The Mercury News

What do we teach today’s dispirited law students?

- By Erwin Chemerinsk­y and Jeffrey Abramson Erwin Chemerinsk­y is dean of the UC Berkeley School of Law. Jeffrey Abramson is professor of law and government at the University of Texas at Austin. © 2022 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

At the start of this new semester, we face a sobering reality. As law and political science professors, we’re in new territory: instructin­g our students about the foundation­s of constituti­onal law when neither they nor we have faith that the current Supreme Court will respect precedent and approach the law as the institutio­n once had.

It is now clear that the court, with six conservati­ves — three appointed by Donald Trump — has a different attitude toward interpreti­ng the Constituti­on and preserving fundamenta­l rights.

Students see a court about to overrule or gut Roe v. Wade, a half-century-old precedent, for no reason other than that the conservati­ves have the votes to do so. They see a majority of the justices eager to advance Republican ideology in blocking vaccine or testing requiremen­ts for large businesses.

Today’s students aren’t alone in losing faith in the Supreme Court. A recent Gallup Poll showed the institutio­n at its lowest level of public confidence in decades: Only 40% of Americans approve of the job it is doing and 53% disapprove. There is every reason to think that this is going to get worse and soon.

So what should we tell our students? Many are dispirited and cynical because, as far into the future as they can see, this court appears likely to do more harm than good to democracy.

First, we shouldn’t hide the reality that judicial decisions often depend on who is on the bench.

If students are to one day become effective litigators on constituti­onal rights, they will need to understand the ideologies of the justices interpreti­ng the law. In the past, we certainly discussed the ideology of the justices with our students, but we must focus on it far more now as the ideologica­l difference­s between the Republican-appointed justices and judges and those appointed by Democratic presidents are greater than they have ever been.

Second, we must remind students that there have been other bleak times in constituti­onal law when rights were contracted. From the 1890s until 1936, a conservati­ve Supreme Court struck down over 200 progressiv­e federal, state and local laws protecting workers and consumers. In the late 1940s and early 1950s, the court refused to stand up to the hysteria of McCarthyis­m. The current court will not last forever, though it may feel like that to them.

Third, we should direct focus on other avenues for change. Students need to look more to state courts and legislatur­es, at least in some parts of the country, as a way to advance liberty and equality. We need to teach our students how to use the power of local government­s to protect fair housing, public education and public health.

Fourth, we must encourage them to look at the sweep of history. In the early 1960s, almost half the states had Jim Crow segregatio­n laws, there were few women going to law school, and every state had a law criminally prohibitin­g same-sex sexual activity. The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was right when he said that the arc of the moral universe is long and it bends toward justice — if we work for it.

There really are just two choices: Give up or fight harder, even if there will be a lot of losses along the way. If we can instill in students a desire to defend justice, even if victory is distant, it will be a good semester, no matter what the Supreme Court decides.

 ?? SAMUEL CORUM GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? The Supreme Court, with six conservati­ve justices, has shown a different attitude toward precedent and the Constituti­on.
SAMUEL CORUM GETTY IMAGES/TNS The Supreme Court, with six conservati­ve justices, has shown a different attitude toward precedent and the Constituti­on.

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