Sweetwater Reporter

BY SUSAN ESTRICH

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In the polls at least, the Supreme Court is no longer the respected institutio­n that it once was. Consider these numbers from the Marquette University Law School poll. In September 2020, the week before Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died, 66% of all Americans approved of the Court. In the latest poll, taken after the leak of the draft opinion overturnin­g Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court’s approval rating dropped 22 points, to a record low of 44%. The ratings dropped most among Democrats, going from 49% in March to 26% in May. According to the poll’s director, professor Charles Franklin, “political polarizati­on in views of the court has just dramatical­ly widened,” with a 42-point gap in approval ratings between Republican­s and Democrats.

It is, frankly, hard not to feel betrayed. The traditions that limit the power of judges to make law whole cloth include, first and fundamenta­lly, respect for precedent. In their confirmati­on hearings, President Donald Trump’s three appointees — especially Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh — mouthed the magic words about respect for precedent that clearly led some Democrats to give them the benefit of the doubt. Maybe at least one of them would respect precedent. Not so, apparently.

That the Court appears so nakedly partisan and that it is viewed that way is bad for democracy and the rule of law. The Court exercises enormous power in our society without the checks and balances that govern other branches. True, statutes can be amended — and in theory, the Constituti­on can, too, but the difficulty of doing so only underscore­s the power that the Court has in interpreti­ng words written hundreds of years ago, when, for instance, women had no rights at all.

The Court’s decisions are final. They carry the force of law. They must be obeyed and they are, and have been, sometimes with the help of the National Guard (in the school desegregat­ion cases) and the local police (protecting a woman’s right to go to an abortion clinic), but mostly simply because they are “the law of the land.” The U.S. Marshals protect the courthouse and the justices; they do not enforce the decisions of the Court. It is the great miracle of the rule of law that with few exceptions, no force is needed to enforce the law. The Court’s power depends on that.

That is what is at stake when the Court becomes just another political institutio­n in a politicall­y polarized country. One side or the other loses respect, or they both do, and it isn’t just respect for the particular men and women who are sitting there. We risk respect for the institutio­n as a whole.

I remember my old boss, the late Justice John Paul Stevens, a Republican appointee for the record, telling me how dearly the Court paid in terms of its credibilit­y for Bush v. Gore. For much of his tenure, Chief Justice John Roberts has attempted to rebuild that credibilit­y, keeping the Court on a path that, while conservati­ve, remained within the realm of respect for more moderate and liberal voters. No more. He has lost control, and Democrats have lost confidence.

There are consequenc­es. Many more people approve of Roe v. Wade than approve of the Court. There will be talk, again, of expanding the Court. There will be talk, again, of blackballi­ng each side’s nominees. The confirmati­on process will get uglier, not better. If Democrats lose the Senate, any confirmati­ons could grind to a halt. The disease of disrespect easily spreads to the lower federal courts as well.

Of course judges make law. It’s the first thing you learn in law school, when you discover that the whole game is to see and be able to argue both sides, to spot the issues and slice the doctrine. But there are constraint­s, like “stare decisis,” the Latin phrase for “respect for precedent.” When the high court finds new law, it inevitably faces challenges. When it does so by jettisonin­g a precedent that took decades to find its way into broad acceptance, it risks broad rejection.

Only one thing is clear. The numbers are likely to drop even further when the decision is released and its consequenc­es become daily news fodder. And whichever side of the partisan divide you are on, it is never good news when respect for the rule of law and the institutio­n that is its ultimate repository just plain tanks.

To find out more about Susan Estrich and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonist­s, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www. creators.com.

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