Stephen Breyer, the Supreme Court's 'Raging Pragmatist'

This week marks the 20th anniversary of Justice Stephen Breyer's appointment to the U.S. Supreme Court. Writing at USA Today, Richard Wolf marks the occasion by pronouncing Breyer the "high court's raging pragmatist," a jurist who, "perhaps more than anyone in Washington…is a believer in the democratic system." That democratic impulse, Wolf explains, has led Breyer to favor judicial "deference to police, states and voters," and also to Congress. "On the current court," Wolf observes, Breyer "has been the justice least inclined to strike down legislative actions."
In other words, on issues ranging from aggressive police tactics to the broad exercise of congressional power, Breyer has been a pretty reliable vote for the government. In fact, Breyer has even gone so far as to apply his deferential approach retroactively, using it as a lens through which to view the Supreme Court's past rulings on the scope of government power. For example, here's how Breyer tackled the Supreme Court's 1944 ruling in Korematsu v. United States, as recounted in my review of Breyer's 2010 book Making Our Democracy Work:
In Breyer's view, the Supreme Court must "take account of the role of other governmental institutions and the relationships among them" and work to "maintain a workable relationship" between the various branches of government. That may sound innocuous, but consider the implications. In 1944 the Supreme Court heard the case of Korematsu v. United States, which dealt with President Franklin Roosevelt's wartime internment of some 70,000 Japanese-Americans. Surely this case qualifies as a situation where the Supreme Court should have scrapped the "workable relationship" and struck down FDR's offensive and unconstitutional actions?
Not necessarily, Breyer writes. "Perhaps [the Court] could have developed a sliding scale in respect to the length of detention" or "insisted the government increase screening efforts the longer an individual is held in detention" or found some other way to maintain a "workable relationship with the president." A genuine "Scalia of the left" would have had no problem repudiating the Court's craven decision. Even Elena Kagan, who expressed very few actual opinions during her recent Supreme Court confirmation hearings, managed to denounce Korematsu. The Court needs a stronger liberal voice than Breyer's in contentious cases like this.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
More like "raging statist."
Beat me to it, Nikki.
Showing why you are the worst.
The reincarnation of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.?
Let's not insult Breyer *that* much.
"The price we pay for civilization is 3 generations of morons shouting Fire! in a crowded theater."
Just before they are interned for being Japs.
He sounds positively useless.
Not completely. I'm sure there are any number of people who find this animated rubber stamp quite useful.
In Breyer's view, the Supreme Court must "take account of the role of other governmental institutions and the relationships among them" and work to "maintain a workable relationship" between the various branches of government.
What that has to do with applying the law, as written, to the facts is left as an exercise for the reader, I guess.
I'd take Ginsberg over Breyer, if that says anything.
Plus, how does that make him a pragmatist? Is it because he's learned to love Big Brother?
It's a twisted logic, but they way I've heard it is that pragmatists, unlike 'ideologues,' value 'making things work via compromise,' and for Breyer that translates to 'making government action work' by compromising the principles of the Constitution.
In other words, its more important for the government to do what it intends than for the Constitution do what it was intended to do.
You know who else was a pragmatist?
William James?
Rick James?
The Swiss?
JA!
That democratic impulse, Wolf explains, has led Breyer to favor judicial "deference to police, states and voters," and also to Congress. "On the current court," Wolf observes, Breyer "has been the justice least inclined to strike down legislative actions."
Cause that's totally what the constitution says, yo.
"deference to police, states"
Why the comma?
Breyer has outright stated the goal of the judiciary is to make 'democracy work (function)' and by 'democracy' he means 'government.' Of course our Constitution is unique in trying to limit how 'democracy-government' can 'work,' but why bother with such a quibble.
He might have "legislative deference," but he also marries that to a strong connection to the "spirit of the law," or what Congress supposedly meant (according to both legislative history, the Congressional Record, and his own opinion) rather than to the text of the law as adopted. Take the Aereo case, where he wrote the opinion asserting that, even if technically the law as written didn't seem to apply to Aereo, Congress obviously would have meant it to if it had thought about it at the time.
You guys are aware that the court is a part of government, yes?
You're right. The Supreme Court should be abolished and there should be a completely independent arbiter of government action and enforcer of the constitution. The government should not be able to judge for itself whether its actions are just or legal. Thanks for opening my eyes.
Thomas Jefferson wanted state nullification of unconstitutional laws, as opposed to judicial review. How people came to accept the idea that one part of the federal government was actually supposed to limit federal power is beyond me.
In effect the states could nullify laws before the 17A, when the Senators were chosen by the state governments.
According to TJ and Madison the tenth Amendment gives states the power to directly nullify unconstitutional federal laws. Virginia and Kentucky resolutions of 1796 spelled out their case.
Yes, the part that should act as a check on other parts (branches)
If the point you're making is that courts will, by their very nature, tend toward statism, then I wholeheartedly agree.
For Tony that's a feature, not a bug.
It's the branch most likely to cram its boot up your ass on any given day. Libertarians sometimes act like courts happen organically or something.
In other words, on issues ranging from aggressive police tactics to the broad exercise of congressional power, Breyer has been a pretty reliable vote for the government.
The government which signs his paycheck. You can't get more pragmatic.
So much for checks and balances.
You voted your representatives in. You must enjoy it up the ass day in and day out, rhetorically speaking.
You voted your representatives in.
That's a false allegation.
Yeah. I can accurately predict the outcome of an election by taking the inverse of my ballot.
Without so much as a reach around.
Amendment Protects Economic Liberty