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My UnPopulist Article on Supreme Court Politicization and Dangers of Schemes to Undermine Judicial Review
While there is some genuine politicization, it is not as great as often claimed. Proposals to undermine judicial review could easily end up empowering the very sort of authoritarian president progressives fear.

The UnPopulist recently published my article on judicial politicization and the dangers of schemes to undermine judicial review. While some of my recent writings primarily annoy conservative Republicans, this one is likely to have the opposite valence. Here is an excerpt:
In recent years, it has become commonplace to claim that the U.S. Supreme Court is deeply politicized. The court's current 6-3 conservative majority is often seen as pursuing a partisan or ideological agenda, and views on the Court's rulings often break down along partisan and ideological lines. For some on the left, this perceived politicization justifies drastic measures like court-packing or executive defiance of judicial decisions.
In some ways, the judiciary is indeed politicized. But there are many occasions where conservative judges have prioritized jurisprudential values over any partisan or ideological goals, showing that the court is much more than a merely political body. Moreover, resorting to steps like court-packing in response to real or imagined judicial excesses risks destroying or gravely weakening judicial review—a cure far worse than the disease, one that would leave the country more vulnerable to aspiring authoritarians….
While accusations of judicial politicization are often overblown, the court's critics aren't completely wrong. In recent decades, political conflict over judicial appointments has increased, largely as a result of the increased polarization of U.S. politics….
There is, therefore, some basis for claims that the judiciary has become politicized. Indeed, it has never been completely free of politics.
But claims of politicization are also dangerously overstated. They overlook or minimize a wide range of important issues on which conservative judges have elevated legal and constitutional principles over partisanship and thereby curbed dangerous right-wing initiatives and abuses of power.
Such cases are not hard to find. Perhaps the most obvious and important example is that conservative judges serving on both lower courts and the Supreme Court rejected Trump's and other GOP efforts to overturn the result of the 2020 election….
Undermining judicial review through tools like court-packing is a standard tactic of incipient illiberal authoritarians like Hungary's Viktor Orban and Venezuela's Hugo Chavez as they seek to concentrate power in the executive; it's especially useful in the early stages of authoritarian consolidation. American progressives readily see this when it comes to countries like Russia, Turkey, Hungary and—most recently—Israel, where the right-wing government has been trying to eviscerate the power of that country's judiciary….
The point applies here at home, too. If you think Trump and other Republicans pose a grave danger to liberal democracy, you should be wary of dismantling one of the major institutions standing in their way. Imagine, for example, if Trump had been able to successfully resist judicial rulings against his efforts to overturn the 2020 election.
Even some controversial U.S. Supreme Court decisions opposed by the left bolster safeguards against authoritarianism. For example, the court's "major questions doctrine" requires Congress to "speak clearly when authorizing an [executive branch] agency to exercise powers of vast 'economic and political significance….'"
[I]f you fear concentration of power in a potentially authoritarian and illiberal executive, this doctrine is just the sort of approach you should support, since it prevents the president from using vaguely worded statutes to engage in massive power grabs. Even if you trust President Biden to wield such authority, you probably do not have similar faith in the next Republican president, who could well be Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, or someone with a similar mindset….
The courts are far from perfect, and there is indeed a degree of politicization that impacts them. But conservative judges' willingness to rule against right-wing causes in a variety of important cases gives the lie to claims that Supreme Court justices are just politicians in robes. Even more importantly, destroying judicial review is likely to undermine liberal democratic values, rather than promote them, leaving us more vulnerable to authoritarian gambits in an era where authoritarianism is resurgent.
As noted in the article, I don't oppose all possible efforts to curb judicial prerogatives. For example, I think it would be good to impose term limits on Supreme Court justices, and that Congress may be justified in imposing new ethics restrictions on the justices, including limiting the gifts they are allowed to receive from private citizens. But proposals that threaten to destroy or severely weaken judicial review are a different matter.
UPDATED: In the initial version of this post, I accidentally neglected to include a link to my UnPopulist article. I apologize for the mistake, which has now been fixed.
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Heller
McDonald
Dobbs
Harvard
to name of few are some of the most fundamentally sound constitutional decisions. Of course liberals want to rearrange the court for policy reasons.
No mention of Citizens United v FEC, Shelby County v Holder, Janus v AFSCME, let alone decisions that Thomas still has in his sights like Griswold (but of course not Loving)? The court is already where it is for partisan reasons.
definitely agree with CU, Shelby, Janus. All solid fundamentally sound constitutional decisions. Its difficult to make any argument against the holdings except you dont like the political answer.
Shelby is the least constitutionally sound decision imaginable. Literally the Court just blatantly substituting its own judgment for Congress's on what is appropriate enforcement under the Fifteenth Amendment...a power that the Amendment explicitly gives to Congress. Further, the idea that Congress and the ratifying legislatures of the Fifteenth Amendment believed there was "equal sovereignty of the states" is absolute nonsense since the Southern states were literally under military occupation during the drafting, debate, and ratification of the Amendment. The Reconstruction Congress clearly didn't think there was such a thing as equal sovereignty of states in the realm of black voting rights.
What proof is there that in Alabama, black votes are being suppressed? Shelby was a solid decision. This isn’t 1965 anymore.
The law magically changed without any Congressional action after 1965
It’s not that complicated.
Say that the government, the legislature, of Alabama, really was guilty in 1965, over half a century ago. Just take it as a given. I think that’s fair enough.
58 years later, virtually nobody who was in office in Alabama in 1965 is still in office.
So, the situation is like, in 1965 the Alabama family were a criminal enterprise, provably so.
58 years, later, the Alabama family’s descendants are living in the same house, can Congress just up and declare that they’re still guilty, because the previous generation were? No, that would be a bill of attainder.
By continuing preclearance right through a complete change of officers, without fresh offenses being required, the law transformed into a bill of attainder, and the Court refused to turn a blind eye to that.
It’s a law not a sentence in a criminal trial.
Yeah, and the whole point of the prohibition of bills of attainder is that Congress can’t freaking pass a law making you officially “guilty”. But that’s essentially what they wanted to do with Section 5, by making it contingent on acts a couple generations ago, when other people were running the state government.
And, why did they want to do that?
Because they were using the preclearance mechanism, not to prohibit state actions that actually violated the 14th or 15th amendments, but just to generally prohibit covered states from doing anything voting rights related that they didn't like.
Even stuff that unambiguously was not a voting rights violation, and other states were routinely doing.
They've been abusing pre-clearance, and didn't want it to ever end. But the Supreme court is actually entitled to decide that 'enabling legislation' is unconstitutional.
Section 5 was not a bill of attainder, nor was it a criminal law. Preclearance explicitly did not apply to all states equally, that was explicitly intended by Congress. There was no new law passed, and yet presto the law is now unconstitutional because of reasons.
Those reasons are not that preclearance was abused by the government. If you want to defend an opinion, maybe you should read that opinion.
Who cares? That’s Congress’s choice.
Good decisions all.
I’d be willing to bet that if Citizens United were reheard today it would be 9-0, with even Elena Kagan, who famously argued as solicitor general, that a law that regulated publishing books with political topics was constitutional, would join the majority striking it down.
CU Unlikely to be 9-0 , sotomayor would almost certainly be in favor of free speech restrictions. ( unless she would be embarrassed by being the sole vote). Speculating on KBJ position would be difficult.
CU 's continued existence is armor-plated by a lie which the Court added to the record on its own initiative. To protect the decision against a fully-justified challenge which could even survive strict scrutiny, the Court found it necessary to add the ridiculous assertion of fact—that the ability to buy legislative influence with corporate money would not undermine public confidence in government. Both then and now, only a fool would believe that, and it took a shameless disregard for that truth to say otherwise.
CU is bad law because it justifies plutocracy. There is no basis in legitimate American constitutionalism to support that.
Wait, did Lathrop come down against free speech? Must be a day ending in 'y'.
Maybe Stephen doesn't subscribe to the idea that corporate money = speech, or he could not agree with the idea that corporations get the same level of free speech protection as individuals, or both.
The Court never said that money was speech. They said that money could BUY the capacity to have speech heard, and if you regulated spending money to that end contingent on the content of the speech, or the amount of it, you were really regulating speech.
It's no different than Congress, in principle, could regulate interstate commerce in ink on the basis of it being explosive, or toxic. But they can't pass a law saying you can't use ink to print anything on a particular topic.
"Proposals to undermine judicial review could easily end up empowering the very sort of authoritarian president progressives fear."
That IS kind of an inevitable consequence of setting out to empower the very sort of authoritarian President Progressives love. It's not like you can empower one sort of strong man, and not the other.
McConnell is an institutionalist like Biden…I assume Schumer is too and the Senate took back the power of judicial nominations after Bush nominated Miers. Btw, has Bush said anything about Dobbs?? I hope Republicans think those 8 years were worth it…because it was a super dumb 8 years!
Love the Trump supporter talking about how liberals love an authoritarian President.
What you call TrumpLaw is the judiciary slapping down Trump’s repeated attempts at authoritarian policymaking.
My goodness. Look at a slavish supporter of King Joseph complaining about any other authoritarian president. Grb is absolutely correct in pointing out the hypocrisy of both sides on this.
"But, you don't understand -- Joe is being authoritarian for good reasons!!!"
There is nothing authoritarian about Trump. This is dramatic lunacy at best; mental illness at worse.
Trump did all sorts of authoritarian stuff on immigration, including but not lmited to the Muslim ban.
But let's ignore that stuff and focus on an easy one. His wall. He abused grb's emergency act to move money to construction of the wall from whatever it was truly budgeted for (military housing?). Once he announced his intention, Congress held a vote specific to that question and explicitly said this money can't be spent on the wall. Trump did it anyway. That's authoritarian.
You want to get technical, though? All the way back in '83, the Supreme court ruled that such votes are, like any legislation, subject to the presentiment clause. Immigration and Naturalization Service v. Chadha.
So the Congressional vote didn't mean diddly squat, legally, until either Trump signed the resolution, or Congress over-rid his veto. Neither happened.
Trump had authoritarian impulses, but he wasn't all that big on just outright violating the law. And he didn't in this case. He was actually on pretty good grounds in that case, thanks to Congress.
I think the National Emergencies Act is a bad law, which Congress should repeal or massively amend. We're discussing why they never have.
Brett Bellmore : "That IS kind of an inevitable consequence of setting out to empower the very sort of authoritarian President Progressives love"
Oh, for God's sake give it a rest, Brett. Both sides love authoritarian presidents when they're their guy and hate'em when they're not. All presidents - Left & Right - stretch the bounds of executive power, sometimes getting SCOUS pushback, sometimes not. To claim some kind of ideological division there is just you being a partisan tool.
I’m not going to disagree with you, Trump certainly had an authoritarian streak.
However the metric I use to choose which candidates I’ll vote for is the one I think will be most likely to leave me and mine alone. And under that metric Trump was the clear winner over Hillary and Biden.
Wild guesses:
White
Heterosexual (at least publicly)
Christian (or fond of clinger positions)
"Traditional values" or "conservative values" bigot
Resentful toward modern, successful, educated, inclusive communities
Fearful of loss of a white majority
Culture war casualty
NPC Alert.
Kazinski, a Supreme Court on a mission to leave your kind alone while assailing others is the essence of the problem. It's good for you, but not for the nation. You should not be complacent about that.
Good grief. My whole point here was that 'progressives' so love their own authoritarians that they can't bring themselves to do anything to rein in authoritarian Presidents of EITHER party. Because if they did, their own authoritarians would be reined in, too, and that's just not a price they'll pay.
Take the National Emergencies Act, which Trump famously used to fund building some of his wall, when Congress wouldn't. Yeah, spending money on something Congress refuses to appropriate funds for IS authoritarian. No doubt about it. But that stupid Act genuinely gives Presidents authority to do that sort of thing!
You'd think that it would have been a perfect occasion for Democrats to seriously reform that stupid law. But, nooo, they couldn't, because then their own Presidents couldn't abuse it, either!
They value enabling their own guys' authoritarian tendencies more than they object to the other side being able to let their inner authoritarian out for a walk. That's the ugly truth.
By what avenue does reforming that Act only require one party? And why are you giving the GOP a pass?
Brett Bellmore : “Take the National Emergencies Act…”
What on earth is your point? The National Emergencies Act passed the House 388-5. It passed the Senate on a voice vote. And neither party has proposed curtailing it. Why is solely the Democrats’ fault it hasn’t been reformed? Why is that evidence of their commitment to authoritarian rule when the GOP never proposed changes when they held congress during a Democratic administration?
This kind of sloppy illogical thinking is now mindless reflex to you. I say you’re carving out special blame for democrats from normal political behavior. And how do you respond? By carving out special blame for democrats from normal political behavior. And you do it in an offended huff too! If you were capable of irony I’d suspect that, but you’re not. It’s just complete obviousness.
(Plus being a partisan tool, of course).
Problem is that it’s so wide open that it just begs to be abused.
I don't deny that....
Good grief, Brett knowingly voted for a dishonest, incomptetent, unprincipled, authoritarian weirdo with an intensely creepy cult following because of a very few specific policy preferences, everybody who voted for a solidly middle-of-the-road career politician who isn’t radical enough for most of his supporters is obviously doing the exact same!
Only someone as leftist as Joe Stalin would call Biden “middle of the road.” Biden’s handlers are as Commie as they can be; they’re just not being honest about it. The sky on the planet you live on must be a strange color indeed.
Callahan, Biden is well to the right of Eisenhower, even on civil rights, where Eisenhower was farthest right. I guess if we were back in the 50s you would have been among the Birchers calling Eisenhower a communist.
I guess you've set off some loonies trying to say that Biden isn't liberal.
They're delusional, or they're so swept up in political zeal that they've lost touch with reality. Biden is governing to the left of every president in our history, with the possible exception of FDR. He's barely to the right of Bernie. Everything he does seems to be done for the approval of progressive Twitter (oops, I mean X).
No, that's delusional. (So is Lathrop's claim, of course.) Biden is about as centrist as it's possible for a Democrat to be.
Of course he's liberal, he's more liberal than when he was vice-president, but he's still governing closer to the middle than Trump or Gerorge W Bush ever did.
Your hyperbole is self-refuting.
Brett, of course, has not read the National Emergencies Act, and therefore is talking about what he thinks it says rather than what it actually says.
Or course, I actually HAVE read the NEA, did it back when Trump first used it to fund building a wall.
That law is an awful law, it just BEGS to be abused. But neither party will reform it, because they want to enable their own Presidents' abuses more than they want to rein in the other party's Presidents' abuses.
If you had read it, you would understand that it was passed to restrict the president's emergency powers.
And yet, instead of Congress fighting presidents' atextual claim to have such powers, what Congress actually did was to formally give them a legitimate legal basis for exercising them!
It's like dealing with a squatter by handing over the deed to your house!
DeSantis made the Florida judicial system a joke and if he were to become president he would do the same thing to the Supreme Court. Biden is thankfully an institutionalist and his actions are consistent with what he holds himself out as and so he will not do anything to exacerbate politicization. Trump has no coherent governing values but he consistently got rolled by Bush Republicans when he was president and he will lose in 2024 and so I am not worried about him. Hopefully Republicans will nominate a reasonable candidate in 2028 and not an assclown like Bush, McStain, and Trump.
We thought you were suffering from TDS - however its apparent that it is just derangement.
Remember when you voted for Bush in 2004 because slaughtering hundreds of thousands of innocent Muslims made you feel like a real man?? I will never forget!
To be fair had a group of radical Catholics attacked at the time I'd have cheered bombing the Vatican I was so enraged.
That rage precipitated severe mistakes by a group of overmatched American leaders.
Let’s vote for the guy with almost the same name as the guy that was president 8 years ago! Duuuuuuuuh.
Judicial review is an abomination. Even if left wingers agree only for tactical reasons, we should take this opportunity to weaken it.
What should happen when the Feds or a State violate a Constitutional right?
If there is no judicial review, I think the only effective alternative is for decorating lampposts with politicians to become socially acceptable.
As attractive as that seems sometimes, judicial review is probably the clearly superior method.
The whole lamppost thing sounds pretty good right now. Why mess with judicial review to start?
All-talk, obsolete, doomed, un-American clingers just might be my favorite culture war casualties.
Can you be more specific? Are you talking about the executive or the legislature? And if the executive, are they acting pursuant to a law on the books, or just doing something illegal?
If politicians are doing it, voting them out (and remembering who cheered them on). If the executive officers weren't following the law, then the law doesn't protect them. There's no need to address it in constitutional terms. A policeman, for instance, would be liable for battery, assault or even criminal abduction, depending on the circumstances.
And what should happen when the judiciary violates a constitutional right?
I think it is inherent in the nature of judicial power that a court can pass on whether a particular law or government act conflicts with a provision of the Constitution as part of deciding a case. But American judicial review has some major problems that make it if not necessarily an abomination, something that is not good .
1. A lack of clear standing principles (which themselves are court created) that allow courts to exercise judgment over too many types of social and political conflict.
2. Extremely broad declaratory and equitable remedies that courts believe are forever binding on everyone for all time rather than remedies that provide specific relief to particular parties to resolve a particular dispute.
3. A lack of democratic accountability, most notably the federal level, for the people and institutions making these broad pronouncements.
4. Legislative and Executive branches that are too unwilling to pushback against judicial decisions even a little even though they are the branches that create courts and enforce their orders respectively.
Yes.
Second agreement today. Scary
Some really great points here.
2. isn't true though. Everyone pretends that it is, but legally, a court only has authority over the parties before it, and an injunction only applies with respect to the party seeking it. If you know that courts are simply going to rule a certain way, it can definitely affect behavior of/with regard to non-parties. But the formal legal truth doesn't change.
Regarding 3), juries are also undemocratic, in a sense, but the damage is limited to one case. For that reason, weakening stare decisis, especially vertical stare decisis, would be the best bet. Multiple European countries do without such a rigid principle, and don't experience the "chaos" that some say (without evidence) would happen here. As for chronological stare decisis, the apex court should first try to figure out what the law is, as it was made. They would then ask whether an error is well established enough that it would cause hardship to follow the law as it is.
We should recognize that precedent isn't law (something judges have no right to make), nor is it about following the law. It's actually about disobeying the law in the interest of fairness.
Currently, the party that wants SCOTUS to follow the law, instead of precedent has the burden. I would reverse that, at least until an error is so well established that it has been accepted by the whole legal community and the people, not just the court.
4. Powell v McCormack comes to mind.
I'll shut up now. Good post, LTG.
It was understood that it would be used in a very limited fashion. For laws that violate the "manifest tenor" of the constitution, or are "plainly irreconcilable" with it. Did you know that Ohio's courts (and those of many other states) still use a beyond reasonable doubt standard to asses the constitutionality of legislation? I didn't until a few years ago, and I went to a good OH public school.
If everyone and their mother were scoffing at the court for decisions that completely ignore the law like Roe and Obergefell, and decisions that make up an answer to a constitional question where there isn't one, like Thornton (term limits) or Seila Law, the justices wouldn't be brave enough to pull such stuff.
If people outside the courts made use of their own legal prerogatives, justices wouldn't try to pull such stuff.
Likewise, remembering that a court only has jurisdiction over the parties before it and stare decisis is just a convention, if they knew lower courts would occasionally decline to follow precedent, justices would behave differently.
undermine judicial review could easily end up empowering the very sort of authoritarian president progressives fear.
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
progs don't mind authoritarians as long as its their type of authoritarian.
Says the Trump supporter.
"But claims of politicization are also dangerously overstated."
The Fifth Circuit has entered the chat.
Was peak liberal Ninth Circuit (including liberal district judges) ever as bad as the Fifth is now?
Nope. Not even close.
Don’t get me wrong. There have long been idiosyncrasies with different circuits. The Sixth with AEDPA. The (old) Fifth and the death penalty. The Federal Circuit and, um, intellectual property … heh. And, yes, the Ninth could have issues (although not as bad as was popularly reported), especially given the sheer number of cases out of California and the fact that they were occasionally out-of-step with a more conservative SCOTUS.
But nothing I have EVER seen compares to the modern Fifth. Not even close.
I’m really not looking forward to what they’re going to do with that bonkers ADF sanctions order from Brantley Starr. Gonna give a green light to every whacko district judge in the country to order Christian religious education as a sanction for lawyers. Probably one of the most dangerous things I’ve seen come out of a court lately.
If you think something out of the Fifth is the worst ever, just wait a day.
The Fifth will come up with something worse.
In fairness, y’all agree philosophically with the ninth and disagree philosophically with the fifth. That might color your opinions as to which was worse. Some.
At least the fifth has one actually close to libertarian on it.
These are practitioners giving opinions as such. A lawyer who lets their partisanship color their sense of the lay of the land is going to do a bad job.
If you want to allege bias, bring more than the bare assertion.
The Ninth absolutely had its issues back in the day, but it is statistically not as bad as it seemed due to its size - bare numbers of overturned cases looked bigger.
Nowadays it doesn’t even stand out anymore at all except some on the right cling to that old meme.
I’m happy to admit my partisan bias colors my opinion of the Fifth Circuit!
But as a legal writer I hate how many of them write stylistically that (theoretically) has nothing to do with their politics.
And to the extent practice is distinct from politics some of their decisions are in fact way outside the norm. I mean multiple judges endorsing preliminary injunctive relief in Title VII cases is…wrong. And I don’t mean “the reasoning is wrong” or “the values underlying the decision are wrong.” I mean you would get no marks on an exam question if you turned that in as an answer from any professor anywhere. (Well not Blackman. But anyone who wasn’t a clown and taught employment law or remedies)
I understand. I wasn’t disagreeing with them. Just asking. I’m down here in the Land of the Fifth and I know how they are. I also remember thinking regularly when something went to the Ninth the outcome was pre-ordained.
Besides, I got them beat. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals (Tx high court for criminal stuff) with Killer Keller closing the office early so a last minute death penalty appeal couldn’t come across the fax and making up Unindicted Co-Ejactulators. After watching the TCCA in action the Soviet show trials seem unbiased by comparison.
Are you referring to this guy, the Bush-Cheney-Trump conservative and religious righty from Texas?
If you could imagine being a libertarian for a moment, perhaps you would try to assess that decision from a libertarian (or sometimes libertarian, or libertarianish) perspective?
Just how "modern" do you figure the obsolete, bigoted, backwater religious zealots of the Fifth Circuit -- disaffected culture war casualties who pine for illusory "good old days" -- are?
The idea that SCOTUS is a nonpolitical body is ludicrous. It never was and never will be. Just to have a chance at being nominated, a future justice has to be a political animal at the highest levels. The ones that are not are the exception.
Even the occasional justice dedicated to virginal judicial analysis is selected and vetted by politicians invested in outcomes, not judicial philosophy.
Rather than holding on to a fiction, just accept that SCOTUS is a political body and organize it as such: expand it and institute term limits. The court should be large enough to enable a broader representation of the population and to prevent even two-term presidents from packing the court.
I dunno...Looking at the track record of Republican appointed SC justices like Blackmun, Soeter, Stevens etc I'd be tempted to think either the Republicans really did prioritize....something.....over politics.....or they were just idiots.
Abortion/Roe was a great issue for Republicans and so the fact they really strung it out was good for the party in general. Now Republicans at the state level have to take a position on the issue.
I always thought it was far more useful to both parties as an issue than as a Decision.
No, because Democrats never believed it would be overruled. I was involved in GOP politics during the Tea Party movement and the Republican activists that came of age in the 1990s and 2000s that thought they would inherit the GOP were all establishment true believers that were adamantly pro-life. Not one of them would have even voted for someone like DeSantis that allowed abortion through 6 weeks even though now they are clearly rooting for him. They were nice people but they were wrong about everything and most of them took a big financial hit because they were NeverTrumpers.
Republican Presidents prioritized their actual politics, over the politics they had to profess to win primaries.
Secret liberals everywhere.
So, your argument, then, is that politicians are relentlessly honest?
What the fuck argument is this? Politicians are not always honest. That does not support your insane and paranoid assumption that Republicans are all secret liberals because they appointed Justices you in retrospect don't like.
Souter was not a secret Republican plot to get a liberal on the Court. Holy fuck slow your roll.
Ilya is trying to overthrow the country and belongs is the gulag...
These authoritarian right-wingers who hate the sole libertarian at this disingenuous, white, male, conservative website are your fans, Volokh Conspirators -- and the reason your intolerant, superstitious, old-timey political preferences are doomed in modern, improving America.
- Fully disagree with the idea of throwing people in prison for their opinions.
- I think you got him all wrong here. He opposes "schemes to undermine judicial review."
I don’t see any way in which this article contributes to overthrowing the country, but on the bright side at least he doesn’t want Somin shot.
On the other hand, griping about overthrowing the country while wanting to set up gulags. It’s been a while, but my memory is that the folks with gulags were the people that wanted to overthrow the US. Did Ed just accidentally expose his real game?
“In recent years, it has become commonplace to claim that the U.S. Supreme Court is deeply politicized.”
If by “[i]n recent years” you mean since about 1789.
At least three of the Supreme Court justices appointed by George Washington presided over Sedition Act trials, cheerfully enforcing that Act. In what sense is that apolitical and above the partisan fray?
Somin is correct. Progressives/democrats/left should not want any extreme reform of scotus.
Some on the left realize this. Aziz Huq nailed it in this panel from 4 years ago. His point is that scotus has almost never been anything other than a hindrance to progressive ideology. Huq is quite correct.
Aziz Huq (at 30:47)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KaVeYNqZ8Vc&t=1847s
Lest we not not forget the Libertarians shaved enough votes from 2 Republicans senate candidates in the 2020 election to force a runoff which ultimately handed control of the senate to Biden/Obama 2.0
Stealing votes which rightfully belonged to Republicans!
How dare they!
Then the Republicans and Democrats had a one-on-one rematch without any pesky Libertarians, and the Republicans *still* lost.
That’s because Republicans never miss an opportunity to miss an opportunity.
And the problem is never the Republicans themselves...it's certainly not the fault of bad campaigning, or the ham-handed interference of Donald Trump, no it's never their fault, it's all those meddling third parties trying to lure voters away from the duopoly plantation.
Exactly like Democrats blaming voters who supported Nader for putting GW Bush in office. A lot of that going around.
Lest we forget Trump’s election tantrum had the (unintended?) consequence of enabling Democratic victories in those run offs.
Dude has cost the Republicans so so much and yet they slavishly rally around him as the chickens come home to roost.
Q: “Are you a masochist?” Republican response: “Beats me!!!!”
Ilya, you need a better title photo for this piece. I'd suggest this one, tweeted by Ted Cruz, of he and Harlan Crowe witnessing the swearing in by Clarence Thomas of the now infamous Judge James Ho in front of the garage size fireplace in Crowe's library.
https://twitter.com/sentedcruz/status/949083663915995136?s=61&t=rqVJiQhUsecM-isjOlTwdw
Your arguments that Republican judges follow the law most of the time and some Republican officials did do their sworn, and legally required, duty are, perhaps, less compelling than you think they are. I will continue to believe the considerable evidence that some of the Supremes, and many other judges, are not only partisan, but corruptly so.
The Constitution of the United States of America vests the power of law-making with Congress, and grants 18 enumerated powers to that entity. The executive's job is to faithfully execute those laws. The judiciary's job is to adjudicate claims arising under those laws. The scope of the federal government is strictly limited by the Constitution to a tiny fraction of the power it wields today. The authority of the Supreme Court and all inferior courts was arrogated by Marbury v. Madison to a level not compatible with our founding document, and Supreme Court decisions are by no means the "law of the land." But lawyers and financial interests that enjoy huge advantage by the extraconstitutional reach of the federal government will never willingly put the "toothpaste back in the tube." In a just world, we would seldom even read about the Supreme Court, because it would almost never hear a case.