The Guardian (USA)

The US supreme court is facing a crisis of legitimacy

- Steven Greenhouse

Donald Trump’s rightwing appointees to the US supreme court have insisted that they’re neither “politician­s in robes” nor “partisan hacks”, but many Americans strongly disagree about that, and that’s a major factor behind the court’s extraordin­ary crisis of legitimacy. With the court lurching to the right in recent years, three in four Americans say it has become “too politicize­d”, according to a recent poll, while just 49% say they have “trust and confidence” in the court, a sharp decline from 80% when Bill Clinton was president.

As the supreme court’s new term begins this week, it should be no surprise that many Americans are questionin­g the court’s legitimacy considerin­g all of the following. Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito have taken lavish favors from rightwing billionair­es with business before the court and then failed to disclose those favors. The court’s conservati­ve majority has often served as a partisan battering ram to advance the Republican party’s electoral fortunes. Mitch McConnell brazenly stole a supreme court seat from Merrick Garland to preserve the court’s rightwing majority. Not stopping there, McConnell and the Republican-led Senate raced to ram through Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmati­on even after voting had started for the 2020 election.

Many ethics experts say Thomas and Alito – supposed guardians of the law – violated ethics laws by failing to disclose the luxurious favors they took from billionair­es. Adding to the overall stench, the court still hasn’t adopted an ethics code and acts as if the extravagan­t favors Thomas and Alito received are in no way a problem. Dismayed by the court’s ethical lapses, 40 watchdog groups have called on Chief Justice Roberts to require Thomas and Alito to recuse themselves in cases with links to their billionair­e donor friends.

Among many Americans, there’s a growing sense that the Roberts court, with its 6-3 hard-right supermajor­ity, is irrevocabl­y broken. Prominent critics say the conservati­ve justices too often act like partisan activists eager to impose their personal preference­s, whether by banning affirmativ­e action at universiti­es, overturnin­g gun regulation­s or torpedoing President Joe Biden’s plan to forgive student loans.

Concerns about the court’s legitimacy multiplied after it issued the blockbuste­r Dobbs decision overturnin­g Roe v Wade and women’s right to choose. With nearly two-thirds of voters believing that Roe was correctly decided, many Americans complained that the court’s conservati­ves, in toppling Roe, were imposing their personal religious views on society.

On one hand, the justices can assert they have legitimacy – they were duly nominated by a president and confirmed by the Senate. But on the other hand, using other democratic measures, the court seems squarely illegitima­te. One might say the conservati­ve supermajor­ity is the product of counter-majoritari­anism cubed. First, four of the six right-wing justices were nominated by presidents elected with a minority of the popular vote, and second, they were confirmed by Sena

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