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Thursday, March 01, 2007
Thomas Sowell :: Townhall.com Columnist
High Court and Low Politics: Part III
by Thomas Sowell
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While there is a tendency to label judges "liberal" or "conservative" -- and the labels may fit, even if somewhat loosely -- the real puzzle are judges who start out one way and move the other way over time.

In the population at large, and even among the intelligentsia, the usual movement over the years has been from left to right. The phrase "radical at twenty and conservative at forty" has been true enough, often enough, to become a cliche.

Most of the leading conservative intellectuals were at least liberal, and often radical, in their youth. That includes Milton Friedman, Friedrich Hayek and the whole neo-conservative movement. In politics, the leading conservative figure of the 20th century -- Ronald Reagan -- was a liberal in his early years.

On the Supreme Court of the United States, however, the movement has been in the opposite direction.

In an outstanding recently published book titled "Supreme Conflict," author Jan Crawford Greenburg traces systematically the leftward movement of Supreme Court justices who were initially part of the conservative wing of that court.

Justice Harry Blackmun began his career on the High Court by voting with his fellow Minnesotan, conservative Chief Justice Warren Burger, so consistently that the media called them the "Minnesota Twins."

Over the years, however, Blackmun moved steadily leftward and established as his judicial legacy the decision in Roe v. Wade that created a "constitutional right" to abortion out of thin air.

Justice Anthony Kennedy likewise began his tenure on the Supreme Court by voting "with Scalia and Rehnquist more than with any other justice," as noted in "Supreme Conflict." The liberal media savaged him as an enemy of civil rights.

Years ago, a judge who had served with Anthony Kennedy, when both of them were judges in California, warned at a social gathering that Kennedy "is not a strong person."

Others warned against Kennedy in Washington, as detailed in "Supreme Conflict," but the Reagan administration went ahead and nominated him anyway. Justice Kennedy's record on the Supreme Court fully justified all these misgivings.

In the face of withering criticism, Kennedy began to move to the left -- not as far left as Blackmun but far enough for some of his later decisions to contradict some of his earlier decisions. He was now lauded in the media as a "centrist," like Sandra Day O'Connor. Continued...

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About The Author
Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institute and author of The Housing Boom and Bust.
 
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eXtreme Term Limits
I'm with you, Andrews, on limiting a person to one federal elective office term per lifetime. The biggest problem I see with it is an unelected bureaucracy that would become even more firmly entrenched and would really run things more than they do now.

Maureen
Good post, well-reasoned.

One thing you forget is that the USSC law clerks who clerk for the justices are YOUNG (and therefor usually fall into the "liberal" column in the ledger). They are the best and brightest, but inexperienced regarding real-world situations.

The clerks do a massive amount of the research and writing and, I suspect, have a modicum of influence. Of course, the ideologues like Ginsberg are so enamored by socialism that NOTHING would sway their decisions, but other justices may pay some attention to their clerks' thoughts on a particular case.

The justices won't say specifically; we just have to read the opinions and try to separate dogma from dicta. (Your government in action)
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