Oroville Mercury-Register

Supreme Court hanging up phone, back to in-person arguments

- By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON >> The justices are putting the “court” back in Supreme Court.

The high court announced Wednesday that the justices plan to return to their majestic, marble courtroom for arguments beginning in October, more than a year and a half after the in-person sessions were halted because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The justices had been hearing cases by phone during the pandemic but are currently on their summer break. The court said that oral arguments scheduled for October, November and December will be in the courtroom but that: “Out of concern for the health and safety of the public and Supreme Court employees, the Courtroom sessions will not be open to the public.”

“The Court will continue to closely monitor public health guidance in determinin­g plans,” the announceme­nt said.

Public invited to listen

The court said that while lawyers will no longer argue by telephone, the public will continue to be able to listen to live broadcasts of the arguments. Only the justices, essential court personnel, lawyers in the cases being argued and journalist­s who cover the court full-time will be allowed in the courtroom. Lawyers involved in the cases said they were told testing would be required of lawyers attending in person.

The court that returns to the bench is significan­tly different from the one that left it.

When the justices last sat together on the bench

at their neoclassic­al building across the street from the U.S. Capitol on March 9, 2020, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was the court’s most senior liberal and conservati­ves held a narrow 5-4 majority. But Ginsburg died in September 2020, and her replacemen­t by conservati­ve Amy Coney Barrett in the final days of the Trump administra­tion has given conservati­ves a significan­t 6-3 majority.

Because of the pandemic, Barrett has yet to be part of a traditiona­l courtroom argument, with the justices asking questions of lawyers in rapid succession, jockeying for an opening to ask what’s on their minds. The arguments the court heard by telephone were more predictabl­e and polite, with the justices taking turns asking questions, one by one, in order of seniority. That often meant the arguments went longer than their scheduled hour.

It also meant that lawyers

and the public heard from the previously reticent Justice Clarence Thomas in every telephone argument. Before the pandemic Thomas routinely went years without speaking during arguments and had said he doesn’t like his colleagues’ practice of rapidfire questionin­g that cuts off attorneys. “I don’t see where that advances anything,” he said in 2012.

Audio of arguments

One change from the remote arguments will stay for now. The justices said they will continue their practice during the pandemic of allowing audio of oral arguments to be broadcast live by the news media. Before the pandemic, the court would only very occasional­ly allow live audio of arguments in particular­ly high profile cases. That meant that the only people who heard the arguments live were the small number of people in the courtroom.

The court releases a transcript of the arguments on the same day but, before the pandemic, only posted the audio on its website days after.

Like much of the country, the court essentiall­y shut down to the public by mid-March of 2020. The court was closed to visitors and arguments scheduled for that month postponed. April’s arguments also were postponed before the court announced it would hear 10 cases by telephone beginning May 4, 2020.

In the term that began in October 2020, the court heard all of its arguments remotely. During the justices’ absence from the courtroom, they heard a total of 68 arguments by phone. The court announced in early March that all the justices had been vaccinated and they resumed holding their private conference­s in person.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Supreme Court in Washington.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Supreme Court in Washington.

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