Looking Back

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By Geffery Toobin :Jeffrey Toobin has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1993 and the senior legal ana­lyst for CNN since 2002.

Atonin Scalia, who died this month, after near­ly three decades on the Supreme Court, devot­ed his pro­fes­sion­al life to mak­ing the United States a less fair, less tol­er­ant, and less admirable democ­ra­cy. Fortunately, he most­ly failed. Belligerent with his col­leagues, dis­mis­sive of his crit­ics, nos­tal­gic for a world where out­siders knew their place and stayed there, Scalia rep­re­sents a per­fect mod­el for every­thing that President Obama should avoid in a suc­ces­sor. The great Justices of the Supreme Court have always looked for­ward; their words both antic­i­pat­ed and helped shape the nation that the United States was becom­ing. Chief Justice John Marshall read the new Constitution to allow for a vibrant and pro­gres­sive fed­er­al gov­ern­ment. Louis Brandeis under­stood the need for that gov­ern­ment to reg­u­late an indus­tri­al­iz­ing econ­o­my. Earl Warren saw that seg­re­ga­tion was poi­son in the mod­ern world. Scalia, in con­trast, looked backward.

His revul­sion toward homo­sex­u­al­i­ty, a touch­stone of his world view, appeared straight out of his shel­tered, nine­teen-for­ties boy­hood. When, in 2003, the Court ruled that gay peo­ple could no longer be thrown in prison for hav­ing con­sen­su­al sex, Scalia dis­sent­ed, and wrote, “Today’s opin­ion is the prod­uct of a Court, which is the prod­uct of a law-pro­fes­sion cul­ture, that has large­ly signed on to the so-called homo­sex­u­al agen­da, by which I mean the agen­da pro­mot­ed by some homo­sex­u­al activists direct­ed at elim­i­nat­ing the moral oppro­bri­um that has tra­di­tion­al­ly attached to homo­sex­u­al con­duct.” He went on, “Many Americans do not want per­sons who open­ly engage in homo­sex­u­al con­duct as part­ners in their busi­ness, as scout­mas­ters for their chil­dren, as teach­ers in their children’s schools, or as board­ers in their home. They view this as pro­tect­ing them­selves and their fam­i­lies from a life style that they believe to be immoral and destructive.”
But it was in his jurispru­dence that Scalia most self-con­scious­ly looked to the past. He pio­neered “orig­i­nal­ism,” a the­o­ry hold­ing that the Constitution should be inter­pret­ed in line with the beliefs of the white men, many of them slave own­ers, who rat­i­fied it in the late eigh­teenth cen­tu­ry. During Scalia’s first two decades as a Justice, Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist rarely gave him impor­tant con­sti­tu­tion­al cas­es to write for the Court; the Chief feared that Scalia’s extreme views would repel Sandra Day O’Connor, the Court’s swing vote, who had a tox­ic rela­tion­ship with him dur­ing their ear­ly days as col­leagues. (Scalia’s clash­es with O’Connor were far more sig­nif­i­cant than his much chron­i­cled friend­ship with Ruth Bader Ginsburg.) It was not until 2008, after John G. Roberts, Jr., had suc­ceed­ed Rehnquist, that Scalia final­ly got a block­buster: District of Columbia v. Heller, about the Second Amendment. Scalia spent thou­sands of words plumb­ing the psy­ches of the Framers, to con­clude (wrong­ly, as John Paul Stevens point­ed out in his dis­sent) that they had meant that indi­vid­u­als, not just mem­bers of “well-reg­u­lat­ed” state mili­tias, had the right to own hand­guns. Even Scalia’s ide­o­log­i­cal allies rec­og­nized the fol­ly of try­ing to divine the “intent” of the authors of the Constitution con­cern­ing ques­tions that those bewigged wor­thies could nev­er have antic­i­pat­ed. During the oral argu­ment of a chal­lenge to a California law that required, among oth­er things, warn­ing labels on vio­lent video games, Justice Samuel Alito inter­rupt­ed Scalia’s harangue of a lawyer by quip­ping, “I think what Justice Scalia wants to know is what James Madison thought about video games. Did he enjoy them?”

Scalia described him­self as an advo­cate of judi­cial restraint, who believed that the courts should defer to the demo­c­ra­t­i­cal­ly elect­ed branch­es of gov­ern­ment. In real­i­ty, he lunged at oppor­tu­ni­ties to over­rule the work of Presidents and of leg­is­la­tors, espe­cial­ly Democrats. Scalia helped gut the Voting Rights Act, over­turn McCain-Feingold and oth­er cam­paign-finance rules, and, in his last offi­cial act, block President Obama’s cli­mate-change reg­u­la­tions. Scalia’s rep­u­ta­tion, like the Supreme Court’s, is also stained by his role in the major­i­ty in Bush v. Gore. His oft-repeat­ed advice to crit­ics of the deci­sion was “Get over it.”

Not long ago, Scalia told an inter­view­er that he had can­celled his sub­scrip­tion to the Washington Post and received his news from the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Times (owned by the Reverend Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church), and con­ser­v­a­tive talk radio. In this, as in his jurispru­dence, he showed that he lived with­in the sealed bub­ble of con­tem­po­rary con­ser­v­a­tive thought. That bub­ble also helps explain the Republican response to the new vacan­cy on the Court. Within hours of Scalia’s death, Mitch McConnell, the Senate Majority Leader, announced that the Senate will refuse even to allow a vote on Obama’s nom­i­nee, regard­less of who he or she turns out to be. Though oth­er Republican sen­a­tors have indi­cat­ed that they might be a lit­tle more flex­i­ble, at least on hear­ing out a nom­i­nee, the chances of a con­fir­ma­tion before the end of Obama’s term appear to be close to nil.
This Republican intran­si­gence is a sign of pan­ic, not of pow­er. The Court now con­sists of four lib­er­als (Ginsburg, Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor, and Elena Kagan) and three hard-core con­ser­v­a­tives (Roberts, Clarence Thomas, and Alito), plus Anthony Kennedy, who usu­al­ly but not always sides with the con­ser­v­a­tives. With Scalia’s death, there is a real­is­tic pos­si­bil­i­ty of a lib­er­al major­i­ty for the first time in two gen­er­a­tions, since the last days of the Warren Court. A Democratic vic­to­ry in November will all but assure this trans­for­ma­tion. Republicans are head­ing to the bar­ri­cades; Democrats were appar­ent­ly too blind­sided to rec­og­nize good news when they got it.

Like Nick Carraway, Scalia “want­ed the world to be in uni­form and at a sort of moral atten­tion for­ev­er.” The world didn’t coöper­ate. Scalia won a great deal more than he lost, and he and his allies suc­ceed­ed in trans­form­ing American pol­i­tics into a cash bazaar, with seats all but put up for bid­ding. But even though Scalia led a con­ser­v­a­tive major­i­ty on the Court for vir­tu­al­ly his entire tenure, he nev­er achieved his fond­est hopes — thanks first to O’Connor and then to Kennedy. Roe v. Wade endures. Affirmative action sur­vives. Obamacare lives. Gay rights are ascen­dant; the death penal­ty is not. (These posi­tions are con­tin­gent, of course, and cas­es this year may weak­en the Court’s resolve.) For all that Presidents shape the Court, the Justices rarely stray too far from pub­lic opin­ion. And, on the social issues where the Court has the final word, the real prob­lem for Scalia’s heirs is that they are out of step with the rest of the nation. The pub­lic wants diver­si­ty, not intol­er­ance; more mar­riages and few­er exe­cu­tions; less mon­ey in pol­i­tics, not more. Justice Scalia’s views — pas­sion­ate­ly felt and pun­gent­ly expressed though they were — now seem like so many boats against the cur­rent, borne back cease­less­ly into the past.Looking Back