Sunday, June 10, 2012

The Growing Unpopularity of the U. S. Supreme Court

A new survey says some unpleasant things about the justices of the U. S. Supreme Court.  While there's lots of blame to go around, much of the criticism focuses on the justices blatant injection of their own political and personal beliefs into their decisions.  The chief offenders?  The far right ideologues like Scalia, Thomas and Alito who do not even make an attempt to appear open minded and unbiased.  Indeed, some 75% 0f the survey respondents accused the justices of a lack of impartiality.  And the problem is getting worse with the GOP members/conservatives on the Court, especially as the justices age and become more out of touch with the changing demographics and social mores of the nation.  Like it or not, it is not possible to turn the clock back to 1950 no matter how much Scalia and the "Uncle Tom" like Clarence Thomas strive to do so.  Yet these justices refuse to protect the rights of minorities and the powerless.  A piece in The Daily Beast looks at the Court's growing credibility problem and diminishing prestige.  Here are highlights:

You know the definition of a federal judge? It's someone who went to law school with his or her senator.  Yes, many judges are very smart people, but they don’t get appointed to the federal bench because they have the greatest legal minds. They get to be judges because they are competent and well connected.

So the New York Times–CBS News poll released Friday—finding that three out of four Americans believe Supreme Court justices have their decisions influenced by their personal and political beliefs—should come as no surprise.

This has been true for more than 200 years, but clearly something new has happened. A generation ago, two thirds of Americans approved of the way the court was doing its job. Today, according to the Times poll, the figure is 44 percent. A 23-point drop in an approval rating over 25 years doesn't just happen spontaneously—something causes it.
Two connected factors help explain the court's precipitous plunge.  The first is that this is the most entrenched court in American history. The average tenure of the five most senior Justices—Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas, Ginsburg and Breyer—is more than 21 years. This is the highest number ever recorded. Put another way, these five justices have served on average longer than five presidential terms.
This is important because justices, like all human beings, are products of their generation. It's one thing for a Justice's personal views to influence his or her decisions, but we have a court dominated by life-tenured justices whose views were shaped during a time when nearly a quarter of our population was not yet born.

The generation gap becomes clearer every day. For example, there is great anticipation as to whether the Supreme Court will weigh in on the question of gay marriage. But for most of the youngest quarter of Americans, this is not an issue at all. It is as obvious to today’s young Americans that gays should have the right to marry as it was to young Americans in 1960 that blacks and whites should be treated equally.
Which brings us to the second factor responsible for the court's loss of prestige. Over the past decade, the court has stopped doing its job, and the people have noticed.  There has always been a debate over the appropriateness of judicial review. In a democracy, how can we justify a decision by a group of unelected judges to strike down a law supported by the majority?
Implicit in this question is that the most troubling thing about judicial review is that judges are interfering with the will of the people. But what has happened over the past decade is that rather than protecting the minority, the Supreme Court instead safeguards the interests of the rich and powerful.
In the course of American history, the most infamous Supreme Court decisions have been those where the justices have sided with the economically and politically powerful to squash the hopes and aspirations of the comparatively weak. In the 19th century, for example, the court upheld racial segregation, denied blacks the right even to invoke the judicial process, and permitted states to prevent women from practicing law. In the twentieth century, it nullified efforts to protect the economically vulnerable and upheld internment of the Japanese during World War II. Each of these decisions now stands as embarrassment.
Beginning in the middle of the last century, however, the court began to safeguard the rights of the least powerful. In this sense, unlike the current court, the Justices were protecting the rights and interests of citizens who were not from their same economic or social class.  

Over the past decade, this orientation has been stood on its head, and the court has taken to safeguarding the interests of its own social class. The court has backtracked on abortion, saying it needs to protect women from themselves. It has prevented states from rectifying the injuries caused by centuries of racial discrimination. It has shielded pharmaceutical companies from having to pay damages to people who have been grievously injured by their products. And it has helped destroy the political process by making it possible for corporations and wealthy Americans to talk so loudly that they drown out everyone else.

Friday’s poll doesn’t reveal the existence of a new phenomenon, but the fact that people are now noticing an old phenomenon. And what this in turn reveals is simply that the justices are out of touch.

Candidly, as an attorney, I have almost zero respect for the far right justices.  They are turning the concept of justice upside down and gutting the constitutional rights of minorities and favoring the rich and powerful and those who are increasingly religious extremists when compared to society as a whole. 

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