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Supreme Court

David Souter Shaped the Supreme Court Through the Backlash He Inspired

The late justice was appointed by a Republican but quickly established himself as a judicial liberal.

Damon Root | 5.12.2025 10:50 AM

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Justice David Souter | lllustration: Eddie Marshall | Mark Reinstein | ZUMA Press | Newscom | Midjourney
(lllustration: Eddie Marshall | Mark Reinstein | ZUMA Press | Newscom | Midjourney)

Supreme Court Justice David Souter, who died last week at age 85, will probably not be remembered as the author of any truly momentous majority opinions, because he never really wrote any of those. Nor will Souter be remembered as one of the Court's great dissenters, because none of his dissents inspired the next generation to keep the faith about unpopular ideas. Souter's career will likely be remembered for a more unusual reason: the severe and enduring backlash that he inspired.

Appointed to the Supreme Court in 1990 by Republican President George H.W. Bush, Souter quickly emerged as a consistent "liberal" vote in high-profile cases about hot-button issues such as abortion and affirmative action. This was supremely disappointing to conservative legal activists, who had hoped Bush would pick someone in the mold of Justice Antonin Scalia, the outspoken conservative tapped four years earlier by President Ronald Regan.

To make matters worse, Souter replaced retiring Justice William Brennan, a liberal icon. The Bush administration thus squandered a rare opportunity to shift the ideological balance on the Court. Instead of replacing a liberal justice with a conservative one, Bush effectively traded a liberal for a liberal. In the eyes of many folks on the right, that was a grievous mistake that neither could nor should be forgiven.

The resulting backlash against Souter would fundamentally shape the Republican Party's approach to judicial nominations. The battle cry of "No More Souters" would now be heard whenever a Republican president had the chance to fill a Supreme Court vacancy. In practical terms, what that meant was "no more judicial nominees without verifiable conservative credentials." Republican judicial nominees have been vetted under the "No More Souters" rule ever since.

In a way, the "No More Souters" rule even influenced the actions of Souter himself. When Souter began planning for his own retirement at the surprisingly young age (for a justice) of 69, he timed the event so that a Democratic president would be the one to replace him. That is how President Barack Obama came to name Sonia Sotomayor to the Supreme Court in 2009. It was Souter's own careful retirement planning that allowed Obama to trade a liberal for a liberal, thereby preserving the tenuous ideological balance that then existed on the Court. Had Souter stepped down a year earlier, when George W. Bush was still president, Souter's replacement would have almost certainly been to the right of Sotomayor. Thanks to Souter, the "Brennan seat" on the bench has been occupied by a judicial liberal since 1956.

Souter's unlikely nomination infuriated the political party that first championed him while greatly benefiting the political party that first opposed him. I don't suppose we'll be seeing another justice like that anytime soon.

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Damon Root is a senior editor at Reason and the author of A Glorious Liberty: Frederick Douglass and the Fight for an Antislavery Constitution (Potomac Books).

Supreme CourtLaw & GovernmentJudiciaryCourtsObituaries
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  1. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

    So Souter ended up defending Brennan's judicial activist overreach, and set up entrenching Sotomayor's extra-legal judicial reasoning, i,e. her willingness to apply the law unequally depending on who it benefits or harms.

    Bravo, I guess.

  2. Liberty_Belle   2 months ago

    How dare he think for himself, instead of toeing the conservative line. The GOP won't stand for such insolence.

    1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

      If there's one thing we've learned from Trump it's that judges are supposed to defer to the president (when the president is a Republican), not be a check on power. Choosing the latter (when the president is a Republican) is grounds for impeachment.

      It's always about who, not what.

      1. VULGAR MADMAN   2 months ago

        Even Trump doesn’t talk about Trump as much as you do.

      2. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

        Yes. Judges are supposed to defer to the executive when a question on article ii powers.

      3. charliehall   2 months ago

        The far right wants Justices who will overturn precedent and eviscerate Constitutional protections when it serves their weaponization of issues. Souter was not that kind of Republican, and neither was his mentor, Warren Rudman. Souter had been a State Attorney General and a State Supreme Court Justice. We need more Justices with that kind of experience.

        Once upon a time, Presidents appointed Supreme Court Justices from the other political party. Taft, Wilson, Harding, Hoover, Franklin Roosevelt, Eisenhower, and Nixon did that. The Court was more respected then. Today nobody thinks that the SC is anything other than a partisan weapon for culture wars.

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

          Yes, to marxists, anyone who resists the left is "far right".

          1. sarcasmic   2 months ago

            To Obamabots, anyone who criticizes his policies is a racist.

            To Trumptards, anyone who criticizes his policies has TDS.

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xxgRUyzgs0

            1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

              And what about broken drunk leftists who claim Trump wants eugenics?

              1. Sam Bankman-Fried   2 months ago

                By 2035 all wealthy Americans will be culling embryos using IVF. You are free to create babies by humping random women you meet in bars. To each his own. 😉

        2. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

          There is zero logical construction in your argument.

          Precedent that is unconstitutional does not make ot constitutional.

          And then you throw a lot of shit on the wall hoping people think you're educated despite your history of comments. Most of it being a non sequitur to your accusation.

          1. Sam Bankman-Fried   2 months ago

            We aborted more babies in the year after Roe was overturned than before!! Your entire life is a joke!!! I pray every day for more babies to be aborted!! I love it!!

    2. Mickey Rat   2 months ago

      That begs the question that he did think for himself or was toeing the Democrat judicial activist line.

      How was the line of judicial reasoning Souter supported good?

      1. charliehall   2 months ago

        He actually toed the conservative Republican judicial restraint line. That is an extinct line today.

    3. Zeb   2 months ago

      I think that the complaints (the reasonable ones at least) weren't that Souter failed to be loyal to the president that appointed him, but rather that that president didn't do a great job vetting him.

      1. Sam Bankman-Fried   2 months ago

        And who vetted Harriet Miers??

        1. Zeb   2 months ago

          Probably your mom.

    4. Nobartium   2 months ago

      It should be lost on no one that no leftist on the court ever becomes more rightist.

      1. charliehall   2 months ago

        James McReynolds was a leftist in the Wilson Administration but a reactionary obstructionist on the SC. He was also a vile anti-Semite. However, today the far right would call him a leftist because he wrote the majority opinion in United States v. Miller (1939) which said that the Second Amendment was about militias, not an individual right to firearms, which is what the Founding Fathers thought.

        Felix Frankfurter was a leftist in the FDR Administration but a conservative on the SC.

        Ditto Whizzer White for the Kennedy Administration.

        You have been disproven.

        1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 months ago

          There was nothing leftist about Byron White, you bumbling imbecile. He had no judicial record before being nominated to the court.

  3. Dillinger   2 months ago

    >>The late justice was appointed by a Republican but quickly established himself as a judicial liberal.

    are you 14 years old? there are nine hundred reasons GHWB was barely (R) and seven hundred reasons it doesn't matter who appointed whom

    1. charliehall   2 months ago

      GHWB was much more R than Trump ever was or will be.

      1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

        LOL, please. He was certainly a Rockefeller R like the rest of the New England scumbags, but he definitely wasn't conservative.

        1. charliehall   2 months ago

          He was appointed to the NH Supreme Court by Meldrim Thomson, the most far right Governor the US had seen in generations, and had a conservative record there.

          1. But SkyNet is a Private Company   2 months ago

            George HWBush was a state judge? You can't even keep track of your own idiotic ramblings

      2. Dillinger   2 months ago

        who's here to argue the (R) in T?

      3. Zeb   2 months ago

        Republicans are a political party, not an ideology. All this arguing over what a "real" republican is is silly. They are both equally Republican (though Trump spent more time as Democrat).

        1. Dillinger   2 months ago

          GHWB was deep state it literally did not matter what letter was in front of his name. nothing truthful about him was encapsulated in the (R) of 1988 he shouldn't have run for president as an (R) and was only elected because he was peddled as Reagan's third term.

          if internet, no GHWB in 1988. mho

          1. Sam Bankman-Fried   2 months ago

            And you would have never run up that huge bill to the porn video store!! 😉

          2. Zeb   2 months ago

            Are you suggesting that establishment Republicans don't have deep ties to the deep state?

  4. GroundTruth   2 months ago

    Again, it is time for an amendment to have SCOTUS seats be for a single, 18 year term, with each new presidential administration being empowered to select two.

    1. Anastasia Beaverhausen   2 months ago

      No. What an awful idea.

    2. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

      Again, NO.

  5. Purple Martin   2 months ago

    Damon Root's observation is broadly true but, like the identical J'Accuse! applied to Justice John Paul Stevens, more of a Just So story—How the Elephant Got His Trunk—a fable of simplistic explanation.

    I view conservatives as believing in the importance of institutionalism; communitarianism surviving individuals; delayed gratification; and exhibiting humility about what we do not—and perhaps cannot—know. But while today's left has problems with the last two, flirting with illiberalism in the name of social justice, today's right rejects them all, embracing illiberalism in the name of authoritarianism.

    So…old, white, male, born and raised in rural Idaho, career enlisted military (SMSgt (ret) USAF), married 50 years w/children/grandchildren, retired from a second career in IT Security, I am by temperament a natural conservative. Thus, of Supreme Court Justices in my adult lifetime, David Souter remains my favorite.

    I had other reasons to like him. He seemed a kindred soul, conservative by temperament rather than ideology, with a worldview of general restraint. From his quiet work on the court, I believe he saw his role as one of quiet resistance against the excess and dramatic change so many of his colleagues actively pursue.

    We're both slight, soft-spoken men of frugal tastes, and solitary dawn runners. We both took voluntarily early retirement from jobs we liked and remained good at (me at 63, Souter at an early-for-SCOTUS 69, though for several years he heard cases on the 1st Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston, and I worked the occasional solo Security & Privacy consulting engagement for old clients).

    And it seems our early retirements were for similar reasons. As he wrote to retired Justice Harry Blackmun: “In a perfect world, I would never give another speech, address, talk, lecture or whatever as long as I live.” Me too. He probably did the fewest sponsored-travel interviews, book tours, and lectures of anyone on the court (and certainly at least tied for least luxury-travel-funded-by-billionaires, because 0=0).

    When the court was out of session, he'd spend most of his time in what's, seemingly by law, always referred to as "the tiny hamlet of Weare, New Hampshire," reading, hiking, and trail-running. For me it's reading, every-other-day disc golf (since I had to stop running two years ago), and pretty much my only group activity, singing with a quality small-choral group.

    When we retired, Ms. Purple and I downsized to an unassuming working-class neighborhood, chosen for its walkability anchored by a minor small private college. After 40+ years of constant worldwide travel in a military & consulting career, I don't get out much—and like it that way (in 11 years since buying a used Mini Cooper, I've put only 31k miles on it).

    In remarks on Justice Souter's retirement, Barack Obama got it just right: [he] “...never sought to promote a political agenda. And he consistently defied labels and rejected absolutes, focusing instead on just one task — reaching a just result in the case that was before him.”

    It's a pity that no longer consistently applies to any of the Justices. (Amy Coney Barrett may be closest, and perhaps becoming more so...much to the constant, screamingly whiny distress of those here in support of MAGA's radical revanchist destructionism—yesterday's alt-right consuming the once broader conservative right, and currently demonstrating such self-delight in making so much chaos of what they once considered worth conserving).

    Thank you Justice Souter. Requiescat in Pace

    1. charliehall   2 months ago

      "that no longer consistently applies to any of the Justices. (Amy Coney Barrett may be closest"

      We would do well to have eight more Justices like Souter and Barrett.

      1. Ersatz   2 months ago

        Ha! good one!

    2. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

      The mere fact that Obama said he was "non-ideological" was the biggest tell that he was just another "conserver" of the liberal ratchet. No wonder you and the cockroach charlie hall love him so much.

      1. charliehall   2 months ago

        I am indeed Jewish but my name is not Gregor Samsa, although you probably wish that I were. I do know that when people resort to calling me the kinds of names that Nazis used to direct towards Jews, that I have won the argument on facts and logic. There has long been a racist and anti-Semitic strain in Libertarianism in the US, and you are continuing that tradition!

        1. Red Rocks White Privilege   2 months ago

          Funny, I never mentioned your ethnicity whatsoever. Is this another "criticism is genocide" attempt your side likes to indulge in?

  6. Brett Bellmore   2 months ago

    "In the eyes of many folks on the right, that was a grievous mistake that neither could nor should be forgiven."

    It wasn't a mistake, is the thing. Republican voters eventually figured that out.

    1. Sam Bankman-Fried   2 months ago

      You mean in 2016?? So 24 years to learn a lesson?? Seems a long time. 😉

  7. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

    Our first gay SC Justice.

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