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Supreme Court

These Progressives Seek to 'Disempower' the Courts

Is unfettered majority rule actually a good idea for the left to embrace?

Damon Root | 12.30.2025 7:00 AM

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12-29-25-v1-b | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Midjourney
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Midjourney)

Writing recently in The Guardian, left-wing law professors Ryan Doerfler and Samuel Moyn argue that progressives should stop trying to save the judiciary from being overrun by conservatives and instead make "'disempowering' federal courts" a top progressive priority. "Far from pulling [the judiciary] back from the edge," they write, "our goal has to be to push it off."

In place of an independent judiciary that's empowered to overrule the unconstitutional actions of elected officials, Doerfler and Moyn argue in favor of a system in which elected officials—and the popular majorities they ostensibly represent—are free to impose their agendas without judicial interference. If progressives want their political project to succeed, Doerfler and Moyn claim, then progressives must "reassign power away from the judiciary and to the political branches."

I wonder if Doerfler and Moyn are familiar with the expression "be careful what you wish for." Because if they actually got their wish regarding the courts, it would likely backfire on progressives.

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For the sake of argument, let's assume that the federal courts are magically stripped of their powers at this very moment. Would that leave progressives in a stronger position relative to President Donald Trump? I would think not.

On this point, the liberal law professor Steve Vladeck, who has offered his own criticisms of the Doerfler-Moyn approach, said it well. Here's how Vladeck put it:

Doerfler and Moyn are quite clear that their goal is to empower the people at the expense of the judiciary, period. But as attractive as that viewpoint might be in the abstract, it seems to me that the last 11 months have driven home, in technicolor, the importance of a judiciary with a modicum of independence—which, among other things, can stand up to tyrannies of the majority.

There is also plenty of older evidence available that argues against the wisdom of disempowering the judiciary. After all, there have been various points in American history during which the courts have basically followed the Doerfler-Moyn approach and simply deferred to the supposed will of the majority. And in those cases, what we find is the U.S. Supreme Court acting at its historic worst.

Two prominent examples spring to mind. In Korematsu v. United States (1944), the Supreme Court upheld President Franklin Roosevelt's notorious wartime internment of Japanese-Americans on the grounds that the courts had no business second-guessing any such decision made by the executive branch.

Similarly, in Buck v. Bell (1927), the Supreme Court upheld a compulsory sterilization law that was being enforced against a young woman who had been raped by the nephew of her foster mother and then committed to a state asylum by her foster parents. As far as the author of that awful decision, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., was concerned, the mere fact that the eugenicist measure was enacted by democratically accountable lawmakers was sufficient to earn it the judicial stamp of approval.

I was under the impression that progressives disapproved of these two cases. Yet the outcome in each case would presumably be acceptable under the Doerfler-Moyn approach because the Court voluntarily stepped out of the way of "the political branches" and deferred to the supposed will of the majority.

Perhaps unfettered majority rule is not the political cure-all that some progressives would like it to be.

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NEXT: Zohran Mamdani Didn't Run on 'Affordability.' He Ran Against Prices.

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). His next book, Emancipation War: The Fall of Slavery and the Coming of the Thirteenth Amendment (Potomac Books), will be published in June 2026.

Supreme CourtCivil LibertiesExecutive PowerJudiciaryCourtsHistory
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  1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   1 month ago

    Too funny.

    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 month ago

      Reason continues to ignore leftist ideology. They only want courts to lose power if they stop democrat executive or legislative powers. Like reason, they currently celebrate inferior court judges now.

  2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   1 month ago

    All leftists do is lie example 689544567876:

    The “It’s not happening” to “democrats sue to make sure it keeps happening” pipeline is wild

    https://x.com/Oilfield_Rando/status/2005972079141920998

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 month ago

      As always, lying (and all other nefarious behavior) is justified in the fight against evil*.

      *To the left, Evil is anyone and anything that inhibits the Glorious Revolution and delays delivery of the WEF-worker's paradise utopia.

  3. MollyGodiva   1 month ago

    The liberal position is not to strip the court of their ability to strike down laws that are legitimacy unconstitutional. We want/need them to stop re-writing the Constitution and federal law to fit their partisan goals. Under the Constitution presidents do not have immunity, they can't fire anyone they want, they can't declare war, they don't control the federal budget, and they don't control immigration. 14AS3 is self-executing. Federal courts can rule against partisan gerrymandering, 4A 5A 6A 7A and 8A exist and need to be enforced. The government and religion need to be very separate. Voter suppression is real and needs to be stopped.
    In sum, we need SCOTUS to stop being an arm of political parties.

    1. Stupid Government Tricks   1 month ago

      Oh bullshit. Your reading of history is pathetic. The courts have been rewriting the constitution since the beginning. That's what changed the country from islands of enumerated powers in a sea of liberty to islands of liberty in a sea of government.

    2. Mickey Rat   1 month ago

      For years, the Left has been pushing a "living constitution" and "dead precedent", that is, the text of the Constitution should be malleable to whatever they feel government should be doing, and bad judicial rulings like Wickard should not be overturned because they like the effects of the result. What they are objecting to is a closer Constitutional reading by GOP appointed judges.

      1. TJJ2000   1 month ago

        ^THIS exactly. Molly has a point. Just pointing at the wrong side.
        It's Leftard Self-Projection day-in and day-out.

    3. Use the Schwartz   1 month ago

      "In sum, we need SCOTUS to stop being an arm of political parties."

      - In order to usher in the revolution.

      You forgot to add the last part comrade. Now that I think about it, you can go ahead and add that as a signature to all of your comments.

    4. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 month ago

      Presidents cant fire members of the executive china tony?

      What retardation. This is way off the Waltz scale.

    5. TrickyVic (old school)   1 month ago

      ""We want/need them to stop re-writing the Constitution and federal law to fit their partisan goals.""

      Health care as a right. Living wage as a right. Housing as a right.

      The left WANTS courts to re-write the Constitution.

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 month ago

        Take care clause!!!! - China Tony
        General Welfare clause!!! - china tony

    6. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   1 month ago

      Fuck off commie scum.

  4. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   1 month ago

    No need to disempower the judges.
    If judges let a criminal go the are personally responsible for that criminals actions, and will recieve the same punishment as if they committed the crime.

  5. JFree   1 month ago

    In place of an independent judiciary that's empowered to overrule the unconstitutional actions of elected officials, Doerfler and Moyn argue in favor of a system in which elected officials—and the popular majorities they ostensibly represent—are free to impose their agendas without judicial interference.

    Too bad they don't understand that the solution is a MUCH MUCH bigger role for the jury system. To transcend the criminal court system - and infect/control the entire judiciary, legislative, and executive branches.

    "Popular majorities" are simply a way of suppressing the actual people and their representation into a box that is only opened (maybe - and in a highly corrupt manipulated way) on election day every four years. Certainly these professors don't give a shit even about their purported 'majority rule' since they favor the unaccountable tyranny of the elected.

  6. Mickey Rat   1 month ago

    "I was under the impression that progressives disapproved of these two cases. Yet the outcome in each case would presumably be acceptable under the Doerfler-Moyn approach because the Court voluntarily stepped out of the way of "the political branches" and deferred to the supposed will of the majority.

    Perhaps unfettered majority rule is not the political cure-all that some progressives would like it to be."

    When Progressives lose at the ballot box, then they push the courts. If progressives start losing in the courts, then they push the bureaucracy. They support the supremacy of whatever institution of government they feel they have the most influence over in the moment. There is no principle there, just the pursuit of power.

    1. Rat on a train (FR)   1 month ago

      They are goal oriented and don't care how they achieve them.

      1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 month ago

        Are you saying they advocate by any means necessary up to assassinations?

    2. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 month ago

      Weird. Reason has shown the same pattern you attribute to progressives.

      1. Mickey Rat   1 month ago

        You may be noticing things you should not be noticing.

  7. Neutral not Neutered   1 month ago

    Doerfler-Moyn are obviously on board with the Obama Fundamental Transformation of America into what it was designed to never be.

    They are not American. They should move to Venezuela.

    Why is it Reason only cites far left rags like The Guardian, NYTimes, WAPO and The Atlantic? Couldn't be any farther away from being libertarian.

    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 month ago

      Reason is part of the expert class therefore defer to experts.

  8. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 month ago

    'These Progressives Seek to 'Disempower' the Courts'

    FDR, his man-crush Mussolini, Stalin, Mao, Castro, Chavez, Maduro, and Otto Pen approve.

    1. JesseAz (RIP CK)   1 month ago

      They didnt disempower the courts. They put activists in their systems to make laws what they wanted then to be. See Venezuela and Brazil.

      1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   1 month ago

        Potato, potahto. Replacing an independent court by edict with a bunch of quislings is really the same as disempowering (or eliminating).

  9. Wizzle Bizzle   1 month ago

    Fuck you. Cover the Walz/Somali fraud story.

  10. LIBtranslator   1 month ago

    Damon opens with the adjectivally empty "left-wing"--meaning the article is intended to entertain Christian National Socialists, not communists, Fabian socialists or libertarians. The object of the scolding must therefore lie in either the totalitarian or the Fabian socialist squares of the Nolan chart, the difference being not of kind, but consistency. Both looter factions feel a need to embrace Hitler or Stalin, but in the dark, behind closed doors, as a sop to the demands of government-subsidized candidate "democracy." Each loves its Big Brother, but begs leave to quibble over some detail.

  11. See.More   1 month ago

    Is unfettered majority rule actually a good idea for the left to embrace?

    Majoratarianism is not a good idea for anybody to embrace.

  12. Rick James   1 month ago

    Similarly, in Buck v. Bell (1927), the Supreme Court upheld a compulsory sterilization law that was being enforced against a young woman who had been raped by the nephew of her foster mother and then committed to a state asylum by her foster parents. As far as the author of that awful decision, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., was concerned, the mere fact that the eugenicist measure was enacted by democratically accountable lawmakers was sufficient to earn it the judicial stamp of approval.

    I was under the impression that progressives disapproved of these two cases.

    And your impression would be incorrect because COVID.

    1. Rick James   1 month ago

      Oh, and never forget, Oliver Wendell Holmes is a progressive hero.

  13. Number 2   1 month ago

    Funny. I wonder if these two progressive law professors realize that they are asserting the same position as Robert Bork asserted 40 years ago: that majorities have the right to rule simply because they are the majority.

    1. Vernon Depner   1 month ago

      They suffer from the delusion that "progressives" ARE the majority.

  14. TJJ2000   1 month ago

    That's no secret.
    "Dictators in Robes" - I do believe is what the Leftards call them.

    Which is essentially (If the judiciary is doing it's job) the US Constitution is dictating a free-society that [WE] [D]emocratic [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] don't want.

  15. Roberta   1 month ago

    It's not so much about judicial power per se as it is about the underlying constitutional provisions they're charged with deciding cases about. If you look at the constitutions of most of the US states and of other countries, they include all sorts of vague mandates and governmental priorities; there's no way to give these rules effect except for sometimes the judiciary to impose the details when they think the legislature has fallen short.

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