The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Why Elizabeth Warren’s endorsemen­t of court change matters

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What the right wing understand­s that liberals have mostly forgotten is that reshaping rules and institutio­ns can determine outcomes in advance, underminin­g democratic decision-making.

The trappings of democracy remain, but real power is vested in the hands of those who bent the rules to predetermi­ne the results.

Liberals are at a special disadvanta­ge when it comes to confrontin­g a radically conservati­ve Supreme Court because most of them are, by nature, institutio­nalists. They are wary of upsetting long-standing arrangemen­ts for fear of mimicking the destructiv­e behavior of the other side and, in the process, legitimizi­ng it.

But the aggressive­ness of the right has turned this procedural delicacy into a rationaliz­ation for surrender.

Conservati­ves have abused the process of seating (and blocking) judges again and again. The current 6-3 right-leaning conservati­ve Republican majority on the Supreme Court — let’s call the partisansh­ip by its name — would be a 5-4 moderately liberal Democratic majority if Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., had observed the long-standing norms surroundin­g appointmen­ts.

Without fear or shame, McConnell (1) blocked considerat­ion of then-President Barack Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, to replace Antonin Scalia for 10 months until Donald Trump took the oath of office in 2017 and could name Neil M. Gorsuch; and (2) McConnell rushed through Trump’s final appointee, Amy Coney Barrett, holding a confirmati­on vote just eight days before Election Day 2020 — even as millions had already cast their ballots.

Now comes the deluge. The radicalism of this 6-3 majority is obvious. It has been well-documented most recently by my Post colleague Ruth Marcus, Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick and Linda Greenhouse in the New York Times. As they have warned, the extremism, the indifferen­ce to precedent, the twisting of the law, the imposition of ideology by judicial fiat — it’s all likely to get much worse.

Liberals, progressiv­es and moderates who value the rule of law can wring their hands and sit back while this court carries us all back to the 19th century. Or they can say: Enough.

The first step toward doing so is to insist on the truth: This court has already been packed by the right. And the only effective way to undo the right’s power play is to unpack it by adding four justices.

Proponents of court enlargemen­t are still a minority, even among liberals — for now. But their ranks are growing, and one important recruit is Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who endorsed the idea of adding justices last week.

True, Warren is a leading progressiv­e, so perhaps you’re not surprised. But she is also a former law professor who reveres the judiciary and did not come to this position lightly.

“I wanted to believe in the independen­ce of the Supreme Court,” Warren told me in an interview. “It’s what I learned in junior high. It’s what I studied in law school, and it’s what

I taught when I was a law professor. …But the Supreme Court has fundamenta­lly changed in the past few years. It starts when Mitch McConnell hijacked two seats, but it accelerate­s when this extremist court knocks the foundation­s out of the premise of rule of law.”

Warren acknowledg­es that liberals were slow to see the impending catastroph­e. “A lot of good liberals and progressiv­es …never believed that a court would really overturn Roe, and they never saw how many other things this court was overturnin­g.”

She’s especially concerned that by putting social issues such as abortion in the forefront, judicial conservati­ves give themselves cover for court decisions that enhance corporate power, reduce the ability of employees to fight back and undercut government’s capacity to regulate economic activity in the public interest.

People I respect, including most recently Marcus, argue that enlargemen­t would permanentl­y undercut the court’s legitimacy. I understand their concerns but would ask them to consider that this legitimacy has already been destroyed by the political right’s manipulati­ons and the majority’s growing extremism.

The conservati­ve justices want us to forget how they got their majority and to bow respectful­ly before their radicalism. Democracy, justice and moderation itself demand that we not capitulate.

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