But then it’s all very self-contradictory. How are people supposed to have faith in the court when it makes a decision, reaffirms it many times over nearly 50 years, then just changes its mind on a dime?
The judicial branch has a responsibility to itself for self-consistent reasoning, which it has completely abandoned this term.
The court is not supposed to change dramatically with every election, that’s what the legislative branch does. And yet, the court did.
It’s legal of course, the court can do what it wants. But it can (and has) lost approval and legitimacy, which at the end of the day were it’s most valuable currency.
It doesn't change dramatically with EVERY election, it just changed dramatically with the last one due to a lot of judges retiring/dying off at once. Just a generational phenomenon.
SCOTUS leaned liberal (in the sense that liberal justices tend to believe in larger-scope interpretations of Constitution) for a long time, now for the first time in a while they're leaning conservative (the Constitution says what it says and if we want it to say something different Congress should pass an amendment).
Honestly I find myself falling into the more Conservative camp from a judicial perspective. I'm all for gay marriage and a woman's right to choose, but I feel like we used SCOTUS to do an end-run around Congress to get both at a federal level, and from my layperson's reading the constitutional justifications for both feel stretched to me. In the same sense that you can use creative interpretations of the Bible to justify basically anything, you can do similar things with the Constitution. That isn't how the system is supposed to work
It doesn’t matter what camp you fall into, or if you think the courts decisions in the past were “wrong” (though obviously there is no absolute right or wrong interpreting how a 250 year old document interfaces with modern society).
The court as an institution has a responsibility to maintain some sort of consistency if it wants any legitimacy.
How can people make decisions about where and how to live if their fundamental rights are changing year to year (and most recently being taken away)?
You are also not aligned with the current public opinion. The court is at its lowest approval rating ever, and that is before overturning Roe. If the court cannot maintain it’s appearance of legitimacy then it essentially fails as an institution. The court could have chosen to move more slowly, with more restraint, but it didn’t.
The whole idea of the court is to be above public opinion. This is not the first time in history that the court has made sweeping overturns of previous precedent that large swaths of voters disagreed with. It's also not the first time the legitimacy of those rulings has been challenged. Remember Eisenhower sending the 101st Airborne and federalizing the Arkansas National Guard to enforce integration? Or Kennedy doing similar for Alabama? Those actions were enforcement of a controversial SCOTUS ruling against the local public opinion.
And you can say "yeah but racists were the bad guys", but that's not how any of this works, regardless of what narratives we decide to apply to history after the fact. Did the court's lack of perceived legitimacy in Birmingham or Little Rock (among many other places that required less extreme enforcement) cause it to fail as an institution?
The court only fails as an institution when it's decisions are no longer enforced. Last I checked we haven't reached that point yet. And even if we do, worth remembering SCOTUS survived the last civil war intact.
His argument is that Congress should legislate these issues either through proper laws or constitutional amendments. Turns out 9 judges might disagree with the previous set of 9 judges. That disagreement swings both ways and in the absence of proper legislative action will become the law of the land.
It is rare for the Supreme Court to act as a second Congress. When it has, those are the cases that most likely get overruled. Additionally, old cases with poor and antiquated assumptions get overturned (not relevant here, just showing a consistency in what is and can be expected to be reviewed.)
Opposing sides of that court have said the exact same thing about Roe v Wade. Ruth Bader Ginsberg even said "this is pretty weak, going to need Congress here", no different than Justice Alito on the opposite side.
I think your perspective is very common, I think it is disingenuous for different people that should know better to promote that perspective. There is so much the elected representatives and the people can do. This crisis of confidence perspective relies on nobody actually reading these cases.
RBG argued that RvW was decided poorly but that doesn’t mean there isn’t a constitutional right to abortion. There are other sources that could be used for the right than SDP.
Ruth Bader Ginsberg is most certainly not an extreme comparable to Alito, lol.
The Supreme Court has acted as a second Congress for a wide variety of things. This is how miranda rights happened. This is how contraception was legalized. This is how homosexuality was legalized. This is how race integration was legalized. ETC.
Congress better get to work and find a rationale in the articles and a variety of amendments
(As just one, like interstate commerce, will keep it on the chopping block by the same court)
also, currently people need to be challenging laws and the court has to accept those challenges, if there isn’t political will to still challenge those things then the cases will never happen
The judicial branch has a responsibility to itself for self-consistent reasoning, which it has completely abandoned this term.
The court is not supposed to change dramatically with every election, that’s what the legislative branch does. And yet, the court did.
It’s legal of course, the court can do what it wants. But it can (and has) lost approval and legitimacy, which at the end of the day were it’s most valuable currency.