As I’ve written
quite a few times in this column I admire and respect John Oliver immensely. I’ve
loved him since I first met him on The Daily Show, fondly remember the
summer of 2013 when he hosted it and have loved Last Week Tonight for
the last ten years.
Despite what he
will tell you he is hysterically funny and shines a light on so many issues
that most people, myself included, could not comprehend in a hundred page book.
I admire his bravery and I respect his comic bluster. And when a few weeks ago
he explained to the entire world just how messed up the SSI and SSDI payment
system is, I felt seen in a way entertainment hasn’t in a long time and that no
representation on any fictional TV show ever had.
But that doesn’t
mean I don’t recognize his flaws, among with our an increasingly clear tendency
towards the left. There are some places where his blindness is worse than
others (it comes across in foreign affairs more than you’d think) but it can be
just in clear in the many problems with our domestic agenda. To his credit he
is honest enough to know that most of the progressive solutions he argues for
are unfeasible in our current form of democracy and he doesn’t lecture the way
other comedians such as Bill Maher do towards his audience.
The purpose of
this article is, however, not to admonish Oliver’s leanings but to discuss a
subject that has become a trend not only with him but so many progressives over
the years: the Supreme Court. To Oliver’s immense credit, he is not a Johnny-come-lately
to the subject. Almost since his show began he has been very clear about the
flaws of the Supreme Court as well as the problems that might lie ahead. And he
knows very well where the blame is in a way most progressives won’t. When Neil
Gorsuch was on the verge of confirmation in 2017, he acknowledged how dangerous
he was and told his audience: “you will have two elections in which to do
something about it. The first will occur in 2016, the second in 2014.” That is
a more direct placement on the blame of the electorate in one minute then I’ve
seen Daily Kos do in five years.
Oliver, of
course, is hardly alone about the slant of the Supreme Court in recent years. There
have been many discussions of it in the media, particularly MSNBC and CNN, and
a multi-part documentary on Showtime last year. But for all the handwringing
that has been done over the court in the last several years, everybody seems to
have a fundamental lack of understanding of what the Supreme Court’s role in
America really is. They are right to be worried about its increasingly
rightward leaning, I’ll grant you, but there is a very real argument that so
much of the conflict over it ignores what the Court was up until very recently –
let’s say 2000. I should mention the outrage over the court is also relatively
recent and selective. There was outrage as Bush V. Gor at the end of 2000, but
up until that very moment I don’t remember any one of either party making the
Supreme Court front and center of electoral politics. Nor did it resurface during
the next decade and while the court increasingly made decisions that confirmed
a right-ward lurch, I don’t remember anyone making an argument about how
important was during the 2016 campaign for President. It wasn’t even until
after the 2020 election when a Democrat was President that reform was discussed
almost every minute by the Democratic party and even that had no basis in
reality.
I’ve talked about
the court in several of my articles involving history over the past two years
and I have a far greater understanding of how it works and what its powers are
then many people, and certainly most progressive. It is the benefit of having a
historian for a father, who worked at the Supreme Court during the 1970s (when
according to the left the Supreme Court officially began to destroy America as
we know it) and who has an understanding of Constitutional law and judicial
history then someone like me can ever hope to learn. I have absorbed some of
this and while I’m nowhere near the authority on the Court that he is, I
certainly understand what it can and can’t do. So this article will discuss the
Supreme Court, some critical myths about it, the period that so many people are
still divided on and why whatever discussion of reform is thoroughly misguided
because it leaves a very critical piece out.
Let’s start with something
we all learn in grade school about the three branches of government: the
legislative, the executive and the judiciary. Congress is the federal representative
of the first and it makes laws. The executive – the President – enforces
the law. The judiciary – the Supreme Court – interprets the law.
It might be
considered blasphemy to argue that the Supreme Court is still doing exactly
what it is doing now as it was when it was established. But as we all know the
Supreme Court is still interpreting the law. To be sure Samuel Alito and Clarence
Thomas have a very different interpretation of the law than Sonia Sotomayor and
Elena Kagan do but the justices are still interpreting the laws. Their
proclamations, as the left doesn’t understand but the right does, are not
carved in stone and the final say on the matter. The court is still essentially
waving a wand and seeing what will happen. The right, of course, know this and
has been working in a way to make sure it fits their agenda more than it does
the left. But the Court is not the final authority. I realize that much of this
does have to do with a gridlocked Congress, but that is not the subject of this
article. (I will get to it in a different one.)
Now there’s been
much argument over the last quarter of a century as how the court is supposed
to act as an ‘independent judiciary apart for politics’. I’ve found this ironic
in two ways: first because justices are appointed by Congress, which by definition
is a political entity and two, for the first two centuries of its existence
many of the most significant justices were either elected officials or
critical in politics. This starts with our first Chief Justice John Jay, who
served in the Second Continental Congress, was Washington’s first Secretary of State
and then resigned to serve as Governor of New York.
Throughout the 19th
century and well into the 20th, a considerable number of Justices,
associate and Chief were politicians. John Marshall served a term in Congress
was Adams’s secretary of the state for the last six months of his Presidency
and was named by him as Chief Justice before Adams’s left office. Salmon P.
Chase was first Senator and then Governor of Ohio, served as Lincoln’s
Secretary of the Treasury and was named by Lincoln to replace Roger Taney as
Chief Justice. Edwin Stanton, Lincoln’s Secretary of War was named by Grant to
serve as an associate justice but he died before he could take office.
William Howard
Taft, of course, was President before he became Chief Justice and when he left
the court in 1930 he was replaced by Charles Evans Hughes who had been Governor
of New York and had served as Associate Justice before resigning in 1916 to run
for President as the Republican nominee. Many members of the Roosevelt court,
including Hugo Black and James Byrnes had been Senators and Joseph Robinson, the
majority leader had been named to the bench before dying of a heart attack.
Earl Warren, as I’ve written about before and will write about again, had won
three consecutive gubernatorial elections in California, had been Tom Dewey’s
running mate in 1948 and had tried to run for the Presidency in 1952.
Eisenhower promised him the first available seat on the Supreme Court and tried
to backtrack when Chief Justice Vinson died in early 1953 – Warren held him to
it.
Arthur Goldberg had
been secretary of Labor under Kennedy and was named by him to replace Frankfurter
in 1962. He resigned to become ambassador to the U.N under Lyndon Johnson. He
was replaced by Abe Fortas who had been
Undersecretary of the Interior under FDR and Truman before Johnson. Sandra Day
O’Connor, the first female Supreme Court justice was the last member of the
Court to hold elected office: she had been a member of the Arizona Senate for
three terms before she became judge of Maricopa County. She’d gotten started
when she served on Barry Goldwater’s campaign for President in 1964.
So the idea that the
court is supposed to be above politics is a hard argument to make when so many
of his most celebrated members have been ‘in the arena’ themselves. Indeed,
given how effective many were as justices, there’s an argument we should have more
elected officials on the Court instead of taking them from the bench.
I now want to
deal with the three ‘worst decisions’ the Supreme Court ever made: Dred
Scott Vs. Sanford, Plessy Vs. Ferguson and Korematsu v. United States. They
are considered horrendous decision because of their morality: they supposedly
made the law of the land, slavery, segregation and Japanese internment.
I used the word ‘supposedly’
because in the first two cases all Dred Scott and Plessy did was
give a legal blessing to what everyone knew was true already. Dred Scott inflamed
abolitionists and secessionists for the same reason: it didn’t clear anything
up to either’s satisfaction. When the Plessy decision was reached I
imagined that for both whites and African-Americans they would have considered it
is as surprising as water being wet. And as for Korematsu, it just gave legal
cover to the bigotry that all Asian-Americans were already facing. These might
have been immoral decisions but the court is not a moral institution; it’s
their to interpret the law. And during this entire period America was
conservative in every sense of the word when it came to race. It would have
been radical if in any of these cases the court had struck down slavery,
separate but equal or Japanese internment – and more importantly, it would have
been meaningless in 1857, 1896, and during World War II for the people most
afflicted. The only way to change things would have been through acts of
Congress and Presidents who were willing to enforce the laws. It’s safe to say
neither the executive branch nor the legislative would have been willing to do
so back then.
Indeed for the
first 160 plus years of the court’s existence, it was fundamentally conservative
in all the ways that counted – and almost nobody objected to that. FDR was
inflamed by it and as I’ve written wanted radical reform in 1937 – and it was
by far the most divisive act of his entire Presidency.
It only began to
change when Warren became Chief Justice in 1953 and the so-called Warren Court
began. This era, which progressive think all future courts should model
themselves after and all conservatives have been trying to walk back ever since, basically occurred over 1953 to 1969 when Warren
retired. And in case you’ve forgotten your history (and progressives can be
selective in that part) that is the period where civil rights legislation reached
its peak and was enforced by three different Presidents. The court might be
considered liberal, but the only reason it had the power it did was because all
three branches of Congress were willing to basically be in accord on civil
rights.
And lest we
forget, the major area of the country where segregation was law of the land thoroughly
objected to the idea. In their mind ‘Plessy Vs. Ferguson’ was ‘settled law’. James
Byrnes, who had briefly been on the Roosevelt Court was elected governor of
South Carolina because of the threat of integration. The Southern Manifesto,
circulated by Strom Thurmond and signed by all but three Southern Senators, was
written in large part out of objection to the Warren Court’s ruling and the
Eisenhower administrations movement towards civil rights. We all know about the
Southern segregationist governors, from Orville Faubus to George Wallace, who
thoroughly resented government interference in how the South ran things.
When Lyndon
Johnson signed the Civil Rights Bill into law, he knew very well the
consequences: “We just gave the South to the Republicans for a long time to
come”. He knew something that so many people on the left have never accepted
and still can’t. Congress can enact any law it wants. The President can enforce
it and the Supreme Court can interpret it but even if all three branches were
working together perfectly, they can’t do a damn thing to change how people
think. You can’t regulate bigotry no matter how much you want too. All you can
do is hope that over time it dissipates or erodes.
Progressives have
gotten outraged about the Supreme Court’s actions over the last decade for
justifiable reasons. But I think there’s an argument at least part of it is due
to a difference between how they see the world and how the right does. The left
believes that once a law is made, once it has been legislated, enforced and interpreted
by the Court, everyone should just consider the matter over and done with. The
problem is that only works in an academic world and not the real one. Nothing
the Warren Court did could get rid of racism, any more than Roe ended the
pro-life movement or the Obergefell
decision got rid of homophobia. Just because a law is accepted as
constitutional doesn’t mean the fiercest opponents of it are going to shrug
their shoulders and consider the battle lost. The Civil Rights movement was
essentially founded on the idea that Plessy V. Ferguson was morally wrong and it
was justifiable to disobey it. What makes the conservative movement any less
wrong in their opinion, other than the fact that there’s a different set of
people who believe they are wrong?
And it’s worth
noting that the left’s idea of ‘reform’ is in keeping with their entire
attitude towards anyone who disagrees with them in general. That decision,
which has been around Congress ever since Biden was elected, was essentially a
variation on FDR’s plan and allowed Biden to nominate four more Justices to the
Supreme Court, therefore giving the court a liberal majority. Not only does
this ignore a very obvious problem (it’s based on the principle the GOP will
never win the Presidency again) it speaks to the left’s solution to everything:
as long as there are more of us then the opposition, we don’t have to
take their concerns seriously. I find the GOP’s decision for enforced minority
rule utterly undemocratic. But the idea that the solution is too simply make
sure that there are more on our side then theirs is just as horrible. Neither
does anything to resolve the divides in our nation, and both are variations on essentially
ignoring the opposition for one’s own agenda.
That’s why everyone,
from Bernie Sanders to Rachel Maddow to, yes, John Oliver who argues that the
Supreme Court, like all of are other institutions in our democracy can be ‘fixed’
if we just put in more people of the ‘right mind’ to overrule the bigots is not
a real solution. It’s punting it down the road and hoping that things will get
better rather then doing the hard work to make sure things actually get better.
I don’t blame them for this idea; it’s increasingly becoming the mindset of
both parties and a huge amount of people across the country. But it’s not a
solution. It’s a band-aid on a gaping wound rather than trying to actually fix
it.
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