So, a question I continue to ponder: should Louis Brandeis' nomination
have been defeated (as it almost was) because of open opposition to his
political views, and, let's say, a minority filibuster? Is that a
necessary cost of Bazelon's implicit position here? Is it a cost worth paying (or does this presuppose a principled consistency that is just silly in today's political world)?
One can
plausibly argue that Bill Clinton simply gave up on potential Court
nominees who would excite too much partisan opposition. It's all too easy to
forget today, given the current composition of the Court, that Breyer
and Ginsburg were (rightly) perceived as exceedingly moderate
candidates from a Democratic/progressive standpoint (as were a high
proportion of intermediate appellate court nominees under Clinton,
although they advanced gender and racial diversity on the federal
courts).
Stevens and Souter (for whom I am exceedingly grateful) were
Republican appointments.
There are no members of today's Court
comparable to the liberal picks (of course, not all were) of FDR/JFK/LBJ or even (perhaps especially) Eisenhower.
Today's
"liberals" on the Court are, by recent historical standards, centrist moderates, today's "centrists" are strong
ideological conservatives, and Scalia and Thomas would have embarrassed
James McReynolds. (That may be slightly strong--I don't think
McReynolds would have drunk from the same water cooler as Thomas--or
Breyer or Ginsburg, for that matter.)
When Stevens reflected on whether any of his 1975 brethren could have signed Roberts' plurality opinion on the schools case, he wasn't saying the half of it.
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