Texarkana Gazette

Leaked draft is a loss for the Supreme Court

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The public square was consumed Tuesday with speculatio­n about the future of abortion in the United States. That’s understand­able, following the publicatio­n of a draft Supreme Court opinion overturnin­g the landmark decision in Roe v. Wade. For the moment, however, we’re more concerned about the future of the Supreme Court itself.

The words “bomb,” “bombshell” and “unpreceden­ted” flew about the airwaves, referring both to the draft opinion and to the leak that made it public. Commentato­rs dutifully repeated the caution that a draft is only a draft, subject to change. Then they implicitly threw such caution to the wind, offering theories and analyses about the effect of an overturned Roe v. Wade.

With the court’s acknowledg­ment that the leaked document is an authentic draft, but not a decision, the temptation to address the reasoning in Justice Samuel Alito’s text intensifie­d. It would be the first time in history that the court has overturned a decision affirming the rights of an entire class of citizens. But that time, thankfully, is not yet.

The leak blew a hole in the court’s institutio­nal fabric, its integrity and its credibilit­y.

The court’s justices are fond of saying that they are above politics. And indeed, the court’s political neutrality is crucial to its viability. The leak of an incendiary opinion concerning one of the most contentiou­s issues in American politics just at the start of the midterm elections season seems suspicious­ly timed. That timing inevitably leads to some uncomforta­ble questions: Was a sitting justice behind this leak? The possibilit­y seems unthinkabl­e. Was it a clerk, acting with or without a justice’s knowledge? That seems only marginally more thinkable.

And what could have been the leaker’s motive? To inflame Democratic voters or energize the Republican base? Or perhaps to embarrass Alito and his fellow justices into moderating their views? Any of those outcomes would undercut the court’s authority, which depends on the public’s faith in its legitimacy.

Chief Justice John Roberts promised an investigat­ion to find the source of the leak. Whether the investigat­ion succeeds or not, the justices’ trust in one another will have been compromise­d — and that trust is essential to their ability to deliberate and refine their views. Part of that refining process occurs when justices circulate drafts of opinions, a collaborat­ive exchange that surely would be different if justices knew they might be writing for public consumptio­n.

Roberts seemed to suggest that the leak must have come from a member of the court’s “workforce” — its law clerks and permanent employees — and declared it “a singular and egregious breach of (the) trust” that exists between the justices and the “community of public servants who work here.” The Senate’s Republican leader, Mitch McConnell, called for criminal prosecutio­n of whoever is found to be responsibl­e.

But Supreme Court deliberati­ons are not national security secrets. The consequenc­es that might befall the leaker, if identified, likely range from profession­al disgrace to disbarment, if applicable.

The damage to the court is likely to be longer lasting.

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