Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Don't Try to Pick a Bridge Builder

By Mike Dorf

One of the supposed desiderata of a Supreme Court nominee is the ability to build consensus for a position.  According to what is becoming conventional wisdom, people interested in seeing the Court move to the left (or right) would do better with a moderately liberal (or conservative) Justice who can attract swing Justices than with a firebrand who will cast votes that are individually farther left (or right) but who will alienate those in the middle, and thus move the Court as a whole in the other direction.  Here I want to question the ability of any President to act on this supposed wisdom.

To begin, the current Court doesn't have swing Justices.  It has one swing Justice, Anthony Kennedy.  On the issues that exercise political activists (e.g., abortion, affirmative action, gun control, school prayer, detainees), as Kennedy goes, so goes the Court.  Thus, a President interested in reaching other members of the Court is really simply interested in reaching Justice Kennedy.  How?  A President might try naming someone known to have Justice Kennedy's ear or some other pre-existing relationship with him--a former law clerk, say.  But that's a very short list of people who are probably unconfirmable and otherwise not ideal nominees.  And anyway, the move would be so obvious as likely to backfire when Justice Kennedy realizes, as he would just about instantly, that the new Justice had been named to the Court specifically to woo him.  Other approaches to the same end seem equally silly.  Suppose the swing Justice had some particular hobby--playing tennis, for example.  The President could name another tennis player in the hope that the new Justice would bond with the swing Justice over tennis, but what are the odds?  Justice Stevens is a tennis player, as was the late Chief Justice Rehnquist.  So far as I am aware, neither had any special influence over the other as a result of their shared interest in the game.

A President might, alternatively, seek a Justice with experience working well with others.  This is potentially useful advice as a principle of exclusion: Don't name a Justice who is a known jerk.  Reportedly, Felix Frankfurter annoyed his colleagues by lecturing and condescending to them.  This probably cost him votes.  Various writers have suggested that Justice Scalia has sometimes had the same effect on his colleagues, but I'm dubious.  He's personable and charming.  True, his opinions and dissents can be strongly worded, but that's likely to be dismissed by colleagues as simply, as it has been reported, "Nino being Nino."  In any event, no one whose name has been floated thus far comes close to failing what Bob Sutton colorfully calls the "No Asshole Rule."

Is there, then, some experience that would demonstrate extraordinary ability to get along with people of different views?  Arguably Elena Kagan's successful stint as Dean of Harvard Law School--when the school broke its  ideological logjam over faculty appointments--shows her to have what it takes.  But then it wasn't Kagan's job to persuade any of her Harvard colleagues to change their views on any substantive issues.  Indeed, quite the opposite: She succeeded by making clear that diverse viewpoints were welcome.  Meanwhile, the appellate judges on the list have had to get along with judges of different views too.  Here perhaps we could use some number-crunching: Did conservative judges on panels with Judge Wood, Judge Garland, or Judge Thomas swing liberal more often than when on panels with other, equally liberal judges?  (White House: If you're reading this, assign an intern to the research task, pronto!)

The idea of swinging the middle Justice(s) is sometimes invoked as a justification for naming a politician but note that here we run into a different problem: The politicians on the presumed medium-sized list--Jennifer Granholm and Janet Napolitano--both have had careers as executive officials in which they would have had people working for them (and now they work for the President), but unlike legislators, they didn't have colleagues with independent and equal power bases.  They probably have generic political skills but nothing that's obviously an advantage over the skills possessed by the other medium-listers.  And Granholm was born in Canada!

So bottom line: President Obama should make sure he doesn't name another Justice McReynolds but beyond that it's hard to see that he will be able to predict who is likely to be the most influential.

6 comments:

Paul Scott said...

GWB had it right. Consensus building is a short-term and losing tactic. Obama should nominate extreme liberals, push them through, and go for the long game. Five true liberals on the court will actually change things. It is achievable (as the conservatives have shown), but not in a single Presidency.

Sherry F. Colb said...

I see that Paul has migrated to the dark side. :-)

Bob Hockett said...

Or, if the Court is destined to continue going Manichean as it seems to have done over the last two or three decades, the bright side!

Paul Scott said...

I should be more clear. It is, I think, analogous to the prisoner's dilemma. I think moderates and consensus building are good. I think when both sides go that route (both in Legislation and Judicial picks) then both sides (and the country as a whole) get the largest gains. When one side, however, has completely abandoned the strategy, that side will win - consistently - until the other side also abandons it.

Sam Rickless said...

Every nomination is an opportunity to educate the public about the right way, and the wrong way, to interpret the constitution. The prez should pick someone who is principled (in the right way) and whose intelligence and knowledge will make the naysayers feel small. In today's NYTimes, Geoffrey Stone makes the point that we need to explain why the label of judicial activism applies to justices of all interpretive persuasions. We need to explain why the image of calling balls and strikes is misleading if it is meant as an endorsement of ideological neutrality. We need to explain why the application of moral theory to judicial decisionmaking is not tantamount to deciding cases based on one's own personal predilections.

The best justice to put on the court is not always one who has great interpersonal skills (though this surely helps), or one who is an ideological wet rag (somewhere in the middle with no firm ideological signature), or someone who can woo Kennedy (Kennedy clearly thinks for himself, and proudly so), but rather someone whose intellectual integrity and breadth of legal knowledge will shine even if the court makes wrong turns. A great justice's influence extends far beyond the controversies in front of her, for her opinions speak not just to the living but to future generations. We read Harlan's dissent in Plessy because it was great. We read Murphy's dissent in Korematsu because he had it right.

Unknown said...


監視器


監視器材


手機訊號強波器


亂剪
 雷門刺青

京王監視器
 大哥大訊號強波器  網站SEO

Stella亂剪旗艦店

網站排名首頁