The Volokh Conspiracy

Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent | Est. 2002

The Volokh Conspiracy

Politics

Upcoming Speaking Engagements

Ilya Somin's upcoming speaking engagements for the Spring 2025 semester. Most are free and open to the public.

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Below is my list of speaking engagements for the Spring 2025 semester. Unless otherwise noted, all events are free and open to the public—and in person. The listed times are those in the time zone where the event is being held.

I will likely add additional events and information to this post, as they are scheduled. In the meantime if your university, think tank, research institute or other similar organization would like to invite me to speak (either virtually or in person) on any topic within my expertise, I am open for business!

Jan. 30, 1:30-3:00 PM, Panel on "Euclidean Zoning Criticisms and Judicial Review
Going Forward," Pacific Legal Foundation Symposium on"Euclid Turns 100: Rethinking an Antiquated Case and Reimagining Euclidean Zoning for the Century Ahead," Scalia Law School, George Mason University, Arlington, VA: "State Constitutional Paths to Curbing Exclusionary Zoning."

Feb. 3, 12-1:30 PM (tentative time), Faculty Seminar, American University Washington College of Law, Washington, DC: "Immigration is Not Invasion." This event may be limited to American University students and faculty.

Feb. 5,  Time TBA, Cato University, Cato Institute, Washington, DC: "Tariffs and the Separation of Powers." This event is likely limited to participants in the Cato University program.

Feb. 24, 12-1:30 PM (tentative time), Columbia Law School, New York, NY: "The Grasping Hand: Kelo v. City of New London and the Limits of Eminent Domain" (tentative title). Debate with Prof. Thomas Merrill (Columbia). Sponsored by the Columbia Federalist Society.

Feb. 27, 9:30-10:45 AM, University of Pennsylvania Carey School of Law, panel on spending and taxation, conference on the 250th Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, Philadelphia, PA: "Tariffs, Taxation, and the Principles of the Declaration of Independence" (tentative title). The other panelists will be include Irwin Kramer (American University), Molly Reynolds (Brookings Institute), Laura Dove (American Enterprise Institute), and Jane Madders (Fordham University, serving as moderator). Sponsored by the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law.

Mar. 7, Time TBA, 2026 National Conference of Constitutional Law Scholars, Westin La Paloma, Tucson, AZ (sponsored by the University of Arizona): "Immigration is Not Invasion."

Mar. 13, Time TBA,  Conference on the Free Speech Rights of Non-Citizens, Center for Academic Freedom and Free Speech, Yale Law School, New Haven, CT: "How Speech-Based Immigration Restrictions Threaten Academic Freedom."

Mar. 19, Time TBA, Seattle University School of Law, Seattle, WA: "Immigration is Not Invasion" (tentative topic).

Mar. 26, Time TBA, McGeorge School of Law, University of the Pacific, Sacramento, CA: "Democracy and Political Ignorance: Why Smaller Government is Smarter" (sponsored by the McGeorge Federalist Society).

Apr. 9, Time TBA, Yale Review panel on constitutional issues under Trump, New Haven, CT: "The Trumpist Nationalist Threat to the Constitution" (tentative topic and title). The other panelist will be Prof. Fabian Witt (Yale Law School).

Executive Power

Justice Barrett, Trump v. Slaughter, and Presidential Removal Power from 1901 to 1921

Every president from 1901 to 1921 successfully defended presidential removal power at will.

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In a previous blog post, I argued that every President from 1881 to 1901 had successfully defended the President's power to remove at will all officers exercising executive power and that no independent agencies in the modern sense of the term had been created during the last twenty years of the 19th Century. In this blog post, I will argue that every President from 1901 to 1921 also successfully defended presidential removal power at will over all executive officers and that no independent agencies in the modern sense of the term were created between 1901 and 1921 during the Progressive Era. My argument grows out of my co-authored book with Professor Christopher Yoo, who deserves all the credit and none of the blame for anything in this blog post. Steven G. Calabresi & Christopher S. Yoo, The Unitary Executive: Presidential Power from Washington to Bush (Yale University Press 2008).

Theodore Roosevelt served as president from 1901 to 1909, and he had a breathtakingly large view of presidential power, which he called "The Stewardship Theory." Id. at 239-240. Teddy Roosevelt thought the President could do anything at all that was not specifically prohibited by the Constitution or statutory law. He called this the Jackson-Lincoln view of presidential power. Teddy Roosevelt believed that Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, and Alexander Hamilton had correctly described the scope of presidential power. He personalized the office of the presidency in a charismatic way that had never been done before, and he appealed to the people over the heads of both Houses of Congress. Teddy Roosevelt was immensely popular.

Teddy Roosevelt contrasted his Stewardship Theory of the presidency with what he called William Howard Taft's James Buchanan Theory of the presidency. Taft thought the president could only act pursuant to statutory and/or constitutional authorization. As a matter of constitutional law, Taft was clearly right, and Teddy Roosevelt had a dangerous and unconstitutionally broad conception of presidential power. He withdrew hundreds of millions of acres of western land from public entry without having any statutory authority to do so. Teddy Roosevelt wielded the removal power with zeal, as Christopher Yoo and I show in our book, maintaining strict control over all his cabinet members.

In his eighth annual message to Congress Teddy Roosevelt proposed:

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Academic Freedom

Texas A&M Removes Plato from Introductory Philosophy Class

New "gender ideology" rule has predictable results

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After a student posted a viral video of an argument with a Texas A&M instructor about the content of an English class, Texas politicians went ballistic. Soon the instructor was suspended and the university president was fired. Last month, the university regents adopted a policy banning courses that "advocate race or gender ideology" and requiring university approval for any exemptions for materials that serve "a necessary educational purpose."

And thus we arrive at the first academic semester after the donnybrook and with the new policy in place. The results are not terribly surprising, though some are already complaining about "malicious compliance" (best defined as following the rule faithfully but in ways that expose the rule as badly drafted or just plain dumb).

Brian Leiter has the details (including the syllabus and the university correspondence) of Texas A&M philosophy professor Martin Peterson, who was to teach his usual introductory class on "Contemporary Moral Issues" this spring. His syllabus includes two days on "race and gender ideology." He emphasizes in his email to the university that he does not "advocate" for any position in the class, and it is worth noting that the chapter of the text he assigns for that section is actually titled "Equality and Discrimination" and includes excerpts from authors like Iris Marion Young and Kwame Anthony Appiah. For good measure, he also included additional excerpts from Plato's Symposium in that section of the class.

The department chair reported to him that the "College leadership team" had decided that the section, including the Plato readings, would have to be excised from the class. If Peterson did not do so, he would be reassigned to teach a different class. Censoring Plato was probably not exactly what the regents had in mind (though Victorianism does seem to be making a comeback in some circles), but such a result was all too predictable when viral videos and political backlash determine the boundaries of what can be taught in university classrooms and risk-averse administrators are charged with making sure that no professor bumps into those boundaries.

There'll be plenty of material for a second edition of You Can't Teach That! at least.

AI in Court

"The Undersigned Cannot Recall a Comparable Instance of Such Brazen and Repeated Dishonesty" in 55 Years as a Judge

The "filings have led to the Court completely losing trust in" the lawyers involved.

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From Judge Walter Rice (S.D. Ohio) Friday in Kettering Adventist Healthcare v. Collier:

At the outset, the Court must address the troubling accusations made by Kettering and the EBG Defendants: that Collier and Scott fabricated support for their arguments…. [T]he volume, extent, and repetitive nature of fabrications by Scott [a self-represented lawyer] and Hewitt [Collier's lawyer] are without parallel in the undersigned's tenure as a trial judge.

Kettering and the EBG Defendants brought these cases to the attention of the Court—and to the attention of Scott and Hewitt—not in passing, but in a footnote that occupied more than one-third of one page, single-spaced and two full pages in the EBG Defendants' Reply. Yet, neither Scott nor Hewitt has acknowledged the misrepresentations, much less attempted to explain why they subsequently inserted them into multiple filings….

[These] are not mere scrivener's errors or the confusing of the holding of a case with dictum. They are not even engaging in such misreading of the decision that they fail to recognize that the case stands for a proposition diametrically opposed to the one they are asserting. Rather, Scott and Hewitt have cited at least twelve cases that either do not exist or are so far afield from the subject matter of the captioned case that they should have reasonably realized that they had no place in a Court filing, in this or in any other case. Incredibly, even after being put on notice by Kettering that three cases cited in Collier and Scott's Motion did not state what Collier and Scott represented that they did, Collier and Scott cited those very same cases for the very same propositions of law in their later Reply.

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Supreme Court of Texas Removes ABA as "Final Say" on Accreditation

Texas "may consider, in the future, returning to greater reliance on a multistate accrediting entity other than the ABA should a suitable entity become available."

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In September, the Supreme Court of Texas signaled that it would remove the American Bar Association as the "final say" on accreditation. After a comment period, SCOTX adopted its draft proposal without any revisions. In the short term, any school that is currently ABA-accredited will be accredited by SCOTX. Texas will soon adopt a new standard:

In Misc. Dkt. No. 25-9070, the Court advised that it intends to provide stability, certainty, and flexibility to currently approved law schools by guaranteeing ongoing approval to schools that satisfy a set of simple, objective, and ideologically neutral criteria using metrics no more onerous than those currently required by the ABA.

To be sure, schools can voluntarily maintain ABA accreditation. At least in the short term, I suspect most schools (including my own) will not change the status quo. But once the question of portability is worked out, schools may be more amenable to innovation. Indeed, SCOTX signaled that a multi-state accrediting entity other than the ABA may be in the works:

may consider, in the future, returning to greater reliance on a multistate accrediting entity other than the ABA should a suitable entity become available.

Cheers to the Supreme Court of Texas for taking this important step. And jeers to the ABA, an organization that regrettably squandered its good will and reputation.

I think back to the essay I wrote for the ABA Journal in April 2023, titled "The ABA needs ideological diversity to ensure its future." I concluded:

If the ABA does not arrest its progressive lurch, the organization risks its own obsolescence. Model Rules will not be adopted. Evaluations of judicial nominees will be ignored. The accreditation monopoly will cease. And so on. A decline in membership will be the least of the ABA's problems. The ABA can either adapt to a new political reality or fade away like the guilds of yore.

All is proceeding as I anticipated.

Free Speech

Ninth Circuit Suspends Injunction Blocking California Policy Limiting Teachers' Disclosure to Parents of Student's Changed Gender Identity

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A short excerpt from the Ninth Circuit's order yesterday in Mirabelli v. Bonta (Chief Judge Mary Murguia, joined by Judges Andrew Hurwitz and Salvador Mendoza):

Plaintiff-Appellees are four parents and four Escondido Union School District ("EUSD") teachers who challenge a host of California state laws that Plaintiffs refer to as "the State's Parental Exclusion Policies." According to Plaintiffs, these challenged laws are described in the California Department of Education's 2016 "Legal Advisory regarding application of California's antidiscrimination statutes to transgender youth in schools" and its accompanying FAQs. The challenged policies allegedly violate teachers' and parents' constitutional rights by requiring teachers to hide a student's gender nonconformity and social transition, including from the student's parents, unless the student consents to disclosure of that information….

The district court certified the class of all California public school employees and parents of children attending public school who object to the challenged state laws under Rule 23(b)(2). On December 22, 2025, the district court granted permanent injunctive relief to all its members. The district court found that various California laws violate parents' substantive due process and free exercise rights to be informed "after a student says or dresses in a way that suggests a non-conforming gender identity." The district court also concluded that public school employees have free speech and free exercise rights to provide information about a student's gender expression to the student's parents.

Based on these conclusions, the court entered an injunction that bars State Appellants from "implementing or enforcing" "the Privacy Provision of the California Constitution … [and] any other provision of California law" that would "permit or require any employee in the California state-wide education system [to] mislead[] [a] parent or guardian … about their child's gender presentation at school." The injunction prohibits State Appellants from "permit[ting] or requir[ing] any employee in the California state-wide education system to use a name or pronoun to refer to [a] child that [does] not match the child's legal name and natal pronouns, where a child's parent or legal guardian has communicated their objection to such use." The injunction directs the State to include a notice in educator training materials that: "Parents and guardians have a federal constitutional right to be informed if their public school student child expresses gender incongruence." …

After considering the record at this preliminary stage, we conclude that the State Appellants have shown that "there is a substantial case for [a stay] on the merits." …

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Sting Can Call Himself an Englishman, Court Rules

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From the Complaint.

 

From Judge Annemarie Carney Axon (N.D. Ala.) yesterday in White v. Google:

Plaintiff … asserts state law claims for slander and libel because each defendant uses the word "Englishman." … Mr. White alleges he is the only true "Englishman" because he is the only person that truly knows English. [The Complaint actually says, "nose English the right and real way." -EV] Accordingly, no other person or entity may use the word "Englishman." Walmart uses the word "Englishman" online because the word is in the title of several products that it sells. Google search results also contain the word. And Mr. Sumner's [Sting's] song, "Englishman in New York," repeats the word several times….

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Executive Power

Justice Barrett, Trump v. Slaughter, and Presidential Removal Power from 1881 to 1901

Every president from 1881 to 1901 successfully defended presidential at-will removal power.

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During the oral argument in Trump v. Slaughter, Justice Amy Coney Barrett asked counsel for respondent Slaughter how long independent agencies had existed for and counsel suggested to her, incorrectly, that they dated back to the last twenty years of the 19th Century. In fact, as I will show in a series of posts on this blog, no truly independent agency ever existed prior to the decision in Humphrey's Executor v. United States in 1935. My full account of the history of presidential resistance to the creation of independent agencies during this period appears in: Steven G. Calabresi & Christopher S. Yoo, The Unitary Executive: Presidential Power from Washington to Bush (Yale University Press 2008). This blog post will discuss presidential removal power from 1881 to 1901. Subsequent posts will examine presidential removal power from 1901 to 2009. None of these posts could have been written by me without consulting and quoting from the excellent work done by my book co-author, Professor Christopher S. Yoo. He gets all the credit, and I take all the blame for whatever is said below.

In recounting our actual practice from 1881 to 1999, I do not mean to endorse the view that this practice is constitutionally relevant to deciding Trump v. Slaughter. I believe that President Trump should win this case because of the original public meaning of the text of the Constitution. I recognize, however, that only two of the nine justices on the current Supreme Court follow exclusively the original public meaning of the Constitution's text. All the other seven justices on today's Supreme Court think, to various degrees, that arguments from practice are sometimes relevant to the question of whether Humphrey's Executor (1935) should be overruled. Since I have co-published the book with Christopher Yoo cited above on our actual practice, and since the issue is now pending before the Supreme Court, I want to explain why the arguments from presidential practice that Christopher Yoo helped me to write about 18 years ago support overruling Humphrey's Executor (1935).

It is important to review in tedious detail the actual history of presidential assertions of executive power from 1881 to 1901 because many academics who have not seriously examined the subject wrongly believe that the passage of the Pendleton Civil Service Act and the creation of the Interstate Commerce Commission in the 1880's introduced new and severe limits on the President's removal power. These same academics also deny that the Executive Power Vesting Clause of Article II includes an inherent removal power. This is simply wrong. I will therefore work painfully through every presidential administration from 1881 to 1901 to show that the Gilded Age presidents all believed in the theory of the unitary executive and unlimited and inherent presidential power to remove all Senate confirmed officers at will, except for Article III judges who have tenure during good behaviour.

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AI in Court

Client and Lawyer Both Responsible for Attorney Fees in AI Hallucination Case

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From Pauliah v. Univ. of Miss. Medical Center, decided last Tuesday by Judge Carlton Reeves (S.D. Miss.):

Courts across the country have dealt with the rising misuse of generative artificial intelligence to prepare court filings. Those cases have largely, if not entirely, dealt with citations to non-existent legal authority or the attribution of quotes to cases that do not contain the quoted material—produced as a result of what has come to be termed "AI hallucinations." This case is different [from other AI hallucination cases], as it appears that AI was used not to hallucinate the law, but to hallucinate the facts.

The declaration at issue contained multiple fabricated quotations, presented to the Court along with manufactured citations to deposition transcripts, as if they came from sworn testimony. The declaration also grossly mischaracterized testimony and other facts in the record. See Docket No. 141 at 4-6 (listing four outright fabricated quotations and other misrepresentations made to the Court). This declaration was filed in opposition to a motion for summary judgment. Counsel expressly used some of these fabricated "facts" to argue to the Court that this case contained genuine issues in factual dispute. Manufacturing "facts," then presenting them to the Court as genuine, threatens to corrupt the Court's analysis and undermine the integrity of the judicial process at the summary judgment stage.

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Free Speech

Still No Pseudonymity in #TheyLied Defamation Case Over Sexual Assault Allegations

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From yesterday's decision (in my view, a correct decision) by Judge F. Kay Behm (E.D. Mich.) in Doe v. Doe (reaffirming an earlier decision, by denying a motion for reconsideration):

Plaintiff and Defendant are half-siblings and have known each other for over forty years. Plaintiff owns a law firm that operates nationwide, with a primary business address in Oakland County, Michigan.

The relationship between Plaintiff and Defendant deteriorated when Defendant allegedly failed to perform on a contract to work for Plaintiff, and defaulted on a personal loan. A few days after Plaintiff terminated the contract for Defendant to work for Plaintiff, Defendant called Plaintiff's former spouse and told her that 30 years ago, Plaintiff got Defendant drunk and sexually assaulted her. Plaintiff alleges that this statement by Defendant is false and defamatory….

There is generally a presumption of open judicial proceedings in the federal courts; proceeding pseudonymously is the exception rather than the rule. Rule 10 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure generally commands that the complaint state the names of all parties. In order to circumvent this requirement, it must be shown that the need for anonymity substantially outweighs the presumption that parties' identities are public information and the risk of unfairness to the opposing parties. …

Plaintiff argue[s] that … "[c]ourts generally allow a plaintiff to litigate under a pseudonym in cases containing allegations of sexual assault because they concern highly sensitive and personal subjects." And because Defendant is his half-sibling, the disclosure of either party's identity would lead to the inevitable disclosure of the other.

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Parental Rights

Arizona Parents' Bill of Rights Claim Over School's Concealment of Child's "In-School Gender Transition" Can Go Forward,

rules an Arizona appellate court, rejecting defendants' claims that the case was moot, and wasn't timely filed.

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From Walden v. Mesa Unified School Dist. #4, decided last Tuesday by Arizona Court of Appeals Judge Michael J. Brown, joined by Judges Anni Hill Foster and Paul J. McMurdie:

The Guidelines {for Support of Transgender and Gender Nonconforming Students} [created by MPS, Mesa Public Schools] outline how to "provide support" to "a student [who is] transgender or gender nonconforming and consistently asserts at school a gender identity that is different from the student's sex assigned at birth." The version of the Guidelines in place during the 2022–23 school year included definitions of relevant terms and explanations of district policies addressing discrimination, harassment, privacy, and how to update a student's name or gender in the electronic student information system ("Synergy"). MPS also maintained two forms designed to be completed with the student—a checklist and a support plan—detailing how school staff could best address a particular student's needs.

The 2022–23 support plan included the following notice: "Parents/guardians will be notified if the student requests changes to Synergy." Absent a request for a name or gender change in Synergy, the support plan does not require parental notification that a student has completed a support plan. Emphasizing students' right to privacy, the support plan mandates that "[s]chool staff shall not disclose information that may reveal a student's transgender status or gender nonconforming presentation to others except as set forth on this form." Students could mark whether their gender identity could be shared with various groups, including "[s]chool leadership/administration," "[t]eachers and/or other school staff," or "[o]pen to all adults and peers." As of the filing of the Complaint, "MPS still uses the support plan at all schools." …

In October 2022, Doe learned that her child, a biological female named Megan (a pseudonym) was using the name Michael (a pseudonym) at the child's junior high school. In November, Doe contacted a teacher to ask about her child's name. Initially, the teacher declined to answer and directed Doe to speak with the principal but later confirmed that Megan "was known as Michael to all teachers and students at the school."

Doe attended a meeting with the school principal on December 5, 2022, which Doe describes in part as follows:

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American Revolution

Chief Justice Roberts on the Declaration of Independence

Roberts' year-end report on the federal judiciary includes some notable statements about the Declaration and its relevance to constitutional interpretation and judicial review.

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In his year-end report on the state of the federal judiciary, Chief Justice John Roberts makes some notable statements about the Declaration of Independence and its relevance to constitutional interpretation. The relevant section in Roberts' report is occasioned by upcoming 250th anniversary of the Declaration, and much of it reads like standard civics book material. But there are a few noteworthy passages.

First, Roberts notes that the Declaration "sets out a statement of political values
based on Enlightenment principles."  This endorsement of the idea that the United States is a "creedal nation" based on universal liberal values may seem obvious. But it's at odds with the insistence of both far-leftists and right-wing ethno-nationalists that the Declaration and the Founding were meant to establish a nation promoting the interests of a specific racial or ethnic group (usually defined as Anglo-Saxon whites). I cannot know for sure. But I suspect that Roberts is aware of this dispute and included this language in the report for that reason.

Roberts rightly notes that the Declaration is "a statement of national aspirations, not a codification of enforceable legal obligations," and that its universalist aspirations were far from fully realized by the original 1787 Constitution. He particularly stresses the continued prevalence of racially based slavery, including its practice by many of the signers of the Declaration itself.

But Roberts also emphasizes that "throughout our history [the Declaration] has played a signal role in the development of the Nation's constitutional, statutory, and common law." He approvingly cites Supreme Court justices who relied on its principles as tools for constitutional interpretation. This is notable in light of the longstanding debate about whether the Declaration is relevant to constitutional interpretation. Roberts appears to agree that, at least in some situations, it is.

It's worth noting that this idea is perfectly consistent with originalism. If parts of the original Constitution and later amendments were intended to enforce the principles of the Declaration and were so understood at the time, this fact is relevant to any originalist interpretation of these provisions. I think it's particularly relevant to claims that the Constitution's structural constraints and protections for individual rights somehow do not apply to immigration restrictions, or apply with much lesser force. The principles of the Declaration of Independence strongly suggest otherwise. These natural rights principles are also relevant to interpretation of a range of other constitutional issues, such as property rights protected by the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment.

Finally, Roberts emphasizes that judicial independence was one of the objectives of the Declaration:

In the words of future Justice [James] Wilson during the ratification debates, the key passage of the Declaration's preamble…. "is the broad basis on which our independence was placed," and "on the same certain and solid foundation this system [the Constitution] is erected."

The connection between these two foundational documents could not be clearer when it comes to the judicial branch. The Declaration charged that George III "has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries." The Constitution corrected this flaw, granting life tenure and salary protection to safeguard the independence of federal judges and ensure their ability to serve as a counter-majoritarian check on the political branches. This arrangement, now in place for 236 years, has served the country well.

In normal times, this statement would be an obvious truism, hardly worthy of note. But it has special significance at a time when Trump and various administration officials have called for judges to be subservient to the executive, and give him sweeping deference on a vast range of important issues, ranging from tariffs to immigration to the domestic use of the military.

Whether Roberts' statements about the Declaration, its principles, and judicial independence portend anything about the Court's jurisprudence on key cases to be decided in the near future, remains to be seen. Roberts cannot control the votes of the other justices, and his own jurisprudence hasn't always lived up to these ideals.

My general take on Roberts is that he's good on some issues (e.g. - freedom of speech and constitutional property rights), but much less so on others (e.g. - some key issues related to immigration and executive power). But what he says in the report about the Declaration of Independence and its principles is both right and encouraging in its potential implications for the future.

Cornell law Prof. Michael Dorf has his own thoughts on the significance of these and other passages in Roberts' year-end report, including an interesting comparison between Roberts' take and Justice Thurgood Marshall's famous 1987 speech on the bicentennial of the Constitution. I agree with some of his points, but differ on others. In particular, I think the above points about the principles of the Declaration are more compatible with originalism than Dorf suggests. But I agree that reliance on those principles is in tension with much of the Court's recent reliance on later traditions. Those traditions often reflect failure to live up to the principles underlying the original meaning.

Supreme Court

Does the Supreme Court Favor the Rich?

The NYT profiles a sloppy and highly problematic empirical study of the Supreme Court.

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Today's New York Times reports on a new study by three economists purporting to show that the Supreme Court's decisions are increasingly tilted toward the interests of the rich, and suggesting that this may play a role in rising economic inequality. Here's how the NYT story begins:

Supreme Court justices take two oaths. The first, required of all federal officials, is a promise to support the Constitution. The second, a judicial oath, is more specific. It requires them, among other things, to "do equal right to the poor and to the rich."

A new study being released on Monday from economists at Yale and Columbia contends that the Supreme Court has in recent decades fallen short of that vow.

The study, called "Ruling for the Rich," concludes that the wealthy have the wind at their backs before the justices and that a good way to guess the outcome of a case is to follow the money.

The study, "Ruling for the Rich: The Supreme Court Over Time," by Andrea Prat, Fiona Scott Morton, and Jacob Spitz, was posted as an NBER working paper, and has not yet been peer-reviewed or (to my knowledge) accepted anywhere for publication. But that did not stop it from getting a the full-article treatment in the NYT.

Having looked at the study, I don't think it does much of anything to reliably substantiate its claims. It is both conceptually muddled and poorly executed. At most it shows that (surprise!) Republican Supreme Court nominees have become more conservative over time (a point I made to the Times), but that is hardly a revelation.

The biggest problem with the study's design is its adoption of overly simplistic conceptions of what makes a decision "pro-rich" or "pro-poor." Here is what the authors say they are doing:

We measure whether a justice's vote moves money from poor to rich, and not on the words they use to justify that decision. Our approach provides a practical alternative to predicting judicial behavior, and one that is based on an empirical methodology. Our framing is particularly helpful to the prediction exercise when the case is not about a hot-button cultural issue like abortion, but instead on a topic like tax or regulation. Making the rich richer may not be an ideology that is easily justifiable to ordinary citizens, but does a better job at explaining decisions than theories of statutory or constitutional interpretation, e.g. originalism. . . .

We categorize the parties in these cases as "rich" or "poor" according to their likelihood of being wealthy. A justice's vote is pro-rich if its outcome would directly shift resources to the party that is more likely to be wealthy. . . .

Set aside whether it is meaningful to look at cases in this way, to make their assessment the authors adopt a set of arbitrary (and value-laden) assumptions about what makes a given decision "pro-rich" or "pro-poor." Among other things, they assume that all decisions in favor of a private party challenging a government regulation are "pro rich." As they explain:

Any type of government constraint on a business prevents it from doing what it otherwise would, which is most typically maximizing its profits. Thus economic regulation is generally costly to business, but can nonetheless be enacted into law in a democracy because of its benefits to citizens. For example, a company must bear the cost of abating pollution, but after it does so, citizens are no longer harmed by dirty air and water. Governments create many rules that constrain corporations' actions, including financial regulation, labor regulation, safety regulation, environmental regulation, etc., which are designed for the broader benefit of society. We categorize votes on the Court that support businesses over a government rule that the business is challenging as pro-rich.

This analysis conflates the social desirability of government intervention, perhaps to serve some public interest, with the potential distributional consequences of such a policy, as if they are one and the same. And do the authors really mean to embrace the proposition that government policy is never manipulated to serve the interests of the wealthy? Should regulations constricting housing supply should be categorized as pro-poor and anti-rich?

Focusing on environmental regulation (which the authors choose to highlight), it has been long understood, environmental regulation in particular is often a reflection of elite policy preferences and such regulation often has regressive economic effects. Protecting environmental resources and values often means adopting policies that increase the costs of goods and services. Good or bad, it is not clear why either side should be characterized as "pro-rich" or "pro-poor." And have these authors never heard of rent-seeking? Are they really unaware that regulation (including environmental regulation) often advances the interests of privileged interests or incumbent firms at the expense of consumers?

When it comes to cases pitting firms against firms, the authors again embed their ideological priors into their study design. They write:

When one corporation is in a dispute with another, we determine if consumers (the "poor" in our taxonomy) belong on one side. A win for the plaintiff in a private antitrust case, for example, should redistribute monopoly profits to consumers, and therefore a vote for the plaintiff is pro-poor.

Here they have simply adopted the highly contests assumption that whether an antitrust plaintiff prevails tells us anything about whether the decision benefits the rich or the poor. Indeed, the entire premise of contemporary antitrust jurisprudence is that outcomes should be driven by the pursuit of "consumer welfare" such that if an antitrust defendant prevails, this is because there are reasons to presume that this outcome--and not an outcome for the plaintiff--is better for consumers. My point here is not that current antitrust doctrine is right or wrong, only that the authors' case characterization assumes what existing doctrine contests: that a victory for a plaintiff is a ruling against the rich. Similar concerns could be raised about their coding of class-action cases, which some would argue benefit wealthy plaintiffs' lawyers at the expense of actual consumers.

All this is bad enough, but it is when the authors turn to their "counterfactual analysis" to see what might have happened had President Trump not altered the composition of the Supreme Court that things really go off the rails.

In this part of the paper, the authors look at how their conclusions might have turned out differently had Democratic Presidents filled one or more of the Supreme Court seats ultimately filled by President Trump. In their first counterfactual scenario, for instance, they consider what would have happened had Justice Ginsburg retired in 2016, allowing President Obama to appoint her replacement and preventing the ultimate appointment of Justice Barrett. According to the authors, this would have changed the outcome in four of cases from "pro-rich" to "pro-poor." (See Table 5 on page 29.)

The first such example they give is Washington State Department of Licensing v. Cougar Den, Inc. Set aside how the authors concluded that this was a "pro-rich" decision, how is it that the result would have flipped in their counterfactual? Justice Ginsburg joined the judgement of the Court and all of the other Democratic appointees supported the outcome. Perhaps more importantly, this case was decided in March 2019, so how could replacing RBG with a Kagan clone in 2016 (and preventing ACB's appointment in 2020) have affected this outcome at all?

The second example in this table is perhaps even worse: June Medical Services LLC v. Russo. Here, again, we have a case in which RBG and the Democratic appointees were already in the majority, so replacing RBG with a Democratic appointee would have no conceivable impact. And here again we have a case that could not be affected at all by preventing the appointment of ACB because it was decided before ACB was on the bench (June 2020).

June Medical also seems like an odd case to highlight if one is focused on whether Supreme Court decisions are "pro-rich." I guess this case is categorized by the authors as "pro-rich" because the Court ruled against the government on behalf of a business entity, but did the authors really mean to characterize this case in such terms? June Medical was an abortion case. I doubt any justice viewed this case in economic terms, and I am highly suspect that many of those celebrating this study on BlueSky would agree that a decision striking down a state abortion regulation is "pro-rich." (After all, this would mean Dobbs was "pro-poor.")

I think it is important to note that I did not cherry-pick these examples out of the authors' underlying data set; I do not have access to their unpublished data or coding. Rather, these examples are literally the first highlighted by the authors themselves in Table 5. So if the coding and analysis is problematic here, I shudder to think what might be found if other researchers are allowed to check under the hood and scrutinize the data underlying the authors' results.

Longtime readers know that I have long been skeptical of studies purporting to claim that the Supreme Court is "pro-business." I think that such labels often obscure more than they illuminate. I have also argued that insofar as one thinks "pro-business" analyses are useful, there are reasons to think the Trump appointees may make the Court less pro-business than it had been before. But this sort of conclusion requires more careful consideration of the actual cases the Court is considering and what is actually at issue. Sloppy characterizations that embed contestable ideological premises is not any way to develop a better understanding of this Court or its effect on American life.

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