Supreme Court’s Grand Ruse Ends: Finally, Americans See The Justices For The Political Hacks They Are

Supreme Court Chief Justice nominee, John Roberts, responds to the spirited questioning of Sen. Joe Biden (D-DE) during the second day of his confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill, September 13. Roberts was pressed by senators for his views on the strength of established legal precedent with regard to the controversial issue of abortion rights and the landmark Roe vs. Wade abortion case. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque  KL/LA - RTRNUJD
Supreme Court Chief Justice nom­i­nee, John Roberts, responds to the spir­it­ed ques­tion­ing of Sen. Joe Biden (D‑DE) dur­ing the sec­ond day of his con­fir­ma­tion hear­ing on Capitol Hill, September 13. Roberts was pressed by sen­a­tors for his views on the strength of estab­lished legal prece­dent with regard to the con­tro­ver­sial issue of abor­tion rights and the land­mark Roe vs. Wade abor­tion case. REUTERS/​Kevin Lamarque KL/​LA — RTRNUJD

Cue up the sad David Brooks vio­lin play­ing soft­ly in the cor­ner of a dark alley at 3 a.m., because Americans have no faith in pow­er­ful insti­tu­tions any­more. One of those insti­tu­tions would be the mar­bled shrine atop our third branch of American gov­ern­ment, the Supreme Court. A new Associated Press poll shows that “only 1 per­son in 10 is high­ly con­fi­dent that the jus­tices will rely on objec­tive inter­pre­ta­tions of the [Affordable Care Act] rather than their per­son­al opin­ions” in the Court’s impend­ing King v. Burwell decision.

To us, that 10 per­cent fig­ure seems way too high. As far as we can tell, it’s not 1 in 10 Americans who view our Supreme Court as a neu­tral col­lec­tion of jurists who just want to call “balls and strikes,” but 1 American total: Chief Justice John Roberts. And maybe even not him? The American peo­ple, the always trusty American peo­ple, have the Supreme Court’s num­ber here. As with so many cas­es about why the American peo­ple have lost trust in a pow­er­ful insti­tu­tion, we can look to some of the pow­er­ful institution’s recent actions, going back at least to Bush v. Gore through Citizens United and Hobby Lobby and what­ev­er prime­time hit job comes next.

That next hit job may come soon in King v. Burwell, which, if ruled for the plain­tiffs, would inval­i­date pre­mi­um sub­si­dies for those who’ve pur­chased indi­vid­ual health insur­ance plans on fed­er­al­ly facil­i­tat­ed exchanges. The expect­ed deci­sion based on tea-leaf read­ings com­ing out of oral argu­ments was 5 – 4 or 6 – 3 in favor of uphold­ing the sub­si­dies, which tells you a lot about how weak the case is. But there is anoth­er pos­si­ble out­come: 5 – 4 to strike down the sub­si­dies, because the Supreme Court is ruled by a five-mem­ber major­i­ty of con­ser­v­a­tive jus­tices who think that the Affordable Care Act is dumb.

The last time a legal chal­lenge to Obamacare of this breadth made it to the Supreme Court, four jus­tices vot­ed not just to strike down the indi­vid­ual man­date but the entire law as well, because they believed that the law was dumb. They didn’t like it! Get rid of it! John Roberts orig­i­nal­ly sided with them but then, to the con­ster­na­tion of his con­ser­v­a­tive col­leagues, switched his vote because such a hack­ish deci­sion would have made the Supreme Court look too hack­ish. Roberts con­tent­ed him­self mere­ly to gut the hell out of the Medicaid expan­sion and force the Obama admin­is­tra­tion to acknowl­edge that the indi­vid­ual man­date is a tax.

Very few Court watch­ers are bas­ing their pre­dic­tions of the King deci­sion on the mer­its of the case, and right­ly so. If it was being decid­ed on the mer­its of the case, every­one would be bet­ting that it would be upheld 9 – 0. Does any­one think that’s going to hap­pen? No. It will all come down to how John Roberts, and per­haps Anthony Kennedy, feel about man­ag­ing the pol­i­tics. They want to screw over Obamacare but yeeeesh, would that back­fire on the Court and con­ser­v­a­tives? Would that make life more dif­fi­cult for the Republican par­ty head­ing into 2016? On the oth­er hand: Would John Roberts ever eat lunch in Conservative This Town again if he sided with The Libruls to uphold a core com­po­nent of Obamacare? It’s all about find­ing the right bal­ance of these com­pet­ing polit­i­cal con­sid­er­a­tions. The Democratic and Republican par­ties right­ly rec­og­nize the nature of the sit­u­a­tion here and have spent months try­ing to get inside John Roberts’ head. It is what it is.

Let’s con­sid­er a more gen­er­ous ver­sion of what’s hap­pened to the Supreme Court of late: that it’s mere­ly fol­lowed the broad­er trend in American pol­i­tics towards polar­iza­tion. Antonin Scalia and Ruth Bader Ginsburg might be look­ing at the same piece of leg­is­la­tion before them but see­ing some­thing com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent, so diver­gent have the lib­er­al and con­ser­v­a­tive world­views become. And these are jus­tices who were appoint­ed a gen­er­a­tion ago. The next round of jus­tices will have made their careers dur­ing this time of high-stakes judi­cial polarization.

That next round of jus­tices may come very soon, since sev­er­al Supreme Court jus­tices are approx­i­mate­ly one mil­lion years old. As Ian Millhiser writes at Think Progress, Rick Perry cor­rect­ly empha­sized the impor­tance of the next pres­i­den­tial elec­tion in a speech this weekend:

Something I want you all to think about is that the next pres­i­dent of the United States, who­ev­er that indi­vid­ual may be, could choose up to three, maybe even four mem­bers of the Supreme Court,” Perry told the South Carolina audi­ence. So this elec­tion “isn’t about who’s going to be the pres­i­dent of the United States for just the next four years. This could be about indi­vid­u­als who have an impact on you, your chil­dren, and even our grand­chil­dren. That’s the weight of what this elec­tion is real­ly about.”

I hate the “you have to vote in the next elec­tion because of the Supreme Court!” argu­ment. I hate it because it lets the can­di­dates off the hook: they can offer noth­ing what­so­ev­er to vot­ers and then rely on SCOTUS fear­mon­ger­ing to get out the vote. I also hate it because it’s a very cred­i­ble argu­ment. There is nev­er going to be anoth­er David Souter, or a jus­tice who gets con­firmed and then has an ide­o­log­i­cal shift on the bench. This next pres­i­den­tial elec­tion will also be an elec­tion for the next gen­er­a­tion of the Supreme Court, and it’s no tragedy that most Americans under­stand this cyn­i­cal reality.
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