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POLITICS MARCH 29, 2012

Why the Supreme Court Justices Won’t Be Crudely Political When They Rule on Obamacare

In the weeks preceding the Obamacare case, many veteran Supreme Court-watchers could not bring themselves to believe that a majority of the justices would find the individual health insurance mandate unconstitutional. But now that the oral argument is over, the consensus has abruptly shifted, with increased focus on the supposedly ironclad opposition between the five “conservative” justices and the four “liberals.”

Indeed, as commentators consider what kind of decision the Court will hand down in June, they have been increasingly tempted to apply a simple “it’s all politics” template: Liberal justice will favor the individual mandate, conservatives will oppose it, case closed. But that’s hardly ever the right way to look at the Court, and it’s certainly wrong now.

In the first place, the general assumptions that individual justices bring to particular cases are typically jurisprudential rather than straightforwardly political. Some have broad and well-developed views about how the constitution should be read and interpreted. (On the current court, Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, and Stephen Breyer are the best examples.) Others have firm views about the appropriate role of the Court in the constitutional process: Felix Frankfurter famously counseled restraint and maximum feasible deference to legislative decisions, while Earl Warren believed that it was the Court’s responsibility to defend individual rights—against popular and legislative majorities if necessary.

Second, there’s no single model of conservative jurisprudence—or of liberal jurisprudence, for that matter. For example, press coverage often treats Thomas and Scalia as twins. But they aren’t. Thomas is much more willing than Scalia to overrule prior constitutional decisions even when they are venerable and entrenched. In jurisprudential language: Scalia incorporates stare decisis into his decision-making calculus, while Thomas believes that if a constitutional case was wrongly decided a century ago, its age shouldn’t tip the scales against reversal.

Third, justices have different dominant concerns. For Anthony Kennedy, it’s individual liberty, an issue to which he returned repeatedly as he grilled Solicitor General Donald Verrilli on Tuesday. Early in that day’s proceeding he asked, “When you are changing the relation of the individual to the government in this ... unique way, do you not have a heavy burden of justification to show authorization under the Constitution?” Later on he expressed his worry that the individual mandate “changes the relationship of the federal government to the individual in a very fundamental way.” By contrast, Justice Scalia and Chief Justice Roberts appeared more concerned about the distinction between the federal government’s enumerated powers under the Constitution as contrasted with the broader police power of the states. (That said, all the conservative-leaning justices seemed to take seriously the distinction between regulating commerce and forcing individuals to enter commerce, and they seemed uniformly concerned that the government had failed to establish principled limits to the scope of the Commerce Clause.)

Indeed, arguments in the Supreme Court take place against a historical backdrop—not only the Court’s history but also that of individual justices. When the justices enter the conference room to vote on current cases, they bring their past decisions along with them. For example, in his concurring opinion in Gonzales v. Raich, Scalia offered a broad interpretation of how the Commerce Clause and the Necessary and Proper Clause work together to authorize federal government regulation to activities that affect interstate commerce, even when those activities are not themselves part of interstate commerce. Many seasoned Court-watchers believed that Scalia would have a hard time squaring that opinion with a vote against the constitutionality of the individual mandate. But on Tuesday, Scalia argued, as he has before, that the two adjectives in the Necessary and Proper Clause impose separate and distinct tests: A particular means to an end may be necessary without being proper, especially if it runs into a wall of constitutional prohibition. The forcefulness with which Scalia made this distinction showed that he was acutely aware of the implications of his own judicial record on these matters.

It’s also important to point out that there’s no necessary correspondence between jurisprudential and political views. For example, Antonin Scalia is a staunch Catholic, so one might expect him to favor constitutional doctrines that mandate broad accommodation of religious liberty. But just the reverse is true: Scalia authored the majority decision in Employment Division v. Smith, widely regarded as the most anti-accommodationist case in decades. That decision made it clear that Scalia fears anarchy much more than tyranny. For more libertarian conservatives, such as Anthony Kennedy, the reverse is the case—hence his majority decision in Lawrence v. Texas, which struck down a Texas law criminalizing sodomy and was couched in high-minded prose that Scalia has since attacked and mocked mercilessly.

And finally, many justices—and especially chief justices—think hard about the consequences of their decisions for the standing of the Court over time. At the height of the constitutional controversy over the New Deal in the mid-1930s, Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes shifted ground to avert an all-out confrontation between the Court and the Roosevelt administration. In the early 1950s, Chief Justice Warren maneuvered behind the scenes for two years to ensure a unanimous decision in Brown v. Board, a case he knew would test the Court’s legitimacy. And today, Chief Justice John Roberts surely understands that a root-and-branch assault on the Affordable Care Act would thrust the Court into the center of presidential politics to an extent unseen since 1936. In that way, the question of whether Roberts would participate in a 5-to-4 decision overturning the individual mandate—thus creating the biggest confrontation between the president and the Court in 75 years—is not only a question of his legal theories, but also of his commitment to the legacy of the Court as an institution.

For example, it’s possible to imagine Roberts joining with the liberals for the sake of preserving the institutional reputation of the Court, while assigning himself the majority decision so he can write the narrowest possible opinion upholding the mandate—perhaps on the grounds (which he stated twice) that the government isn’t forcing individuals to enter the health insurance market because everybody is already in it, willy-nilly. He could insist on the doctrinal point that the Commerce Clause doesn’t give the government the power to compel individuals into commerce while denying that health insurance is an instance of the forbidden compulsion. Conversely, if Roberts gives priority to his own jurisprudence over the Court’s institutional standing and thereby provides the fifth vote to overturn the mandate, he could assign himself the majority opinion with an eye to minimizing the damage. He might well argue that his position does not reflect ideological hostility to expansive government action. The government could have used its taxing power straightforwardly to create a much more statist health insurance system than does the ACA, he might remind: “Medicare for all” would lie beyond the reach of constitutional challenge.

None of this is to say that the Court won’t find a way to invalidate the controversial core of the ACA. (I’d be stunned if they swept the entire law aside, however.) But it is to say that the path to overturning the law is more winding than a simple count of liberal and conservative justices would suggest. And it’s very likely that the Justices—and the Chief Justice in particular—will be tempted to place their decision somewhere in the middle of that path.

William Galston is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a contributing editor for The New Republic.

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22 comments

Mr. Galston appears to forget Bush V. Gore

- darklayers

March 29, 2012 at 12:11am

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We can count on Scalia, Thomas, and Alito to be crude, political, and crudely political, because that is who they are and what they do. We can count on Roberts to be political, but not crude, because that's who he is and what he does, although it is unclear what that portends. We can count on the liberal justices to write impeccable, scholarly opinions explaining in a manner consistent with the very long history of constitutional jurisprudence exactly why that jurisprudence compels the conclusion that the ACA is not only constitutional, but not even close to the line. We cannot count on Kennedy for anything. Depends on what he had for breakfast, or who he talked to last, or how sensitive he is feeling that day to ridicule by Scalia who manages to violate all sorts of rules of judicial behavior with no response from anyone, just by being a bully.

- roidubouloi

March 29, 2012 at 12:55am

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Well said, darklayers.

- magboy47.

March 29, 2012 at 1:27am

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I predict that they will overturn without overturning by ruling that A mandate may be permissible, but not THE mandate as congress has structured it. I think the administration erred by putting too much stress on the inevitability of everyone being in the market at some point, a position which is easy to pick apart, and not enough emphasis on the need for universal coverage to have functioning insurance market.

- bustedboom

March 29, 2012 at 3:37am

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Galston gets it right. This is a political dilemma for which the chief justice must provide a political solution, the precedent established by the first and greatest chief justice.

- rayward

March 29, 2012 at 7:32am

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This issue is just too juicy a target for the conservative majority on the court. They will rule against the mandate and in doing so hope to destroy this president and for stall health reform for a generation. How sad.

- paskunac

March 29, 2012 at 7:40am

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Galston overemphasizes the importance of the justices' different approaches in considering likely outcomes. OK, so even if Thomas and Scalia have different reasoning for how they vote, how often has that led them to cast opposing votes? I don't know the answer to that, but my distinct impression is that they pretty much always vote the same way. There are multiple ways to rationalize decisions made for political or ideological reasons. Does anyone really believe that Scalia would be so passionate about the ACA if the basic idea were still a Heritage Foundation baby and had been midwifed by a President McCain? The court has its fair share of hacks, and the higher the stakes (Bush v. Gore, anyone?), the more tempting it is for the hacks on the bench to cast political votes.

- interloper

March 29, 2012 at 8:35am

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Our first chief justice was actually John Jay. John Marshall (whom I'm guessing rayward is referring to?) was I believe our fourth.

- bjones

March 29, 2012 at 10:06am

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If the Republican Justices believe they can help defeat Obama by overturning the law, they will. If they aren't so certain of that - and if they think that Obama will be re-elected - they won't. In that case, Roberts and Kennedy will provide the needed votes.

- CABChi

March 29, 2012 at 10:42am

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Yes, Marshall was the fourth to be appointed and confirmed, but the first to be appointed, confirmed, and serve in the capacity as Chief of a co-equal branch of government - up until Marshall, the associate judges (they weren't called justices) and the chief justice mainly traveled the circuits presiding over trials. Indeed, several who were appointed rejected the appointment as insignificant. One might say that Marshall was the fourth chief justice but the first Chief Justice.

- rayward

March 29, 2012 at 11:50am

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The author of the post seems to argue there is ample precedent to decide the action, rather than resort to a "political" outcome supported mostly by the creativity and imagination of Court members. During these proceedings, I wondered why an earlier decision of the United States Supreme Court went unmentioned in oral argument that allows a municipality to engage in eminent domain for non governmental purposes. A decision about the Affordable Health Care Act wouldn't be the first time the US Supreme Court and the wonderful world of Disney have joined hands.

- Doug12

March 29, 2012 at 12:47pm

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Contrary to his rhetoric, Scalia votes to overturn previous decisions all the fucking time.

- Curran1

March 29, 2012 at 2:52pm

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For me a potent factor that stem the overrule tide is Roberts's institutional self consciousness. There's a lot to this in my view-- ...Chief Justice John Roberts surely understands that a root-and-branch assault on the Affordable Care Act would thrust the Court into the center of presidential politics to an extent unseen since 1936. In that way, the question of whether Roberts would participate in a 5-to-4 decision overturning the individual mandate—thus creating the biggest confrontation between the president and the Court in 75 years—is not only a question of his legal theories, but also of his commitment to the legacy of the Court as an institution... I think in this for those who want the law maintained lie some seeds of hope. In my own reckoning, a pure guess like anyone else's, I think a 5/4 or 6/3 vote in favour of the mandates for this reason is my best guess. So I'm attracted to what Galston says here: ...For example, it’s possible to imagine Roberts joining with the liberals for the sake of preserving the institutional reputation of the Court, while assigning himself the majority decision so he can write the narrowest possible opinion upholding the mandate—perhaps on the grounds (which he stated twice) that the government isn’t forcing individuals to enter the health insurance market because everybody is already in it, willy-nilly. He could insist on the doctrinal point that the Commerce Clause doesn’t give the government the power to compel individuals into commerce while denying that health insurance is an instance of the forbidden compulsion... And I could see the wheels in Kennedy's mind starting to turn along these lines when he finshed his questioning of Carvin.

- basman

March 29, 2012 at 4:25pm

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Galson is knocking me off. See from yesterday: 03/28/2012 - 10:19pm EDT | roidubouloi The four liberals plus Kennedy. I think Roberts is going to vote with the majority so that he can appoint himself to write the majority opinion and try to shape it in a manner favorable to the minority opinion, Warren Burger's old trick. As a result, there will likely be concurring opinions from other justices who don't like Roberts' take on things. The only really interesting question to my mind is what ridiculous explanation Scalia, Alito, and Thomas are going to come up with for trying to undo 220 years of American constitutional jurisprudence plus the intent of the Framers. The bullshit will likely be every bit as thick as in Bush v. Gore. http://www.tnr.com/article/politics/magazine/102089/health-care-obamacare-supreme-court

- roidubouloi

March 29, 2012 at 4:40pm

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Why isn't there a higher court we can appeal to?

- skahn

March 29, 2012 at 6:07pm

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great comments.

- WandreyCer

March 29, 2012 at 8:08pm

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I think there will be a multiple opinionss on this case with all the dissension. I can't imagine Justice Sotomayer not writing this case up, and Scalia wants to say something. I think the President does not have much goodwill within the court. He voted against Roberts, and then berated the Citizens United Decision in a very public Joint Session of Congress. The fact that they took this case when they did speaks volumes. My opinion a couple years back is that the President's battle over health care was fighting the last battle. So obsessed with not losing like the Clinton's there was desperation. Now it appears they have found a new way to lose. But I don't think this loss will be as bad as the Liberals believe. First off rolling back the ACA will be a relief for a lot of people who are struggling to implement it. Second, Americans understand how difficult it is to manage health care with all the different funding sources and litigation, not to mention entrenched interests. Lastly, American's like divided government to keep a check on hair-brained ideas like this legislation. Galston put together a good piece here, and the comments are good too. This should be good to talk about for a while.

- CRS9TNR

March 29, 2012 at 9:57pm

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It is not the place of the Supreme Court to substitute its prudential judgment on matters of market management for that of the 535 elected representatives of the people, much as CR would like it to do so. The radical/reactionaries on the Supreme Court, despite their hypocritical rhetoric about restraint, have completely lost track of their own proper role in the constitutional scheme.

- roidubouloi

March 29, 2012 at 10:43pm

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It certainly doesn't elevate one's opinion of the Chief Justice and some of his colleagues to think that they would permit personal grudges and resentments to influence the decisions they make about matters of high national importance. If that's what you're saying, CR.

- ironyroad

March 30, 2012 at 5:13pm

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Irony, Everyone holds bias and grudges. And they can display their resentments in many ways. I think the Judges will rule according to the law. However, I think the Justices moved this case up to rule on this before the elections to demonstrate a little independence, and perhaps tweak a sitting President who thought he could lecture them. it will be fun to read the opinions to see if they sneak in any references to Citizen's United, or other jabs at The Executive or Lefislative Branches.

- CRS9TNR

March 30, 2012 at 7:37pm

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As the hearings have shown all the subtleness and sophistication of past decades are out the window. The writing is on the wall: ACA is history. Biggest victory for the tea party which has gotten under Kennedy's and Robert's skin and is about to dominate politics for the next 20 years.

- henhen

March 30, 2012 at 10:45pm

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"Everyone holds bias and grudges. And they can display their resentments in many ways. I think the Judges will rule according to the law. However, I think the Justices moved this case up to rule on this before the elections to demonstrate a little independence, and perhaps tweak a sitting President who thought he could lecture them." Really? You think? Sounds as if you wanted to disagree with me and ended up agreeing with me.

- ironyroad

April 3, 2012 at 5:04pm

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