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The Judicial Conference's New "Policy" Demonstrates Why Judges Should Not Make Policy
The way to depoliticize the courts is to depoliticize the courts.
It is a cliche that judges should not "legislate" from the bench. As we hear all-too-often, judges lack the expertise, knowhow, and accountability to make policy. Judges are at their best when they carefully scrutinize a law someone else wrote, and apply it to a given set of facts. To be sure, judges do have some formal policymaking power, such as the promulgation of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. But those processes are transparent, open, and involves a public comment period from all interested stakeholders.
The Judicial Conference's new "policy" illustrates why judges are not equipped to make policy on their own. (I put "policy" in scare quotes because we have no idea what the policy actually says, or if the language is even final.) Though this policy is framed as addressing some sort of nationwide policy, in reality, it will affect a handful of single-judge divisions in Texas and Louisiana, and possibly a few other states. All of those judges were appointed by Republican presidents, and most were nominated by President Trump. And almost all of the appeals lie with the Fifth Circuit.
My friend Sam Bray is correct that "Democratic state attorneys general seek national injunctions in friendly district courts," but as best as I can recall, Democratic Attorney Generals do not seek nationwide injunctions in single judge divisions--they don't have to. Filing a law suit in Brooklyn or San Fransisco has the same effect as filing in Amarillo or Lubbock--without the need for a layover in DFW.
The Judicial Conference's policy is targeted at a very small number of federal judges who have issued nationwide relief against a Democratic administration, which the Supreme Court has consistently stayed. Is it any surprise that most press accounts of this policy include a photo of Judge Matt Kacsmaryk? The Judicial Conference is feeding a media narrative about these rogue Republican judges who are abusing the nationwide injunction.
In some regards, this Judicial Conference proposal reminds me of Justice Barrett's well-intentioned but horribly-misguided concurrence in Trump v. Anderson. Barrett was trying to explain why the Court should avoid politics and turn down the temperature on these sorts of election issues. Of course, her concurrence backfired big-league, and instead highlighted the right-left split on the Court. The Judicial Conference proposal operates in a similar sphere. The judges on that body are attempting to reduce what they see as partisan judge-shopping, and in the process propose a rule that is targeted only at a handful of Republican judges. Ironically, the same judges that the Texas AGs are shopping for, the Judicial Conference is trying to divest of jurisdiction.
Sam Bray, like Chief Judge Sutton and perhaps Chief Justice Roberts, may think that this law removes the judiciary from politics. But that perspective is myopic. The choice of how district courts are divided is an inherently political topic. The process of selecting district court judges is more complex than you can probably imagine. Perhaps Sutton and Roberts are fearful of potential legislation and would prefer to handle things in house. Again, this perspective is myopic. Who decides? If any body must inject itself into this mess, it's Congress. And if Congress won't act, as we are often told, it is not for the judiciary to clean up the mess. The way to depoliticize the courts is to depoliticize the courts.
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Tl;dr, this policy is bad because it prevents conservatives from rigging the system.
To be fair, he is also saying that it still allows liberals to game the system. It's the one-sidedness he is objecting to.
It’s the one-sidedness that Blackman is objecting to, but it’s the naivete of Bray that I’m objecting to.
Essentially the combat is between lefty lawyers who can reliably find friendly hacks in multi-judge districts and righty lawyers who can reliably find friendly hacks in single judge districts. The lefties are, as it were, armed with swords; the righties have net and trident.
The Judicial Conference is attempting to ban tridents.
But the obvious consequence is that they guarantee that Congress wil not attempt to reform the system. After four years of Trump being jabbed by lefty judges with swords, we’ve had three years of Biden being jabbed by righty judges with tridents.
The only reason for lefty politicos to object to judge-pickin’ is if they suffer pain from it. Take away their pain by banning tridents and they have no reason to reform the system.
Any student of politics knows that you achieve reform by ensuring that the status quo is unacceptable to both teams.
First, saying 'the whole system is partisan so my side needs this kind of ability to exploit the system' is just cynicism in service of enshittening.
Second, if you find every judge to the left of the couple of radicals in Texas to be liberal...you just might be more a radical than a conservative.
The lefties are, as it were, armed with swords; the righties have net and trident.
Irresistable:
"Stop quoting laws to we that have swords." – Pompey
True, that's what he's saying, but it isn't true. The other districts have multiple judges, who are far from uniform in their personal politics or judicial approach. Of course you're more likely to get a liberal judge in the SDNY or EDNY than in SD Texas, but playing the odds is not picking a judge.
I can't speak to every district nationwide, but the notion that EDNY has only liberal judges is just wrong.
Like a lot of things, it depends.
If you are talking about how harshly criminals should be treated, you are correct.
If you are talking about, say, gun control or abortion, I have my doubts.
It is a cliche that judges should not "legislate" from the bench. As we hear all-too-often, judges lack the expertise, knowhow, and accountability to make policy.
Have you ever heard of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Criminal Procedure and Evidence? All written by judges. Areas where judges would have expertise.
Filing a law suit in Brooklyn or San Fransisco [sic] has the same effect as filing in Amarillo or Lubbock
It takes some real terminal partisanship to assume all Dem-appointed judges are the same, and all GOP-appointed judges are just like that couple of insane Texas ones.
Also, some serious ignorance to not know that there are several Republican-appointed district judges sitting in Brooklyn.
That's the thing that got me. I kept reading this and thinking that there is an implicit assumption that liberal states ensure only liberal judges. I could see that being the case if you have judges appointed by governors. But since federal judges are appointed by the president, you'll find republican-appointed judges even in places like San Francisco.
The "blue slip" custom produces judges more aligned with a state's politics than the president's. Depending on how nuclear the Senate Majority Leader feels.
The problem is that this idea is routinely rejected when it comes to other issues.
It is clear that ONLY Congress and the state legislatures can determine what constitutes a militia and can determine the appropriate regulation with respect to firearms for these militias. Those are political judgements that rest exclusively with those branches of the government. (And the approach that this Supreme Court has taken with all the other Amendments to the Constitution. Take, for example, Bivens, and the Courts command that only the legislative branch can create remedies for the violation of any right contained in the Constitution - except for the Second Amendment.)
It is inherently political: The Scalia/Alito courts have routinely rejected “political interference” by the courts when it was convenient, but then clearly overstep the bounds – for example the absolute, unlimited authority of the commander in chief – when it came to the Court illegal appropriating and micromanaging defense personnel policy when it came to the COVID vaccine and the military.
Huh?
I don’t see why courts can’t decide what a militia is. Certainly Congress and the states may have broad authority over them and a lot of freedom of action to make choices. But there might be a situation where a state tries to regulate something as a militia regulation which just doesn’t have anything to do with militias, and courts could call them on them.
Because this guy wants to be able to pick his own judges before he comes into court, he’s going to give us this crap about judges supposedly having no authority to manage their own affairs. It’s not like there’s any reference to the Judiciary in the constitution as some sort of coequal or even autonomous branch or anything like that.
If Mr. Whineypants doesn’t get his way, he’s going to keep throwing tantrums and diss everyone in his way until he does. It’s not like his tantrums have to be coherent or anything like that.
It’s “Judges don’t give me what I want, judges bad.”
Ever have a moment in school where a few class clowns were being an issue so the school/teachers made new rules supposedly for everyone but really it was about the clowns? This is that but for the courts.
If you make enough bad decisions other responsible actors will do something about it. These judges have made really bad and dumb decisions, some of which were too dumb even for the Fifth Circuit. No one would have cared as much if they weren’t being such clowns. But they were so now no body can talk during free period.
Also: no one wants to hear the clown whose fault it is whine so much.
Lawyers take advantage of very loophole. They consider it a duty. At least some do. So, unfortunately, the rules have to deal with the worst of the bunch.
There are already district courts that have adopted local rules and internal operating procedures that provide for case assignment in such a way as to ensure that litigants cannot judge shop by filing in a single-judge division.
Are those rules invalid under the “judges shouldn’t legislate” argument? And if a district court can adopt such rules for itself, why can’t the Judicial Conference require that all district courts do so?
Yet another tantrum from Blackman.
"Courts should not make administrative rules about courts because it hurts the feelings of my buddy" is not even an intelligible argument.
Some right-wing arguments must be unintelligible to be made at all. You can't argue to maximize dark money bias in the judicial system if you make the argument intelligible.
Pfft.
By the way, the headline of this post is "The Judicial Conference's New "Policy" Demonstrates Why Judges Should Not Make Policy," but nothing in the post explains how the policy demonstrates why judges should not make policy.
Kacsmaryk's photo is put up because he is an awful judge who disobeys precedents he is required under his oath as an inferior court judge (that word "inferior" is in Article III) to follow, and Republican plaintiffs file suits having nothing to do with Amarillo Texas to get his anti-law rulings.
And despite all the right wing rhetoric on courts, this is unprecedented. He's basically a criminal in a robe and Republican partisans like Blackman are pissed off the authorities are cracking down on the crime.
Other than the abortion pill challenge what cases has he drawn based on reputation that are not legitimately in his territorial jurisdiction? The campus drag show case is about acts within his division.
Well for one, how about the Remain in Mexico case? Amarillo is... nowhere near the border.
Then why not just impeach him? Or why don't his superior judges take some stronger stand than threaten to send him another letter?
In other words, why not slap down the unruly judge instead of adding yet another bandaid which makes a bigger mess?
Because we are a polarized country and Republican partisans like having a judge who will make illegal rulings against the Biden Administration or in favor of Republican pet issues on demand. So they won't remove him.
Really, this is bad faith. Obviously you know why he can't be impeached. And the notion of "he can't be impeached, therefore we can do nothing as he violates his oath and the Constitution" is silly. Article III says nothing about taking cases away from him.
It doesn’t really make a mess because the vast majority of federal districts with multiple divisions don’t do things like they do in Texas/LA.
Then the new alleged proposed policy is meaningless, no?
No. If you have one or two districts that don’t do it like everyone else leading to bad results there then you need a policy to correct that if they won’t reform themselves.
But that's the point. When there's just one or two troublemakers, use existing means to get rid of them or at least stop them from making trouble. Inventing an entire new policy which affects everybody is the wrong approach.
Making new rules and policies is typically how organizations and polities deal with troublemakers when they don’t have the tools to fix it.
This rule could be really problematic. The press release is very blase about the geographic issues. How is it supposed to work? If you live in a multi-judge district say Austin (WD Tex), you get to litigate at home, but if you live say in Del Rio (WD Tex), you might have to go to El Paso -- 6 and a half hours away. Or if all cases challenging state or federal laws are just going to be randomly assigned, you have the prospect of litigants from El Paso having to go to Austin -- 9 hours away.
What this demonstrates is that judges in DC ought not be deciding case assignments in Del Rio.
You miss the point- it only applies if you are trying to get a declaration or injunction against a federal law or executive determination.
I.e., you can file all your normal suits not trying to overturn major federal policies before Judge Kacsmaryk or Judge O'Connor to your heart's content.
Plus if they file in NDTX they’ll have a chance of a good draw anyway. It’s really telling when you look at that bench that certain cases were filed in Amarillo specifically. Things so outlandish they couldn’t risk the possibility of a W appointee.
Do you think those judges do crazy things in run-of-the-mill cases?
Or a state law. Regardless, why shouldn't people in El Paso or Del Rio who have an issue with a federal law or executive pronouncement get to sue at home. Why should they be inconvenienced or more likely forced to drop cases because they can't afford the travel. You shouldn't inconvenience all litigants because you are upset with one judge.
Judge O'Connor is part of the Fort Worth Division which has two regular duty judges and one senior judge. So, your point is what?
Why should they be inconvenienced or more likely forced to drop cases because they can’t afford the travel.
In these days of electronic filing and zoom court hearings, you are wildly overestimating the effect of this even in injunction against US law cases.
About 25 years ago somebody told me his big law firm had just flown a team of ten or so people from NYC to Texas and back to attend a short hearing. No advance purchase, so full list price airfare. I assume their client had deep enough pockets not to notice. Has that practice declined as the courts became computerized or since they discovered conference calls?
Are you making an argument that the main issue here is asymmetrical inconvenience? in good faith???
He misses the point in another way. Nothing says that the solution to this problem has to be that litigants have to travel 6 hours; the solution could be that judges rotate so that it isn't a one judge division.
OK,
JOSH BLACKMAN | 3.13.2024 2:01 AM
Typical long, rambling, nonsensical Blackman hissy fit over a pretty ordinary proposal to improve the functioning of the federal judicial system.
SAMUEL BRAY | 3.13.2024 9:13 AM
Factual, rational, succinct commentary on the benefits of the same proposal, including a polite metaphorical defenestration of Blackman (emphasis added), with the added knife twist of entirely ignoring him:
JOSH BLACKMAN | 3.13.2024 3:54 PM
Upset with Prof. Bray’s Reason, Josh replies in his best, most shrill, Glenn Close voice: I’m not going to be ignored, Sam!…while adding nothing else to what he said the first time.
…and for the rest of us, life goes on.
Should the author really call Matthew Kacsmaryk a "judge"? He's not, you know. He doesn't decide cases by interpreting the law. He's more like an upper-mid-level policy-bureaucrat, a right-wing deep-state administrator. A JINO.
Well, these comments are going down the well-rutted road of bad faith arguments from the Right and common sense from the Left. So I’ve got a non-lawyer’s question on a related topic:
In an earlier thread, someone noted an extraordinarily large percentage of patent cases went to one judge in Texas, Alan D Albright. That struck me as interesting, so I looked-up the judge and found he traveled to conferences on patent litigation and openly solicited business for his court. “Come file with me” seems a pretty bizarre sales pitch from a sitting judge (though put it to music and maybe Sinatra would sing it).
Wouldn’t there be rules against that sorta thing?
Life tenure is a nice thing.
Indeed so. Most indeededly.
I suppose if I have an Achilles heel it’s because I bought it at that same auction.
These posts really are an indictment of federal district court judges. That is the takeaway. I thought CJ Roberts had it right when he said What we have is an extraordinary group of dedicated judges doing their level best to do equal right to those appearing before them.
The federal judiciary is filled with a lot of really smart, and competent people. You know what? Even really smart and competent people will get some decisions wrong. That is the nature of the job. We have a system that works. It is slow. Sometimes unwieldy. But it works.
What is actually being fixed here? Because the message being sent is terrible = two classes of fed dist judges - because reasons.
Congress can change the geography of districts anytime.
Okay so, not a policy, with or without quotes. Not a law. Not legislation. Just the press release that launched a thousand Blackman posts. I feel if Orin Kerr had been an hour quicker with his post there was a slim chance we wouldn’t have to see this one from Josh. Alas, ‘twas not to be.
Well, Samuel Bray but yes, perhaps. On the other hand, as someone noted in a comment to Bray’s post, “…this is an arrow aimed straight at the heart of Josh Blackman.”
Though I don’t know if Sam really aimed his reply at Josh, or if Josh just conveniently happened to be standing in the path of the arrow at the time.
The author says, "Who decides? If any body must inject itself into this mess, it's Congress. And if Congress won't act, as we are often told, it is not for the judiciary to clean up the mess. The way to depoliticize the courts is to depoliticize the courts."
Perhaps the author should familiarize himself with the Conference of Senior Judges, created by Congress in 1922, and codified in 1948 as 28 USC sec. 331, with District Court Judges added in 1957. The Conference was created by Congress to to "serve as the principal policy making body concerned with the administration of the United States Courts."
In short, Congress did exactly what the author said it should do, and the Conference did exactly what Congress created it to do.
Either Professor Blackman did not know that, in which case he would have been hard pressed to get a "C" or better in my own law school class, or he did know but hoped the reader did not, and in that case he would have received an invitation to my office for a conversation.