme Court is most likely to hear those cases that will most sharply divide the Justices, because those are the cases about which the law is most uncertain. Even a Court consisting of nine Scalias or nine Ginsburgs would eventually wind up dividing five-to-four in the cases it agrees to decide, because it is the division within the Court itself that defines the cases that most demand the Court's attention.

The important question, then, is not whether the Court often divides five-to-four, but where on the constitutional spectrum the decisive Justice sits. Depending on the makeup of the Court, that Justice might split the difference between Scalia and Thomas, on the one end, or she might split the difference between Brennan and Douglas, on the other.

Within any set of nine Justices, some will be relatively more "conservative" and some will be relatively more "liberal." That they often divide five-to-four tells us nothing about "balance" and nothing about whether the Court as a whole is "liberal," "conservative," moderate, or whatever. It tells us only that the Justices often divide five-to-four, which tells us nothing about the Court as a whole.

The current Supreme Court is not "balanced" in any meaningful sense of that term. It is, in fact, an extremely conservative Court - more conservative than any group of nine Justices who have sat together in living memory. Here are some ways of testing this proposition:

• Seven of the current nine Justices were appointed by Republican presidents.

• Twelve of the fourteen most recent Supreme Court appointments have been made by Republican presidents.

• Four of the current Justices are more conservative than any other Justice who has served on the Court in living memory.

• The so-called "swing vote" on the Court has moved to the right every single time it has shifted over the past forty years, from Stewart to Powell to O'Connor to Kennedy.

• As Justice Stevens recently observed, every Justice who has been appointed in the past forty years was more conservative that the Justice he or she replaced.

• If we regard Warren, Douglas, Brennan, and Marshall as the model of a "liberal" Justice, then there is no one within even hailing distance of a "liberal" Justice on the current Supreme Court.

In fact, the current Court consists of five conservative Justices, four of whom are very conservative, and four moderate Justices, one of whom, Ginsburg, is moderately liberal. As Justice Stevens recently observed, it is only the presence of so many very conservative Justices that makes the moderate Justices appear liberal. But this is merely an illusion.

Now, I know I have been tossing around the terms "conservative" and "liberal" as if they have clear, well-defined meanings, when of course they do not. In my next post, I will clarify what I mean by these terms.

This is the first in a series of six posts on the make-up and direction of the Supreme Court.

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