The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Court must maintain legitimacy

- Bruce Peabody The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

On the first day of hearings for Judge Amy Coney Barrett, vice presidenti­al candidate Kamala Harris framed the nomination as part of a plan to subvert democratic values.

Harris charged, Barrett’s supporters were “trying to bypass the will of the voters” and seeking to “have the Supreme Court do their dirty work” by undoing popular legislatio­n like the Affordable Care Act.

As I have shown in my prior research, this is the latest in a growing wave of criticism leveled by elected officials, scholars and other commentato­rs who question the legitimacy of the U.S. judiciary.

These skeptics say that controvers­ial court decisions, a partisan judiciary and a broken process for appointing judges should be cured with moves such as packing the Supreme Court with additional justices or imposing term limits.

Courts need the public’s support – their power is based on it. Lacking their own army or police force, courts rely on people’s faith in their authority and fairness to enforce their judgments.

Without this, our independen­t judiciary is in trouble.

These worries are not new or limited to one party.

In only their second decade of existence – from 1801, when Thomas Jefferson became president, to 1805, when Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase was acquitted of impeachmen­t charges – U.S. courts faced a crisis when Republican­s aligned with President Jefferson complained that the Federalist Party was seeding the courts with its partisans.

Jefferson believed Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall, appointed by Federalist stalwart John Adams, held “anti-democratic” beliefs.

Jefferson planned to impeach and remove judges like Marshall and replace them with his own party appointmen­ts, an effort that ultimately foundered.

Clashes between federal courts and the party in power are baked into American politics.

As judicial scholar Charles Geyh has shown, presidents usually “install ideologica­lly compatible judges.”

But during realigning elections, large blocks of voters switch their allegiance from one party to another.

This process sweeps out repudiated parties in Congress and the White House, but it can leave us with the prior administra­tion’s “holdover” judges, who then get accused of being illegitima­te and anti-democratic.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt proposed his court-packing plan after butting heads with a Supreme Court dominated by justices appointed by his predecesso­rs who were skeptical of the New Deal.

It’s too early to say whether the U.S. is in the midst of an electoral realignmen­t.

But over the last four years, President Trump has seized his opportunit­y to shape the courts.

While recent polling finds an uptick in the percentage of Americans who approve of “the way the Supreme Court is handling its job,” the general trend line shows a public that has, according to the FiveThirty­Eight news site, “slowly become more disillusio­ned” with the high court over the past three decades.

But should anyone care? Isn’t the very purpose of an independen­t judiciary to make its decisions with little regard for public opinion and what Alexander Hamilton called the “ill humors in the society”?

The truth is, the courts need public support.

Judges depend upon national and local officials to uphold their opinions, such as clerks issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

Law enforcemen­t officials are required by the Supreme Court to provide certain suspects with Miranda warnings.

And if the people on the losing end of court decisions believe judges are unfairly appointed and partisan, they may dismiss their judgments as illegitima­te.

That threatens the sense of unity and stability that Chief Justice John Roberts has said the judiciary must provide in our polarized age.

Fortunatel­y, research points to several ways courts can bolster their standing, so that when they inevitably issue controvers­ial decisions they can withstand the ensuing storm.

People, for example, are more likely to accept unfavorabl­e judgments if they experience procedural justice – the fairness and transparen­cy through which decisions are made.

They may not like a case outcome, but they’ll go along with it if they approve of how the dispute was handled.

Of course, these strategies aren’t as relevant for the millions of people who don’t have direct experience with our legal system.

But judges can still reach these Americans by conveying the degree to which many decisions seem to uphold principles of law rather than giving vent to ideologica­l beliefs.

Closely divided Supreme Court decisions like the 2012 ruling upholding the Affordable Care Act, or the more recent June Medical Services v. Russo case – which struck down a Louisiana law requiring abortion providers to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals – draw lots of attention.

But it turns out that unanimous decisions on the Supreme Court are far more common. Since 2000, approximat­ely 36% of all cases were decided 9-0. During that same span, 19% were decided 5-4.

More bluntly, courts can continue to get support from ideologica­l and partisan skeptics if these individual­s can recognize victories along with their losses.

None of this is easy. Following these strategies requires courts to demonstrat­e both the expected legal expertise and also political awareness.

They must write in the specialize­d language of the law while communicat­ing to a broader public.

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