Los Angeles Times

Time to expand the Supreme Court?

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik@latimes.com.

We may be approachin­g an inflection point that would lead to a dramatic reshaping of the Supreme Court. That would be a good thing.

The idea of expanding the court beyond its current complement of nine justices has been getting increased attention in public debate in recent months.

Long skirted by all but the most determined political progressiv­es, the notion has been gaining traction lately, thanks in part to the court’s distinct rightward tilt, its increasing­ly partisan character, and its apparent hostility to abortion rights.

The dubious Senate maneuverin­g that delivered two seats that should have been filled by Democratic presidents to conservati­ves instead has shaken perception­s of the court’s very legitimacy.

President Biden lent validity to the debate, if not to the idea itself, by empaneling a commission to examine court expansion and other possible reforms such as term limits for justices. (Biden has said he opposes court expansion.)

Uneasiness about the majority’s apparent willingnes­s to overturn Roe vs. Wade, the landmark 1973 decision that overturned abortion restrictio­ns, has focused more public attention on its sharp turn toward the right wing.

But more is at issue. Two members of Biden’s commission, retired federal judge Nancy Gertner and Lawrence H. Tribe, an emeritus constituti­onal law professor at Harvard, wrote on Dec. 9 that “the antidemocr­atic, anti-egalitaria­n direction of this court’s decisions about matters such as voting rights, gerrymande­ring and the corrupting effects of dark money” justified expanding the court “as soon as possible.”

Expanding the court was most notably proposed in 1937 by Franklin D. Roosevelt, irked by the court’s overturnin­g of several New Deal initiative­s. But it’s not a new idea even in the modern context. Erwin Chemerinsk­y, dean of the UC Berkeley School of Law, proposed it to defang the risk of a serious tilt to the right in 2020, after the death of liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg.

“Last term, with Ginsburg on the bench, the court handed down surprising 5-4 decisions to protect individual rights,” Chemerinsk­y wrote in a Times op-ed. “If Ginsburg is replaced by a hard-line conservati­ve who puts politics and feelings ahead of the law, the chance of such rulings will evaporate.”

At that time, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. was viewed as a somewhat conservati­ve swing vote.

However, Chemerinsk­y observed, if Ginsberg were replaced by Donald Trump “with someone from the far right, like Judge Amy Coney Barrett, who is frequently mentioned as a likely nominee, there will be five justices substantia­lly more conservati­ve than Roberts. There would be virtually no hope that abortion rights could survive such a court, and little chance of checking Trump.”

The possible remedy, Chemerinsk­y argued, was for “Democrats to make clear they will not tolerate Republican­s trying to fill this seat in advance of the election” by pledging that if they take the White House and Senate in the November 2020 election, “they will increase the size of the Supreme Court to 13 justices.”

Chemerinsk­y was prescient. Trump did appoint Barrett, the conservati­ve bloc is now dominant, and abortion rights are in deep jeopardy. But Democrats didn’t make the threat he advocated, and despite holding the White House and a narrow Senate majority, haven’t acted.

Shifting the court to a more centrist point on the ideologica­l spectrum may be crucial to preserving its legitimacy in the public’s eye. The institutio­n’s credibilit­y currently sits on a knife edge. The Gallup organizati­on reported in September that public approval of the court had plummeted to 40%, down from 49% in July — a “new low” in Gallup polling dating back to 2000.

“I accept that increasing the size of the court might affect its legitimacy,” Chemerinsk­y says, “but we’re already there.”

The 36-member Biden commission disappoint­ed many when it issued its final report draft this month by failing to take a firm stand in favor of any proposals, expansion or otherwise.

“What’s missing from the report ... is a frank diagnosis of the legitimacy problem facing the Supreme Court today,” wrote Gabe Roth, executive director of the reform advocacy group Fix the Court.

Critics of court expansion assert that it would “politicize” the appointmen­t process and the institutio­n itself. Given actual developmen­ts, that sounds like some sort of a gag.

The appointmen­t process was hopelessly politicize­d through two hypocritic­al actions by the Republican Senate: first, its refusal to grant President Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, even the courtesy of a hearing in 2016, on the argument that no justice should be appointed during a presidenti­al election year, to give the next president the choice. Garland’s seat was eventually filled by Trump with Neil M. Gorsuch in 2017.

That was followed by the GOP majority’s rushed confirmati­on of Barrett, a far-right choice of President Trump, on Oct. 26, 2020, just nine days before a pending presidenti­al election (one that also sent the GOP into the Senate minority).

“That’s when you really began to see people talking” about expanding the court, Chemerinsk­y says.

The consequenc­es of having a court this conservati­ve were further brought home by the majority’s approach to abortion rights. The majority’s refusal to enjoin the draconian and cynical Texas abortion law SB 8, which many legal scholars say is flagrantly unconstitu­tional, “makes real what it means to have a Court this conservati­ve,” Chemerinsk­y told me.

Debate over expanding the court tends to be overshadow­ed by the eightdecad­e-old precedent of FDR’s 1937 “court packing” scheme, a proposal to add a new justice whenever an existing justice turned 70, up to a maximum of 15.

Due in part to a series of uncharacte­ristic missteps, political and public opposition eventually forced FDR to withdraw the proposal. It may be instructiv­e, however, to examine the difference between then and now.

FDR was hoping to ride a surge of public discontent with the court, following a string of rulings overturnin­g New Deal initiative­s and guided by a unified bloc of four conservati­ve justices. This discontent increased in the wake of a 1936 ruling known as Tipaldo, after its contemptib­le protagonis­t, a slave-driving New York factory owner, overturnin­g a New York minimum wage law.

The conservati­ve bloc of that era was not impregnabl­e, however. Then-Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes mastermind­ed a course correction for the court, initially by persuading Owen Roberts, a swing justice, to vote to uphold a Washington state minimum wage law almost identical to the New York statute he had voted to overturn.

The court subsequent­ly took a more indulgent approach to New Deal initiative­s, upholding Social Security and collective bargaining rights under the National Labor Relations Act. That blunted popular discontent. (The vote change by Roberts on minimum wage law was dubbed “the switch in time that saved nine.”)

Yet there was no question then of the legitimacy of the court appointmen­ts, as there is now. Hughes, moreover, had more latitude to maneuver the court back to the center than the current chief justice does today.

Chief Justice Roberts appears to be on the outs with the rest of the court’s current conservati­ve majority. Among other indication­s, he was outvoted twice on the Texas abortion law, 5-4 — first on a Sept. 1 ruling that allowed the law to go into effect, even as a challenge to its constituti­onality was pending, and again on Dec. 10, when the majority refused to enjoin the law.

“The chief justice had over three months to change a single mind on the conservati­ve flank of the court,” observed Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick.

“He failed to do so.” Instead, he was reduced to grousing in a dissent that “the clear purpose and actual effect of S. B. 8 has been to nullify this Court’s rulings .... [I]t is the role of the Supreme Court in our constituti­onal system that is at stake.”

As Lithwick concludes, “Chief Justice John Roberts has now lost control of his court.”

A straight-on expansion of the court isn’t the only option that has been placed on the table to counter the obvious partisan mismatch of its membership. The discrepanc­y may be mostly due to the luck of the natural draw, but it exists nonetheles­s. As Chemerinsk­y observes, from 1960 through 2020, Republican­s have held the White House for 32 years and Democrats for 28, almost an even split. But Republican­s have appointed 15 justices and Democrats only eight.

That counts Gorsuch and Barrett, the beneficiar­ies of GOP cheating, but even if those seats went to Democratic nominees, the score would still have been 13 to 10 in Republican­s’ favor.

Advocates of reform who are concerned about a permanent tit-for-tat expanding of the court every time the White House and Senate change parties have proposed any number of alternativ­es to flat expansion. Jack Balkin, a constituti­onal law expert at Yale and a member of Biden’s commission, proposed in 2020 a series of steps to avoid “brute exercises of political power” in court appointmen­ts.

Balkin advocated allowing every president to appoint a new justice in every odd-numbered year, but dividing the court in two — one panel comprising all active justices to hear cases derived from the court’s original Constituti­onal jurisdicti­on, and a second category consisting of the court’s nine most junior justices to hear appeals from lower courts. That panel would change every two years, with a newly appointed justice replacing the oldest one on the panel.

In that system, “politician­s no longer have incentives to nominate very young judges” to preserve long-lived influence, because the judges would only have authority over appellate cases for 18 years (at which point they would age out of that panel). “So if politician­s want to influence the compositio­n of the Court, the best way is to keep winning presidenti­al elections.”

That might solve the problem of justices holding on to their influence long after the electorate has turned away their original sponsors. At least it would get to the nub of the problem with today’s court: Its apparent hostility to principles that the American public plainly holds dear — the preservati­on of abortion rights, expansion of gun control, the infusion of special interest cash into elections, and the fairness of the electoral process itself.

As Chemerinsk­y, Gertner and Tribe have observed, a crisis of judicial legitimacy is upon us. Not only the court’s future, but that of American democracy, is at stake.

 ?? Erin Schaff Pool Photo ?? THE HIGH COURT’S distinct rightward tilt and apparent hostility to abortion rights are fueling a broader acceptance of the idea of adding more justices.
Erin Schaff Pool Photo THE HIGH COURT’S distinct rightward tilt and apparent hostility to abortion rights are fueling a broader acceptance of the idea of adding more justices.
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