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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.

Justice O'Connor also began her career voting with the High Court's most conservative member at that time -- William Rehnquist -- more than four-fifths of the time. But she too moved leftward over the years, often providing the fifth vote needed by the court's liberal justices to prevail. She too was now lauded in the media.

Although Supreme Court justices have lifetime tenure, precisely in order to give them independence, nothing can give anyone the backbone and character to stand up to criticism or to resist the blandishments of flattery and lionizing.

All the pressures are to move to the left, in accordance with the views of the liberal media and the liberal professors who dominate the law schools.

Judges who stick to the Constitution as it was written and resist the pressures to enact the agenda of the left from the bench will be depicted as narrow, dull, perhaps even stupid or morally lacking. But those who drift with the leftward tide can count on being portrayed as compassionate, brilliant or even profound.

Does this matter to federal judges with lifetime tenure? One such judge, Circuit Court Judge Laurence Silberman, has said flatly, from what he has seen, that it does.

Perhaps the most influential journalist who denigrates conservative judges and lionizes those on the left is New York Times legal reporter Linda Greenhouse.

The susceptibility of judges to such journalistic influence in general was dubbed "the Greenhouse effect," for Linda Greenhouse, in this column 15 years ago but Jan Crawford Greenburg attributes it to Judge Silberman.

He is the one who deserves credit for identifying this judicial weakness, which is more important than coining the phrase.

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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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Spineless?
Not so hard to understand why they moved Left if they were constantly being lambasted by the Press.

The obvious difference is someone with character and a backbone would stick to their principles, despite the barrage.

The Navy calls that Courage.

History has a name also......
It is Integrity.
It is Conviction.
It is Certainty.
It is Honesty.
It is Honor.
It is Veracity.
It is Relability.

Hmmmm, it appears there are several names for Dedication.

Allegiance
Commitment
Loyality
Perseverance
Ardor
Devotedness

Winston Churchill was the one who said you are likely to have a heart at 20 if you were a Liberal but would attain a brain by 40 if you were a conservative. [Paraphrased]

So even the "Keepers of the Faith" are corruptable? Erosion or influnce, it ain't good for the Republic.

Targets of GREAT Opportunity
Supreme Court Justices:
1. Are few in number,
2. Tend to serve for decades,
3. Need not stand for re-election,
4. Possess incredible, nation-sweeping power, arguably greater than any other public officials.

These things make them the Left's preferred targets for "re-education." Given the great extents of time over which the Old Media and other leftist organs can work on them, it should not surprise anyone that few strict-constructionist Justices can resist the relentlessness of the Left's assault on their convictions. Indeed, we should be gratified that Justices Rehnquist, Scalia and Thomas have been so staunch -- and pray that Justices Roberts and Alito demonstrate equal resilience over time.

Is there a cure? Possibly not, as long as the four "target markers" mentioned above persist.

Supreme Court.
I think Mr. Sowell has identified a significant reason for justices moving to the left after they finally arrive on the Supreme Court. The predominant liberal slant of the major media has been "mightier than the sword" in pressuring the Court to uphold it's view.

changes of views
I think Mr. Sowell skipped over a major point too quickly. The right-ward tilt in most peoples lives occurs as they become more self-reliant and have to accept responsibility for their own actions.

In the teens one is the most receptive to the collectivist or socialist ideals because they "sound right". Experience and seeing how and when one can depend upon others in one's private life forces most to the right over time as they accumulate knowledge and goods, and come to realize that maybe the one who earns something should get the use of it (as opposed to compulsive sharing).

Those fields that are the farthest removed from personal accountability tend to be where leftist thought reigns. Has anyone else noticed that private school teachers seem to be further to the left than public school teachers? That militant union members like collective bargaining more than highly skilled individual workers (job advancement and security being more important than wage issues in this case)?

The effective tenure of judges isolates them from having to take responsibility for their action as assuredly as it isolates them from the whims of the current government or societal mood. How, then, to maintain the separation from current fads within society while making them more accountable? I don't know.

Keep in mind that you don't want a president Chevez wannabe overturning all of your justices so he/she/it can impose their own; a straight override is a bad idea.

proof-reading
Private school teachers are more to the right, not the left. I was trying for a rhetorical and presented it as a factual instead. My bad.

This is also why Robert Bork was...
...kept off the bench. He had intellectual horsepower and intestinal fortitude. The Democrats knew they weren't going to be able to influence him with bad press for being an evil conservative.

And this is yet another example of the effect of bias in the media.

Old News
It was 30+ years ago in Harper's Magazine that editor Louis Lapham noted this effect on members of Congress who came to DC with the intent of imposing fiscal restraint only to be excoriated in the press as "insensitive to the needs of the people". Those who moved leftward in their opinions were hailed as "compassionate". Not only is it the adulation of the MSM prized inside the Beltway, but invitations to the "in" cocktail parties are the other highly coveted currency in DC. Shortly after reading this, I originated the word "beltwayitis" to describe the effect on previously sane individuals once they move to the planet Washington DC. Apparently its effect is exerted on all govt officials in direct proportion to the length of time spent there. The only vaccine is unwavering devotion to principle.

Makes no sense
You argue that the freedom of lifetime tenure pressures judges to move to the left. Why doesn't it pressure them to move to the right, as you say is natural as one gets older?

A simpler explination is that being on the court and listening to cases year after year helps justices see the correctness of left wing positions. They also might become more familiar with the constitution. (In a public lecture, Justice Scalia was at a loss to state the 9-th amendment and had to pull out his pocket constitution to check.)

Dr. Sowell's explanation
It appears that Dr.Sowell's explanation ,very astute and concise, was overlooked by some here. He says people generally turn conservative over time but judges, goaded and influenced by the mainstream media(unlike the rest of us regular citizens) tend to the left over time. The media and academia are and have been notoriously one sided to the left. It is hard to resist flattery or condemnation for many people and judges are just people with great intelligence(I hope!). Hopefully, the influence of the MSM is waning.

Maybe the same forces that encourage...
leftist thinking among the media and academia are also at play with the Supremes: a desire to be seen as "accomplishing something." More likely if you are already an "activist." Or, if you become an activist.

The media, academia and judiciary (and others) are also not "in the arena" (in Teddy Roosevelt's sense). They are voyeurs who believe themselves to be more intelligent, more educated, and better than the rest of us.

Unfortunately, intelligence and education are poor substitutes for experience - practical experience, not something obtained from a lot of reading other intellectual's writings.

That practical experience is one of Dr. Sowell's attributes. He did not go right from high school to college to grad school. He spent time in the "real world" as a Marine in the Korean War.

Gene Touchet
Nowhere are caves or privies mentioned in the constitution. What was that about?

Re-read, and try to think about, the phrase "Constitution as it is written." What is the tense of the verb "to be"? Is it not the present tense? Then, would it not include the ammendments, which corrected the "three-fifths of a person" thing?

"More perfect union" may be a process, but it is grammatically incorrect. Being "more perfect" is like being "more unique," "more pregnant," or "blindly and stupidly leftist."

Gene T
What are you blatherin about? Of course we no longer count "three fifths of all other persons", it is called an amendment! That is the only way the contitution changes. So we must "stick to the Constitution at it was(is) written" or else we have no constitution. Any other arguement is braindead!

Gene Touchet
I don't know why you mentioned cave dwellers or privies in cities but your reference to three-fifths of all other persons is right on; the US Constitution, as written and as it now exists, is not perfect. You seem to miss the real point of your example though; this bad compromise was later overridden by the XIVth Amendment and not by judicial fiat.

Yes, our "more perfect union" is (and always will be) a work in progress. But it is, according to the compact under which we live, the job of the judiciary to interpret that compact and not to change it or create new law.

To Shrinque
I was scrolling through the posts here and read that unseemly rant by Gene Touchet and thinking of the proper responce when I saw you post.

Your response covered almost everything that I was going to say. Good job. The only thing I would add is that the 3/5 portion of the Constitution was the work of the then "Northern Liberals". The Southern politicians wanted the slaves to be counted as "whole" people.

Gene Touchet
You mention the 3/5ths rule in the Constitution as being less than perfect. You are correct. But you probably have no idea why the framers wanted to count slaves as 3/5ths of a person. It was not, as is commonly blathered by the race-baiters, as tool to denigrate blacks. First, there were white slaves in those days. It was an attempt by non-slave states and by those founding fathers who viewed slavery as a moral evil but as something that existed and was well-entrenched to lessen the influence of slave-owners. The 3/5ths clause is for purposes of apportioning representation. If all slaves had counted as a full person, slave states would have wielded too much influence by virtue of having too many representatives in Congress. Many of those founding fathers opposed to slavery wanted to make sure that they would have the leverage, even nearly 90 years before the Civil War and the Emancipation Proclamation, to limit the power of the slave owners, not the slaves.

Vic
Thanks. I was going to include the Northern democrats info, but I was trying to keep it short.

And I should have said "more blindly and stupidly leftist."

Conviction awnd Reliability
These comments show why Justice Clarence Thomas should be admired.

thrilled o'connor is gone

I cheered the day sandra day retired. What an intellectual light-weight!!!!

Let's see, affirmative action is constitutional today, but might not be 25 years from now. Huh? You mean the constitutionality of a law depends on how long its been on the books? I never knew that...

And who was the mental giant who appointed her to the iraq study commission?


One more thing about Gene's post
Mr. Touchet ignores the fact that the constitution has an amending provision to deal with the very issue of change.

If only the supreme court justices would cut the "living constitution" crap, perhaps some of the more divisive issues (abortion?) could be solved politically.

The Constitution and the courts
Hi, I was particulalry distressed by Justice O'Connor's opinion in the business of eminent domain. It is a business and it seems that for her, the desire of an administration in a city to increase revenue trumped property rights. One of the terrible aspects of slavery is the restriction of the right to own and use property.

By general agreement, there are some limitations as to use of property, such as nuisance ordinances but the concept that the propeerty of one private individual may be seized through the power of eminent domain and handed to another person or corporation for private gain, so that municipal coffers may be filled is a travesty. I doubt if the due process clause was ever intended to cover such greed.

moving left with age
I think there's another reason some justices have moved left over time. Actually, I've seen this phenomenon in many older people (especially men) - while conservative in middle years, they grow more liberal and emotional with age. Perhaps its the basic "mellowing" that happens to many men with age. I don't know for sure. But this hasn't been discussed nearly as much as the change from liberal to conservative as one goes from from 20 to 40.

Justice Thomas
Notice how some on the left have recently attacked Justice Clarence Thomas as "unintelligent" and "unqualified"? Funny how the more right one leabs, the less intelligent the left believes you to be.

Does support one of Dr. Sowell's contentions, however.

Liberalgoodman proves my point
Note how Scalia is a dolt who can't recall the 9th amendment according to our august commentator?

Again, the left insists there are two types in the world, the left wing and idiots.

Not exactly a "compassionate" position for the political philosophy of "I feel your pain".

"Living" Constitution Is Very Scary

It has given us a Supreme Court that has arrogated to itself the position of final arbiter on ALL THINGS, political or legal. That little power grab has given rise to welfare, social "security," minimum wage, the nationalizing of States' prerogatives, affirmative action, random, whimsical interpretations, etc., etc., etc.

The concept of check and balance would seem to argue for some sort of veto mechansim that could be applied to Supreme Court decisions.

Vic
Actually 3/5ths was partly northern and partly southern.

The south wanted slaves to count as 1 person for representation and as nothing for approtionment of taxes. The northern abolitionists wanted the opposite. To count them as 3/5ths for both apportionment of representation and taxes was a compromise on a number of fronts.

BlueBustard
I have to agree. If you look at economic studies, the funny thing is, it doesn't so much matter what laws there are (so long as a minimum of protections exist), but that those laws are consistent.

It appears the worst thing one can do to a nation is to have laws which change frequently, or are inconsistently applied. It appears that the unpredictability of law is (in terms of economics) one of the most harmful possibilities one can face.

So, what do the liberals in the US do? They espouse the doctrine of a "living", arbitrary, unpredictable constitution. And they call it progress.

Hate to tell them, but every 3d world dictator and every past absolute monarch had a "living" constitution as well, as it was his whim that ruled. Our founders thought moving away from rule-by-whim was a good thing. Todays liberlas seem to disagree.

What then should we do ...
... besides all of this bitching and moaning.

I think that a Constitutional amendment requiring confirmation of Supreme Court justices by the Senate every 10 years would give them a little backbone ... and give the MSM a heart attack.

The Amendment should not allow hearing or committee votes in the Senate. It should require an up or down vote within 3 months of each justices 10 anniversary since last confirmed.

Justices who don't get a majority vote would serve until a new justice is confirmed.

What Needs to Be Done
Congress dcoes haved a check on Supreme Court justices via the impeachment process.

Simple solution
It would require a Constitutional Ammendment, but there's a simple solution for clearing out the Supreme Court of those tempted to move Left: limit their time in office.

Say, for example, that every new Justice plus every justice for which this does not yet apply may serve for one term of sixteen years (A number I pulled out of thin air, but it would ensure that the Justice sees at least three presidencies). Further stipulate that should a justice's term expire after a Presidential election in which the sitting President will be removed from office, no replacement justice will be nominated until after the new president has been inaugurated.

Something like that could be structured to not affect most justices, but prevent the 20-30 year careerists from gaining too much power.

Rick
“While conservative in middle years, they grow more liberal and emotional with age. Perhaps its the basic "mellowing" that happens to many men with age.”

It’s called senility. If your hypothesis is correct, I’m going to go ahead and put a clause in my living will that states that if I start espousing liberal beliefs, they should “pull the plug.” We'll call it a “late term abortion” or “assisted suicide” so that the liberals won't cry.

Mr. "Right's" 3/5 analysis...
neglects one key point. While Southerners certainly wanted slaves to count for purposes of Congressional representation, they did NOT want them to count at all when determining taxes to be collected by the Federal government. This is why the 3/5 Compromise was developed - so that slaves would count as 3/5 of a person in both cases. Oh and there was no need to limit the power of the slaves - because when the Compromise was written, the states had complete conterol over slavery within their jurisdiction. Oh yeah, and the slaves had none either.


Happy Jake
Actually, since we stole most of our government from Rome, why not limit the judges, to a censor's term of 10 years?

We can prevent it from falling on election years by saying the appointment must always occur in an odd-numbered year, thus never on an election year.

The Problem Is The Mass Man

Apathetic, inattentive, ignorant, and, frequently, downright stupid MassMen go to the polls and vote based on a thought process that only demagogic politicians can understand. Once they became aware of their ability to vote themselves a share of the national treasure, demagogues became Kings.

Public "edjamacation" only serves to prolong the agony.

On another note, any Supreme Court decision must be enforced by the Administrative branch. A president with principles can REFUSE to enforce any given Supreme Court decision, and further instruct the DOJ to inundate the court with opportunities to reconsider and "get it right."

Andrews
Like I said, I pulled the number out of thin air. 10 years works for me, too. I do, though, think we need to limit turnover, as well. I don't think it's such a good idea to have a brand new set of justices every other President. If you get two in a row of the same party, you could easily have a Court that will rubber-stamp any initiatives that President wants, especially if he also has a friendly Congress. That ended up happening a lot under FDR, which is how most entitlement programs came to be, including Social Security.

Judicial activism
Our country’s founders mandated that everything that can be removed from the political process should be. [Combined 9th and 10th Amendments, “The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people. The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”]

The segregation portion of the Tenth Amendment (States' Rights) was invalidated by Amendments Thirteen, Fourteen and Fifteen. The rest of it remained in effect until unnumbered amendments were illegally passed by five or more Supreme Court Justices in various rulings. These rulings are now precedents and therefore the illegal law of the land. They have also established the precedent that any five Supreme Court Justices can amend the "living document" anytime they choose. Left-wingers need to worry that any five right-wingers have this same illegally obtained power now.

How about
power corrupts, for an explanation of Justices ignoring the law and issuing their own ideas as superior to the lawmaker's decisions?

Oconner was a dissenter in Kelo
She voted with the good guys that time.

http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/04-108.ZD.html


Living document
We do not have to call our Constitution a living document written in invisible ink on Silly Putty for it to evolve through the years. There is an amendment process in place, and none of the options allow any five judges on even our highest court to amend it anytime they choose.

The Greenhouse Effect
I never heard the term "the Greenhouse Effect" as it applies to Linda Greenhouse, but I think it accentuates the point that the term "Lifetime appointment" needs to be adjusted. I don't think that SC justices should be held to the political pressures of the day. I think it should be quite difficult to have a justice removed, but I think a provision should be made to have some of these inept justices should be held to account for their decisions. My resolution is that we develop a non-partisan and government supported judicial watch. This group scores the justices on let's say a four to six year basis. Based on this score, they submit a vote of no confidence to Congress where a 3/4ths majority must be reached, followed by the Senate and the President. The justices have accumulated too much power in our day and age with no accountability to the people. This has to change to one degree or another, or the O'Connors and Kennedys will only occur more often throughout our history.

Time to clean house
Are these black robed deities untouchable?
Is there no redress for dealing with their ungodly decisions?
For a body of men who deny the primacy of God in our nation's affairs, when will there be a challenge to their god-like status?
It is long overdue that these men be confonted and opposed.
The legitimacy of these men has long evaporated and it is high time that Congress take action to defang this bunch of reprobates who in the name of law and order deny the foundations of all ethics, ie God's law.

aging and issues
Once again sweeping generalities are being made about what is “right” and “left” without separating the issues. The main reason I’ve seen many move from the left to the right with age is because they learn the limitations of government. They understand economics, ownership, individual rights, the free market, and individual rights more comprehensively. They understand socialism is a nice theory that doesn’t work. They want less government intervention, not more. That being the case, it would make sense that people may become more conservative about taxes, guns, etc., but not necessarily issues such as abortion, gay marriage, etc. It’s social issues that define judges. Did Milton Friedman & Friedrich Hayek move to the right on social issues, also, or just economics? Maybe they did, I really don’t know.

This is obviously not consistent in every case across the board, like Kelo, but may explain why an O’Connor would vote against it.

I’m not saying what’s right or wrong, but merely providing a possible explanation to Dr. Sowell’s puzzlement. I generally despise the media, but I’m not convinced they’re the culprit in this case.

Alternate idea
NOt sure if ti will fix the supreme court, but I have an idea for fixing the rest of the gov't.

Any single person can be elected once in their life, for one term, to any elective federal office. One office for one term, and that's it. You serve 2 years in the House, you can never run for another office. You were in the Senate for 6 years, forget about being president.

It would certainly keep the office holders from using their terms to campaing for reelction, or election to another office. And it would cut the legs out from under the McCain-Fiengold Incumbent Protection Act. And it would make life hard for lobbyists, who would have to get leverage with several hundred new politicinas every two years.

And, honestly, would a bunch of incoming newbies with no experience do any worse than our "professional" legislators?

Now, to figure out how to fix the court.

solutions may be worse than problem
Let's all do ourselves a favor, take a breather, and make sure we don't prescribe a "solution" for this problem that isn't worse than the problem itself.

I think that there is no reason to go and tamper with the terms of judges, or any of these other fixes that people are bandying about. Keep in mind, if conservatives could use these tools to remove liberals from the bench, then vice-versa might also be true!

The solution to the trouble of weak, approval-seeking judges is simple: nominate the right people. They probably won't be the "stealth" candidates. They probably will cause, by their very nomination, the whole liberal apparatus, from the man-on-the-street, to the press and academia, to take to the streets in anger. It'll probably be a long, difficult fight in which many supposed "conservatives" will wither when it becomes too difficult or unpopular. But that's how you sort out the men from the boys--trial by fire.

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)

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.
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