Saturday, March 11, 2006

Debate Leads to More Law, Less Politics?

This article by Terry Eastland ends with the following interesting comment on the effect CJ Roberts is having on the Court:

"The other day Justice Breyer told an Alabama audience that the justices discuss cases more under Roberts than they did under Rehnquist. Roberts is surely responsible for that, and it marks an important change.

Justices Stevens and Scalia have both complained over the years about the conferences held on the Fridays of weeks with oral arguments. It is then that the justices at least tentatively decide cases, and yet under Rehnquist the justices typically did little more than declare their votes. For Roberts to invite discussion means that Roberts himself has to come to the conference table fully prepared. That's not hard to imagine. But the other justices have to come prepared as well, or risk embarrassment.

Over time, the Roberts effect may produce not only larger majorities and more stable rulings but also a Court that, thanks to conferences that really are conferences, pays more attention to working out the relevant law and less to mere politics. The distinction between law and politics is, of course, precisely what Roberts (and Samuel Alito) insisted upon during their confirmation hearings, and it lies at the heart of judicial conservatism. The prospect of the continuing advancement of that philosophy is a happy one, and a reason to say hail to this particular chief."

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Interesting.

When I (with class) met with JR, I asked him if he was making any changes procedurally "to help the court better fulfil its mission". He thought, and said no...maybe he doesnt see this as significant, but I share your hopes for a more stable court.

Anonymous said...

Aave, holy s--- man, its a comment not an argument. take it at face value, you can disagree but you dont need to deconstruct it.

Your whole post is flawed.

Anonymous said...

Fair enough Dave, just this didnt seem like the most appropriate opportunity to do so. Again, we are talking about an obervation about the court and what is oviously just a hypothesis thereon. I dont think there is any attempt to "make a case" regarding its accuracy, thus no reason to discredit it.

Shelby said...

This is an encouraging sign. As a mere 1L, I've already read quite a few opinions where it seems that the majority and the dissent are missing each others' points. In others, both have gaps in logic that make neither argument appealing. Maybe more discourse would reduce these problems.

As for the justices being prepared to discuss, even people with lifetime tenure have dignity and egos. No one wants to be the guy who doesn't know what he's talking about. Peer pressure is a powerful incentive, even if there are no formal penalties for being unprepared.

brey said...

Terima kasih sudah mengizinkan saya untuk berkomentar disini, artikel anda sangat bagus sekali. izinkan kami untuk menshare nya ke web kami di penis pembesar obat
atas izinnya kami haturkan terima kasi, semoga situs anda dan kami semakin maju dan berada di peringkat pertama google.