As I explained yesterday
here at the American Spectator, Justice Alito’s
dissenting opinion in Snyder v. Phelps, the military
funeral picketing case, has a lot more force of law than one might
expect, given that Alito was a minority of one.
Alito’s compelling dissent shows, I think, the importance of
putting great and powerful legal minds on the high court, because
even when a lone minority of one, an intellectually powerful
justice such as Alito can have a strong and salutary influence on
Supreme Court jurisprudence.
For this reason, it seems to me that all conservatives owe David
Frum, Laura Ingraham and other farsighted activists a sincere debt
of thanks.
Frum and Ingraham, you will recall, spearheaded the fight to
recall George W. Bush’s nomination of Harriet Miers to the Court.
Bush then nominated Alito instead. And the rest, as they say, is
(and will be for decades) history.
In fact, it is worth noting that in Snyder v. Phelps, it was
Bush’s two Supreme Court appointees, Alito and Chief Justice John
Roberts, who were at
loggerheads.
This is a good thing: It shows that far from being
intellectually inert and predictable, Alito and Roberts instead are
intellectually powerful and dynamic. And so, they will shape
Supreme Court jurisprudence in significant ways for decades to
come.
Unfortunately, I rather doubt we can say the same thing about
Obama’s two Supreme Court appointees, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena
Kagan. These two lefties, after all, had scant and unimpressive
legal records prior to their ascent to the high Court.
In fact, as legal eagle Jennifer Rubin
explained over at Contentions, Sotomayor never
impressed the left-wing legal elite, and for good reason:
“She is not a ‘trailblazer’ or a ‘Scalia of the Left,’ [they
say]. Translation: she lacks the intellectual firepower to go
toe-to-toe with justices who rely on judicial originalism and to
sway Justice Anthony Kennedy to their side. She was Latina but not
very wise, they now concede.’
Rubin quoted the esteemed legal critic, Jeffrey Rosen, who
wrote:
The most consistent concern was that Sotomayor, although an able
lawyer, was “not that smart and kind of a bully on the bench,” as
one former Second Circuit clerk for another judge put it. “
[…]
Her opinions, although competent, are viewed by former
prosecutors as not especially clean or tight, and sometimes miss
the forest for the trees.
It’s customary, for example, for Second Circuit judges to
circulate their draft opinions to invite a robust exchange of
views.
Sotomayor, several former clerks complained, rankled her
colleagues by sending long memos that didn’t distinguish between
substantive and trivial points, with petty editing suggestions —
fixing typos and the like — rather than focusing on the core
analytical issues.
Some former clerks and prosecutors expressed concerns about her
command of technical legal details…
As for Kagan, Rubin
summed up the views of one liberal law professor, Paul Campos,
thusly: “Kagan is a Harriet Miers type — minus the
cronyism.”
That’s Rubin’s summation of Campos. Here’s what Campos actually
wrote (over at the Daily Beast):
Yesterday, I read everything Elena Kagan has ever published. It
didn’t take long: in the nearly 20 years since Kagan became a law
professor, she’s published very little academic scholarship-three
law review articles, along with a couple of shorter essays and two
brief book reviews.
Somehow, Kagan got tenure at Chicago in 1995 on the basis of a
single article in The Supreme Court Review — a scholarly journal
edited by Chicago’s own faculty — and a short essay in the
school’s law review.
She then worked in the Clinton administration for several years
before joining Harvard as a visiting professor of law in 1999.
While there she published two articles, but since receiving tenure
from Harvard in 2001 (and becoming dean of the law school in 2003)
she has published nothing.
(While it’s true law school deans often do little scholarly
writing during their terms, Kagan is remarkable both for how little
she did in the dozen years prior to becoming Harvard’s dean, and
for never having written anything intended for a more general
audience, either before or after taking that position.)
The bottom line: If you care about the intellectual integrity
and viability of the Supreme Court, give thanks to Justices Alito
and Roberts — and ditto the men and women responsible for their
nominations: George W. Bush, David Frum and Laura Ingraham.
And lament the fact that President Obama and the Democratic
Party are, at the very least it seems, unwilling (and perhaps
unable) to match the Right’s record of judicial nominative
excellence.
Casey Abell| 3.4.11 @ 9:25AM
It's fine with me if Obama wants to nominate nonentities like Kagan and Sotomayor. They're not going to influence anybody on the court and bring nothing except their vote. And the vote will be reliably liberal for any Obama appointee.
What worries me is that even Obama might wake up someday and appoint a truly high-powered liberal to the court, somebody who might influence the other justices, Kennedy in particular. But I don't worry about it much. Obama will probably keep making mediocre, affirmative-action appointments.
Warrior | 3.4.11 @ 11:40PM
You can't get any farther to the left than Darth Bader Ginsburg. I don't believe Kennedy can be influenced as he appears to be mostly devoid of competent thought.
David W| 3.4.11 @ 9:37AM
"unwilling (and perhaps unable) to match the Right's record of judicial nominative excellence"
I guess the question that needs to be asked is there anyone on the Left that has any excellence? If they support the typical left talking points then how can they have any judicial excellence?
Dan| 3.4.11 @ 12:24PM
Kagan isn't a "non-entity." Her WHOLE purpose is to be the "first" lesbian on the high court.
She's supposed to be a trailblazer, ----- her legal acumen is not important, and what's more, WAS NEVER important.
She could get up there and droll all day and make google eyes at Sonia, and the left would be well pleased by her performance. Because it's all a piece of performance art, just one more taboo shattered by lefty iconoclasts.
And that's why when Republican Senators refused to make her carpet-munching ways an issue, they've CONCEDED cultural ground that it will be tremendously difficult to recover.
Occam's Tool| 3.4.11 @ 5:22PM
Once upon a time, Samuel Shem wrote The House Of God, about medical internship. In it, the protagonist was asked (paraphrasing)--- why are you acting so dumb? Is there affirmative action for Jews?
In Kagan's case, yes.
Aarradin| 3.4.11 @ 6:44PM
"And lament the fact that President Obama and the Democratic Party are, at the very least it seems, unwilling (and perhaps unable) to match the Right's record of judicial nominative excellence."
There is nothing unfortunate or lamentable about this at all. In fact, we should be cheering the fact that Obama's appointees are mediocrities. This was my main argument for NOT opposing the Kagan nomination (I couldn't get behind the Sotomayor nomination because of her overt Racism). Neither of these Justices is likely to have much of an impact on the court. They are completely outclassed intellectually by the conservatives.
Sure, they'll be on the wrong side of all the important issues. But then, ANYONE Obama appointed would also.
Would you rather have a competent leftist radical or an incompetent one on the Supreme Court? The incompetent one will do far less damage.
The real downside to both of them is their age. Both are likely to be occupying space for decades.
Handy| 3.5.11 @ 11:38AM
You made me think. Perhaps more important than any vote on a particular case is the vote whether to hear/review it, or not.
Kagan and Sotomayer will always choose to hear the "hot-button" issues of the Left. More sober judges will probably pass on certiorari. After a while, the other seven Justices will just stop returning their calls.
I can't wait for the feminist hissy fits that will ensue. "Light weight" is a compliment. These two are more like anti-gravity appointments.
Tina Paine| 3.13.11 @ 1:51AM
Amazing insight. I am just sorry you left out the Fox-wing's most intellectual and influential SCOTUS justice - Justus Clarence Thomas !!!