Christopher L. Eisgruber: Justice Stevens will not be easily replaced
[Christopher L. Eisgruber is provost of Princeton University and the author of "The Next Justice: Repairing the Supreme Court Appointments Process." He clerked for Justice John Paul Stevens in 1989 and 1990.]
President Obama has said that he will seek to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens with someone who has "similar qualities."
If the president is looking for another brilliant lawyer to join the court's liberal wing, he might succeed. If, however, he wants to find someone with the kind of quirky independence that Stevens demonstrated for much of his judicial career, the president has little or no chance. The constitutional landscape has changed too much since Stevens was appointed in 1975.
Stevens is America's last pre-Roe justice — in other words, the last justice chosen before the abortion issue reshaped the Supreme Court appointment process. In strictly chronological terms, of course, Stevens was appointed two years after the court decided Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 case that first protected the abortion right. But when Stevens faced the Senate, Roe had not yet become ground zero in America's culture wars.
Capital punishment was the big issue at the Stevens confirmation. Sens. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts and John Tunney of California grilled Stevens about his views on the death penalty. Several senators interrogated him about the government's power to tap phones or spy on civilians. No senator, however, asked Stevens a single question about abortion. The Senate confirmed him, 98 to 0.
During his first 15 years on the court, Stevens defied ideological categorization. He voted with the liberals in cases about privacy rights and school prayer but with the conservatives in some cases about affirmative action and indecent speech. He staked out a middle position on the death penalty. In abortion cases, Stevens agreed with his conservative colleagues that states could prohibit teenage girls from getting abortions without their parents' consent.
When I clerked for Stevens in 1989-90, his idiosyncratic jurisprudence frustrated the law clerks working for Thurgood Marshall and William Brennan, the court's two most liberal justices.
The Marshall clerks posted a caricature of Stevens, festooned with doodles mocking his Midwestern persona and middle-of-the-road jurisprudence, on their office bulletin board. His unpredictable votes seemed to irk them even more than the resolute conservatism of William Rehnquist and Antonin Scalia, who at least knew which side they were on.
Stevens did not think judges should be on one side or the other of an ideological fight. He was a true judicial maverick.
Nowadays that word gets misused by the likes of Sarah Palin, who toes the ideological line every step of the way but calls herself a maverick because she likes to say outrageous things. Palin is a provocateur, not a maverick. Stevens resisted ideological ruts and blazed his own trail.
American politics changed, and so did the court. In the late 1970s, the religious right became a major force in American politics. Ronald Reagan promised to appoint justices who would overturn Roe. Interest groups on the left and the right drew battle lines every time a Supreme Court vacancy occurred.
From then on, no president — Republican or Democrat — could choose Supreme Court nominees without paying attention to the abortion issue. And no nominee could survive the confirmation hearings without answering — or, more often, deflecting — a barrage of questions about Roe.
As a result, ideological categories hardened. The abortion issue came to define the court. If you know where a justice stands on abortion today, you can deduce, with very few exceptions, his or her positions on federalism, gun control, affirmative action, gay rights, campaign finance, tuition vouchers for religious schools — the list goes on and on. In 1975, that was not so...
Read entire article at LA Times
President Obama has said that he will seek to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens with someone who has "similar qualities."
If the president is looking for another brilliant lawyer to join the court's liberal wing, he might succeed. If, however, he wants to find someone with the kind of quirky independence that Stevens demonstrated for much of his judicial career, the president has little or no chance. The constitutional landscape has changed too much since Stevens was appointed in 1975.
Stevens is America's last pre-Roe justice — in other words, the last justice chosen before the abortion issue reshaped the Supreme Court appointment process. In strictly chronological terms, of course, Stevens was appointed two years after the court decided Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 case that first protected the abortion right. But when Stevens faced the Senate, Roe had not yet become ground zero in America's culture wars.
Capital punishment was the big issue at the Stevens confirmation. Sens. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts and John Tunney of California grilled Stevens about his views on the death penalty. Several senators interrogated him about the government's power to tap phones or spy on civilians. No senator, however, asked Stevens a single question about abortion. The Senate confirmed him, 98 to 0.
During his first 15 years on the court, Stevens defied ideological categorization. He voted with the liberals in cases about privacy rights and school prayer but with the conservatives in some cases about affirmative action and indecent speech. He staked out a middle position on the death penalty. In abortion cases, Stevens agreed with his conservative colleagues that states could prohibit teenage girls from getting abortions without their parents' consent.
When I clerked for Stevens in 1989-90, his idiosyncratic jurisprudence frustrated the law clerks working for Thurgood Marshall and William Brennan, the court's two most liberal justices.
The Marshall clerks posted a caricature of Stevens, festooned with doodles mocking his Midwestern persona and middle-of-the-road jurisprudence, on their office bulletin board. His unpredictable votes seemed to irk them even more than the resolute conservatism of William Rehnquist and Antonin Scalia, who at least knew which side they were on.
Stevens did not think judges should be on one side or the other of an ideological fight. He was a true judicial maverick.
Nowadays that word gets misused by the likes of Sarah Palin, who toes the ideological line every step of the way but calls herself a maverick because she likes to say outrageous things. Palin is a provocateur, not a maverick. Stevens resisted ideological ruts and blazed his own trail.
American politics changed, and so did the court. In the late 1970s, the religious right became a major force in American politics. Ronald Reagan promised to appoint justices who would overturn Roe. Interest groups on the left and the right drew battle lines every time a Supreme Court vacancy occurred.
From then on, no president — Republican or Democrat — could choose Supreme Court nominees without paying attention to the abortion issue. And no nominee could survive the confirmation hearings without answering — or, more often, deflecting — a barrage of questions about Roe.
As a result, ideological categories hardened. The abortion issue came to define the court. If you know where a justice stands on abortion today, you can deduce, with very few exceptions, his or her positions on federalism, gun control, affirmative action, gay rights, campaign finance, tuition vouchers for religious schools — the list goes on and on. In 1975, that was not so...