Five
Democratic senators taking on the Supreme Court
A tone of ritualized
obsequiousness pervades most briefs filed in the Supreme Court of the United
States. Judges are powerful and at the Supreme Court level, unaccountable.
They wield enormous,
arbitrary power not just over litigants but over the lawyers who appear in their
courtrooms. So when most lawyers speak to a court, they speak with a painful
awareness of the arbitrary control separating the bar from the bench.
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse
(D-RI), however, is not most lawyers.
Whitehouse is one of
five senators (the others are Sens. Mazie Hirono (D-HI), Richard Blumenthal
(D-CT), Dick Durbin (D-IL), and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY)) who filed a brief
earlier this week in a Second Amendment case the Supreme Court’s Republican
majority could use to dismantle what remains of America’s gun regulations.
Whitehouse is also the
lead (and only) counsel on the brief.
The brief itself is less a
legal document than a declaration of war. Though parts of it argue that the
high court lacks jurisdiction over this case, New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. City of New York,
the thrust of the brief is that the Supreme Court is dominated by political
hacks selected by the Federalist Society, and promoted by the National Rifle
Association — and that if those hacks don’t watch out, the American people are
going to rebel against them.
New York State Rifle, Whitehouse writes, “did not emerge from a
vacuum.” Rather, “the lead petitioner’s parent organization, the National Rifle
Association (NRA), promoted the confirmation (and perhaps selection) of
nominees to this Court who, it believed, would ‘break the tie’ in Second
Amendment cases.”
That promotional effort
includes $1.2 million Whitehouse says the NRA spent on television
advertisements supporting the confirmation of Brett Kavanaugh.
Similarly, Whitehouse writes that “the Federalist Society’s Executive Vice President,
Leonard Leo, has been linked to a million-dollar contribution to the NRA’s lobbying arm, and to a $250 million network largely funded by anonymous donors to promote right-wing causes and judicial nominees.”
Having portrayed the
court’s Republican majority as the product of shady interest groups and big
spenders, Whitehouse then paints these insiders as enemies of an American
consensus — complete with quotations from a recent poll.
Today, fifty-five
percent of Americans believe the Supreme Court is “mainly motivated by
politics” (up five percent from last year); fifty-nine percent believe the
Court is “too influenced by politics”; and a majority now believes the “Supreme
Court should be restructured in order to reduce the influence of politics.”
And Whitehouse concludes
the brief with a threat. “The Supreme Court is not well,” he writes, “and the
people know it. Perhaps the Court can heal itself before the public demands it
be ‘restructured in order to reduce the influence of politics’.”
This is, to say the
least, not the sort of argument lawyers typically present to a court. Judicial
legitimacy flows from the myth that judges are
above politics.
Lawyers normally take care not to question that myth, because they do not want to anger a judge and because a lawyer’s own ability to make a living flows from their client’s belief that law exists separately from politics.
Lawyers normally take care not to question that myth, because they do not want to anger a judge and because a lawyer’s own ability to make a living flows from their client’s belief that law exists separately from politics.
But, as the polling
cited by Whitehouse demonstrates, the myth of the politically agnostic court is
collapsing fast.
Here’s an telling
example: a 2014 review of Obamacare cases by
the conservative Washington Times found that “Democratic appointees ruled in
favor of Obamacare more than 90 percent of the time, while Republican
appointees ruled against it nearly 80 percent of the time.”
In cases involving
America’s most politically charged law, in other words, the best predictor of a
judge’s vote isn’t some abstract question about judicial philosophy. It’s
whether the judge is a Democrat or a Republican.
Simply put, there’s a
reason why Senate Republicans held a seat on the Supreme Court open for more
than a year until a Republican president could fill it. Partisan control
matters a great deal.
It’s the difference
between a constitutional ban on gerrymandering and the decision the Republican
majority handed down last June, which held that partisan gerrymandering cannot be
questioned by federal judges. It’s the difference between a
robust Voting Rights Act and skeletal voting-rights protections
picked clean by the Supreme Court.
And, as Whitehouse
correctly notes, it’s the difference between a nation that can keep deadly weapons
out of the hands of murderers, and a nation where guns are largely unregulated.
The Whitehouse brief
provoked predictable outrage from conservative outlets. The National Review’s
David French calls it “the most malicious Supreme Court brief
I’ve ever seen.”
“The brief is so outside
legal norms,” French claims, “that, had I drafted it as a member of the Supreme
Court bar, I’d be concerned about facing legal sanction for
recklessly impugning the integrity of the Court.”
Perhaps. But you know
what was also outside of legal norms? A sitting judge of the United States
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit angrily confronting
senators who credibly accused him of trying to rape Christine Blasey Ford — and
then threatening revenge against those Senate Democrats. The Whitehouse brief
is best read as several prominent Democrats’ response to “what goes around comes around.”
The decision to lock
Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland out of the high court, and the decisions
to muscle Judges Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh onto that court, are the kind
of tactics that exposes the molten core of partisan politics at the heart of
the Supreme Court’s high-minded rhetoric.
Neither Gorsuch nor
Kavanuagh, moreover, possesses even the second-hand democratic legitimacy that
normally attaches to presidential appointees. Both men were nominated by a
president who lost the popular vote, and
were confirmed by a bloc of senators who represent less than half of the
country.
The judiciary, Alexander
Hamilton wrote in the Federalist Papers, has “no influence over either the
sword or the purse; no direction either of the strength or of the wealth of the
society; and can take no active resolution whatever.”
Its power flows entirely
from the widespread sense that its decisions are legitimate. Courts “may truly
be said to have neither FORCE nor WILL, but merely judgment; and must
ultimately depend upon the aid of the executive arm even for the efficacy of
its judgments.”
In other words,
Republicans may come to find that by seizing control of the judiciary through
constitutional hardball, they did so much damage to their prize that it is no
longer worth having.
The Whitehouse brief is
an early warning sign that Democratic elected officials are, at the very least,
ambivalent about whether they should obey courts that are increasingly seen as
illegitimate. If those courts push too hard, that ambivalence could harden into
something that will do permanent damage to judicial power.