I blogged earlier about what I thought was the highlight of Chief Justice Roberts's exchange with Judge Rosenthal at the Baker Institute. Here, I will flag a few of Roberts's comments of interest.
First, Roberts spoke about the difficult summer of 2005. In the span of a short span, he was nominated for Justice O'Connor's seat, Chief Justice Rehnquist died, and Roberts was then nominated for the Chief Justice seat.
Well, the beginning it was very emotionally draining, you're right. It was a level of tension. I mean, if I get nervous before arguing, you can imagine what it was like to get nervous before those hearings. And Chief Justice Rehnquist had been very much a mentor to me, and it was Saturday night, and I gone to bed. I was trying to get rested up. My wife called to tell me that the chief had passed away. And then the next morning, I got a call from the White House, and they wanted me to come in and had another interview with President Bush that afternoon, and then the next morning, they announced my nomination to be chief the day after that, I'm helping carry Chief Justice Rehnquist casket up to the lie in repose at the court, and the new hearings are starting the next week. There's just an awful lot going on, and I had to start learning a little bit more about Chief Justice's and their role, because that obviously hadn't been a been a focus. And I do remember thinking, you know, everything was looking pretty good with the first nomination.
Second, Roberts said he stumps law professors by asking them to name the portraits of Chief Justices in the East Conference Room.
And, you know, we have two conference rooms in the East one, they have on the walls the first eight Chief Justices, and the next one, they have the next eight chief justices. Just inside. I don't see where the room is for the, you know, 17. And I just sort of like, of like, you know, walk around, and you look up and there's, you know, John Jay, and I knew about him. And the next one, there's a picture of somebody I had no idea who it was. And this is the second Chief Justice. Turned out to be a fellow named John Rutledge who had a pretty he was there for five months. So I felt, well, that's not bad. And then the next one, and not, not really, you know, Oliver Ellsworth just rings a bell vaguely. And then John Marshall, you know, I could talk for hours about that. He's the most significant person in our political history who wasn't a president, and a lot more significant than many of the presidents. And then Chris Roger Taney, the unfortunate counterpart to Marshall. Okay, I know them. The next one I knew had worked with Lincoln, but I couldn't quite place the name Salman Chase there for a while. And then one, when I have professors in the conference room, and we're talking about something I will always ask, like, Who is that? And sometimes nobody knows.
Humblebrag. When I recently moved for the admission of South Texas alum to the Supreme Court bar, we had a breakfast reception in the East Conference room. I told our alums who all the Chiefs were. Who hasn't memorized all of the Chiefs? Jay, Rutledge, Ellsworth, Marshall, Taney, Chase, Waite, Fuller, White, Taft, Hughes, Stone, Vinson, Warren, Burger, Rehnquist, and Roberts. (I still would like to know where Roberts's bust will go, but that is a question for another time.)
Third, Roberts spoke at several juncture about judicial "courage." He said that Chief Justice Jay demonstrated an "incredible act of courage" by not answering questions posed in the "Correspondences of the Justices." Roberts also said that in this 250th year of independence, we should focus and celebrate "courage." He referenced the "extraordinary" bravery of those who signed the Declaration of Independence. They would not have been "given the privilege of being shot. They would be be hung, and all their families possessions would be gone." Roberts suggested that judges will need to exhibit a "great deal of courage," an "overlooked virtue of a judge," to disagree with what AI says. Judge Rosenthal also gave Chief Justice Roberts a biography of Chief Justice Chase, written by her father, Harold M. Hyman, who had been a longtime professor at Rice. Rosenthal said, and I agree, that Chase exemplified "courage." (I had the good occasion to cite one of Professor's Hyman's articles in a draft paper I wrote with Seth Barrett Tillman.) When I write about judicial "courage," people lose their collective minds. But this is a real concept. And, I've praised Roberts for having courage, to a limited extent.
Fourth, Judge Rosenthal asked how the Chief deals with criticism. The Chief responded, "I actually try not to read outside criticism too much. And it's, you know, just because you're you're on to something else, and you don't want to worry too much about you've done, you've done your best." I will not check how often Supreme Court IP addresses access the Volokh Conspiracy.



