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# 025 What Makes a Good Supreme Court Justice? Evaluative Criteria in Confirmation Debates I. Introduction The process for confirming Supreme Court Justices in the United States, in addition to ensuring that nominees are acceptable to a majority of Senators, also provides a forum for clarifying and illuminating understandings of the Justices’ roles and of the task of interpreting the Constitution. This confirmation process appears to many observers to have undergone dramatic changes during the past three decades. Some critics of the confirmation process lament that it has become too “political,” meaning that the participants seek to appoint justices who will support particular policies rather than justices who are competent and fair, and that this diminishes the Court’s independence. Other observers maintain that political motivations have always played a large role in the confirmation process, and that it is other factors, such as the mechanics of the process and the style of news coverage, that have changed. In this paper I join the conversation about the confirmation process by examining a limited slice of the public discourse surrounding confirmations. Using both quantitative and qualitative analysis, I examine New York Times coverage of the debates about Louis Brandeis’s nomination to be Associate Justice in 1916, Abe Fortas’s nomination to be Chief Justice in 1968, and Clarence Thomas’s nomination to be Associate Justice in 1991. I am interested in the confirmation debates because they are instances in which the tension between law and politics in the role of a judge is illuminated. In a legal framework, Judges are assumed to impartially interpret the Constitution to come up with 1 objectively correct answers to legal questions. In a political framework, Justices are assumed to have particular outcomes or agendas in mind. The argument of this paper is that, while the Supreme Court confirmation process has always been political, the participants in the national debates about confirmations have become increasingly willing to articulate their claims in political terms. The rhetoric of confirmation debates has shifted away from a logic of impartiality and towards a logic of ideology. Although claims to impartiality often mask ideological motives, candidates’ ideological leanings are increasingly referenced in arguments made by their supporters and detractors. II. The Politics of the Confirmation Process Accounts of the Changes: Interpretations of the Bork Battle Many accounts of changes in the Supreme Court confirmation process identify the failed nomination of Robert Bork as a watershed. President Reagan nominated Robert Bork to the Supreme Court in the late spring of 1987, and the hearings themselves did not take place until October of that year. During the intervening summer, civil rights groups, feminist groups, consumer rights groups, unions, and other organizations waged an intensive campaign to convince the country and the Senate that Robert Bork was so conservative as to be outside the judicial mainstream. Over 300 groups campaigned against Bork and over 100 groups campaigned in favor of him. Ronald Reagan spoke publicly on Bork’s behalf over thirty times -- an unprecedented number of public statements made by a President about a Supreme Court nominee -- and the White House lobbied Senators relentlessly. During the hearings, Bork was questioned about his method 2 of Constitutional interpretation and his views on various past Supreme Court cases, and he provided lengthy and detailed answers to these questions. His nomination was then voted down in the Senate. The divergent understandings of Bork battle are exemplified by the accounts of James Carey and Michael Pertschuk and Wendy Schaetzel. These accounts illuminate the different ways of understanding the role of public debate, media scrutiny, and ideology-based questioning in the confirmation process. James Carey, in “Political Ritual on Television: Episodes in the History of Shame, Degradation, and Excommunication,” characterizes the Bork hearings and the accompanying public debate as a “collective social rite” in which Robert Bork was ritually shamed, excommunicated, and degraded. 1 Carey argues that, in considering Bork’s defeat, we should look beyond the battle of political ideologies and focus on the “inherent drama and symbolic efficacy of the process,” which accrued largely because the event was televised.2 Drawing on Katz and Dayan’s concept of media events3, Carey 1 James Carey, “Political Ritual on Television – Episodes in the History of Shame, Degradation, and Ex-Communication” in James Curran and Tamar Liebes (Eds), Media and Public: Rethinking the Part Played by People in the Flow of Mass Communication (Routledge: 1998), 42. 2 Carey, 52. This contention that television, more than political ideology, was the primary shaping force for this event, points to one of several possible ways of explaining why the confirmation process has changed. Although I agree that the televised nature of the hearings helped shape the process in some ways, I do not agree with Carey’s argument that television was the primary shaping factor or even a major shaping factor. To cite just one problem with this argument, Abe Fortas’s 1968 confirmation hearings were also dramatic and symbolic, yet were not televised. No confirmation hearings were televised until Sandra Day O’Connor’s in 1981. 3 Carey, 53. Carey argues that televised confirmation battles share many characteristics of Dayan and Katz’ media events, particularly their role as collective social rites through which society celebrates its core, sacred values. However, Carey contends that these confirmation battles form part of a group of televised “quasi-judicial events” such as the Iran-Contra hearings and the House UnAmerican Activities hearings that do not fit into Dayan and Katz’ classificatory scheme of contests, conquests and coronations. Carey characterizes these televised, quasi-judicial events as chaotic, ungoverned, frightening, 3 theorizes that the Bork hearings served to define the “permissible range of social discourse” in America and to mark out the consequences for transgressing this range.4 This was accomplished through the ritual demotion of Robert Bork from high status to low status, sacred to profane. In other words, by defining Bork as outside the norm, and thereby symbolically exiling him, the event worked to display and define America’s core values. Carey argues that, although these defining rituals are necessary for all societies, confirmation hearings are an inappropriate forum for them because they do not present a ritualized path to reconciliation.5 While the media events discussed by Dayan and Katz are fundamentally integrative, confirmation hearings, according to Carey, produce dissensus and “exercises in social cruelty.”6 Carey’s argument carries implications for thinking about the role of public debate in the confirmation process and the range of legitimate criteria for assessing nominees. By describing the Bork hearings as functioning primarily to ritually degrade the nominee, Carey casts doubt on the legitimacy of the stated goals and claims of the groups opposing Bork. By using terms such as “shame” and “degradation,” and by grouping this confirmation battle with “episodes of systematic and sanctioned misanthropy” and “witch hunts,”7 Carey paints a picture of Bork’s opponents as engaged in a cruel, irrational act of mob politics, rather than as carrying out a reasonable, legitimate campaign for social justice. Finally, by arguing that the confirmation hearings were an inappropriate forum bitter, and intense. Most importantly, he argues, these events “implant a fissure” rather than “healing a breach,” See also Daniel Dayan and Elihu Katz, Media Events – The Live Broadcasting of History (Harvard University Press: 1992), 4-9. 4 Carey, 47, 65. 5 Carey, 62. 6 Carey, 66. 7 Carey, 42. 4 for the process he describes, Carey implies that the hearings were somehow vulgar and unseemly. Michael Pertschuk and Wendy Schaetzel’s book The People Rising: The Campaign Against the Bork Nomination presents a very different interpretation of the Bork hearings and debate. Pertschuk and Schaetzel argue that Bork’s opponents were engaged in “high democracy, not low politics,” and that their efforts were a necessary and moderate response to Reagan’s politicizing of the judiciary.8 They contend that the opponents’ claims were based on a sophisticated understanding of the underlying legal issues and a reasoned, justified repudiation of Bork’s constitutional vision.9 They also point out that characterizing the debate and its participants as “inappropriate” serves to obscure the legitimate questions of ideology and Constitutional interpretation that were at issue. The People Rising is not a theoretical treatise, but, like Carey’s piece, it contains underlying assumptions about how the confirmation process should function. Pertschuk and Schaetzel’s reading of the event is rooted in two fundamental assumptions: first, that Supreme Court nominees should be closely scrutinized by the press and citizens’ groups, and second, that a nominee’s ideology, method of Constitutional interpretation, and views on specific Supreme Court cases are legitimate criteria for evaluating Supreme Court nominees. After Bork’s defeat, many observers called for reform of the process. The 20th Century Fund, a nonpartisan foundation that supports and organizes public policy research, brought together a task force of academics, lawyers, and government officials to 8 Michael Pertschuk and Wendy Schaetzel, The People Rising: The Campaign Against the Bork Nomination (Thunder’s Mouth Press: 1989). 7. 9 Pertschuk and Schaetzel, 20. 5 assess the confirmation process and submit a proposal for changes. The task force findings, published in 1988, were sharply critical of the process. They concluded that the process had become too visible, that it was functioning too much like an election, and that the various participants were using the hearings to promote their own agendas. The task force made four recommendations for fixing the confirmation process. First, they said that it should be “depoliticized” by minimizing the potential for participants to use the hearings to pursue their own agendas and promote themselves. Second, they said that nominees should not be required to testify in person during the Senate Judiciary Committee’s hearings on confirmation. Third, they said that if it was absolutely necessary for nominees to testify, Senators should be prohibited from asking the nominees about how they would rule on specific issues. Fourth, they said that the decision about whether or not to confirm a nominee should be based on a nominee’s written record and the testimony of legal experts as to his or her competence.10 These recommendations were controversial, even among the members of the task force. From the ten-member task force, one member dissented from all of these conclusions, another dissented from recommendations two and four, and another dissented from the conclusion that the process functions too much like an election.11 These disagreements, and the divergence between Carey and Pertschuk/Schaetzel, indicate a lack of consensus in normative visions of the confirmation process. However, underlying these disagreements is a fundamental understanding that the confirmation process changed in important ways with the Bork battle: publicity and interest group 10 Judicial Roulette -- Report of the Twentieth Century Fund Task Force on Judicial Selection (Priority Press Publications: 1988), 9-11. 11 Judicial Roulette, 8-11. 6 participation reached unprecedented levels and the nominee’s expected future decisions from the bench, rather than his or her legal competence, became the main criteria used for assessment. Putting the Changes in Context: Political Motivations, Participation, and Publicity John Anthony Maltese, in The Selling of Supreme Court Nominees, argues that reformers who call for a return to emphasizing legal competence in evaluating nominees display a desire to return to an idealized time that never existed.12 He contends that many critics of the process falsely assume that considerations of nominee’s ideologies are new to Supreme Court confirmations, when they are in fact as old as the process itself. What has changed, he says, is that the process is now more public and incorporates more participants. Maltese agrees that the publicity and the participation of interest groups did reach unprecedented levels during the Bork battle. However, his argument suggests that these changes need to be viewed in historical context. These changes do not indicate a radical break with the past, but rather are a manifestation of developments that have been unfolding since the end of the Civil War. In fact, Maltese contends that the first nominee to be “borked,” or defeated by a lobbying and public relations campaign based on his 12 John Anthony Maltese, The Selling of Supreme Court Nominees (Johns Hopkins University Press: 1995). Maltese cites the 20th Century Fund task force report as an example of a report that proposes that confirmation decisions should be based on legal qualifications, and this is an accurate characterization. However, the background paper written by one of the task force members and appended to the task force report suggests that the group was considerably less naïve regarding the history of Supreme Court confirmations than Maltese suggests. The background paper demonstrates a good deal of cognizance – although perhaps not as much cognizance as Maltese demonstrates – that the confirmation process has always been political. Somehow, though, this insight was not translated into the task force’s proposals for reform. 7 political views, was John Rutledge, whose nomination to be Chief Justice was rejected by the Senate in 1795 largely because of his public opposition to the recently signed Jay Treaty.13 Federalist newspapers, which supported the treaty, attacked Rutledge for his opinion, asserted that he was not dignified enough for the office of Chief Justice, and called for an inquiry into his personal affairs. Federalist Alexander Hamilton lobbied Senators to reject Rutledge, alleging that he was insane.14 Rutledge was rejected by the Senate in a 14-10 vote. Maltese argues that, in its incorporation of name-calling, public appeals, charges of personal impropriety, and political partisanship, the battle over John Rutledge displayed many of the characteristics that contemporary observers have claimed are recent and dangerous developments. He shows that confirmations throughout United States history have displayed these characteristics. 15 Article II Section 2 of the Constitution gives the President the power to appoint Supreme Court Justices, but dictates that he must do so with the “advise and consent” of the Senate.16 What this has come to mean is that the President nominates a candidate, and the Senate screens the President’s choices and votes to confirm or reject them. Maltese shows that, because the Constitution provides no clear guidelines on what “advice and consent” means or how much power it accords to the Senate, the mechanics of the confirmation process have often been debated, and have been shaped by political norms rather than following a clear rule.17 Different political camps have advocated a strong Senate role at different times, depending on what each camp would have to gain from this 13 Maltese, 26. Maltese, 30 15 Maltese, 31 16 The Constitution of the United States, Thirteenth Edition, 1991. Published by the Commission on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution, Washington, D.C. 17 Maltese, 18. 14 8 state of affairs. For example, during the first few decades of the 20th century, economic conservatives dominated the Supreme Court and liberals and progressives espoused vigilant screening of nominees by the Senate, while conservative Senators advocated deference to the President’s judicial choices. In the 1950s and 1960s, when the liberal Warren Court infuriated conservatives, the political camps switched arguments, and conservatives advocated vigilant screening by the Senate, while liberals advocated deference to the President.18 What this demonstrates, according to Maltese, is that the confirmation process has always been an inherently political process, shaped by “changing political dynamics, contemporary concerns, and the balance of power.”19 However, Maltese concedes that some aspects of the confirmation process have changed dramatically in the late 20th century. What is new, Maltese says, is that the process, once comprised of government officials debating with each other, now includes a wider variety of participants, and these participants – both old and new -- have increasingly oriented their appeals towards mobilizing public opinion. Maltese attributes these changes primarily to institutional changes that have given interest groups more leverage in the confirmation process and have made public opinion more important to governance. Until 1913, Senators were chosen by state legislatures rather than by popular elections, so the threat of electoral retaliation for voting to confirm unpopular nominees was not immediate. The ratification of the 17th Amendment in 1913 provided for direct, popular election of Senators, thus giving interest groups a way to 18 19 Maltese, 21. Maltese, 22. 9 pressure Senators. 20 Until 1929, Senate debate about Supreme Court confirmations was closed to the public unless two thirds of Senators voted to open it and there was no rollcall vote, so it was difficult for constituents to find out how specific Senators had voted. In 1929, Senate rule changes mandated that debate on Supreme Court confirmations be open to the public, making Senators more accountable for their decisions.21 Maltese argues that as the participants such as interest groups learned that they could influence Senators by mobilizing public opinion, they began making increasingly frequent public appeals regarding confirmations. Additionally, although they previously had maintained scrupulous public silences during confirmation debates, Presidents began in the 20th Century to “go public” to make their cases. Maltese explains that the founders were afraid of too much “pure” or “direct” democracy, and believed that government, particularly the Supreme Court, should be “insulated from the whims of public opinion.” However, the 20th century produced new interpretations of the Constitutional order, and Presidents increasingly used public appeals to gain support for their policies. Political scientist Sam Kernell has elaborated this model of Presidential power, which he calls “going public.” In this framework, Presidential power is equated with the ability to shape 20 This claim of Maltese’s rests on two assumptions: first, that Senators base their actions solely on their calculations regarding how to get the most votes, and second, that Senators’ votes on Supreme Court candidates play a large role in citizens’ choices of Senators. These claims can both be contested. It is likely that Senators are motivated in their actions by a variety of factors, including party loyalty, personal convictions, and experience with particular issues. Voters, too, are probably influenced in their choices of Senators by multiple factors, and may not be swayed by, or even know about, Senators’ decisions about Supreme Court confirmations. These caveats do not completely negate Maltese’s claim that the 17th Amendment had an effect on confirmation battles. Rather, they temper it by suggesting that a combination of factors shaped these battles. 21 Maltese, 37 10 public opinion, and the result is an unending campaign.22 Nominees have also increasingly been called upon to testify at their hearings and have personally lobbied Senators and met with journalists. Maltese’s account provides a useful guide for understanding the confirmation process and the ways in which it has changed. However, I believe that the entrance of new participants such as interest groups and the increasingly public orientation of the process do not tell the only story that there is to tell. By focusing on the language and rhetorical framing in the struggle over opinion, I hope to supplement Maltese’s account and highlight the ways in which people have understood the role of Supreme Court Justices. III. Conceptual Framework: Ideology and Impartiality To analyze the arguments made about the suitability of particular candidates to be Supreme Court Justices, I looked at New York Times coverage of the confirmation battles over Louis Brandeis, Abe Fortas, and Clarence Thomas. The results of this study suggest that the political motivations in confirmations are increasingly articulated as such. Arguments reported by the New York Times about the suitability of particular candidates have demonstrated an increasing willingness on the part of debate participants to use the candidate’s ideology as a criterion for assessment. The significance of this issue stems from the fact that arguments advanced during confirmation debates contain implicit assumptions about what the role of the Justices should be, and correspond to different understandings of how the Supreme Court should 22 Maltese, 113 11 function in a democracy. The argument that nominees should be evaluated based on their competence and temperament suggests that a Justice’s role is to reach the correct answer to each Constitutional question. This view is articulated by Alexander Hamilton, who argues in the Federalist Papers that judges should not be in a position that encourages them to “consult popularity” and that their position must “justify a reliance that nothing … be consulted but the Constitution and the laws.”23 The argument that nominees should be evaluated based on their views about specific cases suggests that there are different ways of approaching each Constitutional question. Furthermore, some critics have argued that the democratic goal of government accountability is subverted by the existence of such a powerful institution over which the electorate has no control.24 From this point of view, citizens can and should seek to find out how what kinds of decisions each nominee is likely reach.25 Maltese describes these two ways of imagining Justices’ roles: In theory, impartial judges objectively applying the law according to set standards of interpretation should all reach the same “correct” outcome in cases that come before them. But, in practice, there are very different views among judges about how to interpret legal texts. Moreover, judges are human beings who are influenced, at least in part, by their backgrounds, personal predilections, and judicial philosophies. Quite simply, different judges will reach different conclusions when confronted with the same case.26 23 Alexander Hamilton, “The Federalist No. 78: Judicial Tenure and Review,” in Roy P. Fairfield, ed., The Federalist Papers (Anchor Books: 1961), 232. 24 This position is proposed by Robert Entman and David Paletz in Media/Power/Politics (Free Press: 1991), in which they argue that the media should scrutinize the Supreme Court more closely in order to break down its elite, insulated position. 25 Pertschuk and Schaetzel 26 Maltese, 2. 12 Each of these two cases points to a different standard for confirming justices. In the theoretical scenario, the most suitable candidate would be one who is able to put his or her personal views aside, to be essentially interest-less. Helpful qualities according to this standard would include intelligence and experience as a judge or a lawyer – qualities that will help one reach “correct” decisions and that are not known to slant one’s point of view in a particular direction. In the real-life scenario, the ideal candidate would be one who supports the political or philosophical views of whoever is making the evaluation. Helpful qualities according to this standard would include particular methods of Constitutional interpretation and opinions about issues likely to come before the court. In this paper, I use the terms “politics” and “impartiality” to indicate these two general categories for thinking about the role of justices. I group politics and ideology together and group impartiality and judicial temperament together. Although Maltese designates one scenario as “theory” and the other as “practice,” both scenarios’ implied standards of evaluation play roles in confirmation discourse. Because law is an abstract system of rules that governs concrete events, it can be viewed as sharing some general principles with science. Both law and science include standards of evidence and approved procedures for determining the truth. Judges, like scientists, are expected to at least act as though they are dispassionate and above politics. Thus, a debate about who is suitable to be a Supreme Court Justice implicitly includes questions about who is impartial and how impartiality is defined. Confirmation battles bring to light the tension between the standard of impartiality and the standard of ideology. IV. Methodology 13 In order to trace the standards of evaluation in confirmation debates, I analyzed New York Times coverage of three confirmation battles. My study is both defined and constrained by three factors: sources, cases and method. Because the New York Times was my only source, I analyzed the discourse through the prism of this paper’s journalistic practices. I have made the assumption here that New York Times journalists report the opinions of people or organizations who are understood to have a stake in the outcome of confirmations and whose opinions are understood to matter in some way. I am also making the assumption that the range of statements about a particular nominee reported by the Times will loosely correspond to the range of evaluative standards employed by participants in that confirmation battle. It is possible that some aspects of the changes in confirmation discourse that I identify result in part from changes in journalistic practices rather than from dynamics specific to the confirmation process. However, I believe it is more likely that journalism and Supreme Court confirmations have evolved together. The second factor defining and constraining my study is the three cases I have chosen to examine. I chose the nominations of Brandeis, Fortas and Thomas because each was opposed by enough people to provoke genuine debate about the qualifications necessary to be a Supreme Court Justice. Additionally, the grouping of these three allowed me to look at the span of the 20th century and to think about changes occurring over this time period. Finally, because Thomas is black and Brandeis and Fortas were Jewish, their nominations present the possibility of looking at the role that minority group membership plays in arguments made about nominees. This topic necessitates much more careful and in-depth analysis than I can give it here, but it is intertwined with the issues I 14 address in the discussion below. Because the nominations I chose were all extremely contentious, my findings may not be generalizable to nominations that elicit little controversy. It may be fruitful in the future to consider non-contentious cases. The third factor defining and limiting my study is the content analysis method, which produced my quantitative data. Content analysis counts instances of specific types of statements without examining the different possible meanings of and motivations for these statements. I have supplemented these quantitative data with qualitative analysis of the three cases, and have pointed out instances in which my quantitative data do not tell the whole story. A more detailed description of this methodology and its problems follows below. I have defined confirmation discourse for the purposes of this study as both the official conversations that take place in the confirmation hearings and the unofficial national “conversations” that consist of people or organizations making public statements about confirmations. As stated earlier, this study is limited to those statements reported in the New York Times. For each of the three nominations, I searched the Times’ archives for articles about or closely related to the candidate. I defined the confirmation process as events and discussions related to the confirmation that occur between the President’s announcement of the nomination and the Senate vote. After removing letters to the editor and straight transcripts of speeches and testimony, I was left with news, editorials, opeds, and columns. My study yielded 19 pieces about the Brandeis nomination, 58 about the Fortas nomination, and 420 about the Thomas nomination. I sampled one out of every 5 Thomas articles, bringing that number from 420 to 84. 15 My unit of analysis for this study was the reference, which I defined as one argument made or reported to have been made by a person or group. Each reference was contained in one sentence or small group of sentences. For this study I included only arguments about a candidate’s suitability for the Supreme Court. Because my subject is the entire discursive field surrounding confirmations, as opposed to official sources, I did not look only for direct quotes. I included as a reference any instance in which an argument about a Supreme Court candidate’s suitability is mentioned. My population for this study consisted of 250 references. For each of these, I coded for what criterion was being used to evaluate the nominee. The categories I discuss most frequently below are judicial temperament, impartiality, professional ethics, and ideology or method of Constitutional interpretation. The full list of categories I used for this variable can be seen in the Chart located at the end of this paper. Following is an example of one reference and how I coded it: Senator Strom Thurmond, Republican of South Carolina, a staunch opponent of the Fortas nomination, charged that it was improper for a justice to receive pay for outside work.27 Reason = professional ethics Below I discuss the New York Times’ reporting on the confirmation battles for Brandeis, Fortas, and Thomas, focusing on the arguments made about each candidate’s suitability to be a Supreme Court Justice. I refer throughout this discussion to the quantitative data, which are located in the chart at the end of this paper. These data support some of my qualitative observations, but miss others, indicating that some 27 “Fortas Refuses to Appear Again in Senate Inquiry,” New York Times, September 14, 1968. (0146). 16 aspects of the arguments are well captured by quantitative analysis, while others are too subtle. Difficulties emerged especially from the difference between what is meant and what is said; content analysis measures only what is said directly. Sometimes a close reading of the context in which a statement is made suggests that the speaker intended a different meaning than the most obvious one, or was motivated by different concerns than those expressed in the statement. Additionally, the quantitative portion of this study gives each argument equal weight. Some arguments, however, may have more legitimacy or impact than others in the context of the debate as a whole, depending on the forum in which they are delivered. For example, a statement made during a confirmation hearing may be perceived as more authoritative than a statements made outside the hearings. For these reasons, a mix of quantitative and qualitative analysis produced the most useful results. V. Three Cases Louis Brandeis Louis Brandeis was nominated to the Supreme Court by President Woodrow Wilson on January 28, 1916, and was confirmed on June 1, 1916.28 During his career in private practice, Brandeis had actively supported unions, worker safety laws, and antitrust legislation.29 Business leaders and pro-business politicians vehemently opposed his nomination, while organized labor groups and their allies championed it. The arguments 28 Janet B. Hodgson, “Chronology,” in Nelson L. Dawson, ed., Brandeis and America (University Press of Kentucky: 1989), p. 8. 29 Hodgson, 6 and Maltese, 49. 17 made about Brandeis’s suitability included appeals based on both his substantive views on specific issues and indicators of neutrality such as judicial temperament and fairness. Most people who made public statements about Brandeis’s nomination were clearly interested because they were either in favor of or against the pro-labor, anti-trust agenda that Brandeis had come to symbolize. However, only 23.1% of reported arguments were framed in terms of ideology. Participants in the national debate about the nomination often chose instead to cite impartiality-related or ideologically neutral criteria. The chart at the end of the paper shows that 11.5% of reported arguments about Brandeis’s suitability cited judicial temperament as a reason, and 10.3% cited a sense of truth, fairness, or impartiality: Everywhere, even among the most critical, it was conceded that Mr. Brandeis was a man of remarkable ability as a lawyer, but it was contended by the critics that this did not necessarily mean that he was fitted for a place on the Supreme Court bench. That Mr. Brandeis possessed the judicial temperament was questioned.30 The weekly publication of the Federation of American Zionists, The Jewish People, writes in its editorial column that “In spite of the fact that he has appeared everywhere as the protagonist of issues that involved bitter factional struggles, his mind is essentially that of a judge; he has always been a seeker after truth and is a scrupulous believer in justice and fair play.31 Those who favored Brandeis’s confirmation often cited ideologically neutral standards of professional competence. The chart shows that 9% of reported arguments about Brandeis’s suitability for the Supreme Court cited his skill as a lawyer, and 7.7% cited his knowledge about important issues: 30 “Brandeis Named for Highest Court; Will Be Opposed,” New York Times, January 29, 1916. 31 “Zionist Organ Lauds Supreme Court Nominee and Assails Critics,” New York Times, February 7, 1916. 18 Louis Marshall, the attorney, in commenting on Mr. Brandeis’s nomination yesterday said: “I am very much pleased at the nomination. He is a very able lawyer and will make an exceptionally good Judge, I believe.” Abram I. Elkus in discussing the nomination said: “Mr. Brandeis should make a good Judge. He is a man of exceptional ability, a deep student, and a hard worker. I have opposed him in various suits and I know him very well. He is a very able lawyer.”32 Brandeis’s ideological stance was also cited as a reason for support and opposition: The surprise over the President’s selection of Mr. Brandeis was due to several distinct circumstances. The most striking of these, judged by the comment heard afterward at the Capital, was the radicalism of Mr. Brandeis. Some of those who showed the most marked symptoms of dissatisfaction indicated that they regarded him as practically a Socialist.33 When asked on what facts he based his confidence in the appointment of Mr. Brandeis, Senator James replied: “I believe that his nomination will be confirmed … Brandeis, when you come down to the truth of it all, has performed a great service for what we call the ‘under dog’ in the fight. For instance, when the women’s eight-hour law had been passed by the Legislature of Illinois and was being opposed by the interests, he appeared as the counsel without charge for the laboring women of Illinois.”34 A few supporters and detractors cited the fact that Brandeis was Jewish: Ex-Judge Sulzberger said: “Mr. Brandeis is a man of ability, and I am glad to learn of his appointment. It gives evidence that President Wilson does not consider creed or nationality in selecting men for public office.35 Two protests against Mr. Brandeis reached the committee today. One was apparently from a Democrat in Texas, who said that the confirmation of Mr. Brandeis would be “political suicide,” but who gave no reasons for his statement. The other was an anonymous communication from St. Louis, signed “Southern Gentile Democrats,” who protested simply on the ground of Mr. Brandeis being a Jew.36 32 “Praised for Aiding Labor,” New York Times, January 29, 1916. “Brandeis Named for Highest Court; Will Be Opposed,” New York Times, January 29, 1916. 34 “Committee to Sift Brandeis Charges,” New York Times, February 1, 1916. 35 “Brandeis Nomination Finds Favor in Philadelphia,” New York Times, January 29, 1916. 36 “Senate Softens Toward Brandeis,” New York Times, January 30, 1916. 33 19 The chart shows that arguments based on Brandeis’s religion account for only 1.3% of reported arguments, but it is impossible to tell how many arguments had underlying reasons not evident in the logic articulated. It appeared to several observers, including Brandeis himself, that arguments against him based on his alleged lack of impartiality served to mask opponents’ anti-Semitism or their antipathy to his pro-labor record.37 Philippa Strum, in her biography of Brandeis, suggests that it was not antiSemitism per se, but the combination of anti-Semitism and bitter political disagreements that created the heated opposition to Brandeis. She writes, “Brandeis, in fact, realized that his Jewishness had relatively little to do with the extent and depth of the outcry: a Jewish Wall Street lawyer who worked for J.P. Morgan would not have met with opposition nearly as bitter.”38 It is likely that religion and ideology were intertwined in the opposition to Brandeis’s nomination, and that anti-Semitic reactions exacerbated the opposition to his political views. The arguments reported by the New York Times regarding Brandeis’s qualifications were partially shaped by the Senate Judiciary Committee’s decisions regarding whom to invite to testify and what kinds of questions to ask. The Committee summoned only individuals who had known Brandeis in a professional capacity, and asked them to comment only on Brandeis’s conduct as a lawyer. Many individuals who testified against Brandeis had been on the losing side of legal battles he had fought, and tried to convince the committee that Brandeis had committed improprieties and had used 37 Philippa Strum, Louis D. Brandies – Justice for the People (Harvard University Press: 1984) 293. 38 Strum, 294. 20 duplicitous tactics.39 It is likely that this focus on professional ethics during the hearings helped to shape the public statements made by supporters and detractors. The chart shows that 9% of reported arguments about Brandeis’s suitability for the Supreme Court presented professional ethics, honesty and trustworthiness as reasons: A mass of documentary information concerning charges against Mr. Brandeis is already at the disposal of the Committee on the Judiciary.” One of these letters was apparently written by L.A. Coolidge, the Treasurer of the United Shoe Machinery Company. “Mr. Coolidge charged that, after having helped draw the leases of the company, Mr. Brandeis had “given his professional opinion that they were unlawful.40 C.W. Barron, editor of the Wall Street Journal … charged Mr. Brandeis with … having served both sides at the same time in litigation and hinted that Mr. Brandeis had procured the signature of an old and dying man to a deed of trust by questionable means.41 The praise that Brandeis received from unions and Progressives and the opposition that he elicited from business interests supports Maltese’s contention that Supreme Court Justices have always been favored or opposed because of their ideological stances. However, the arguments about Brandeis reported in the New York Times show that, although they may have been motivated by ideological concerns, participants in this confirmation debate preferred to articulate their support or opposition in terms of ideologically-neutral criteria such as fairness, impartiality, judicial temperament, knowledge, experience, intelligence, and legal skills. Abe Fortas President Lyndon Johnson nominated Abe Fortas to be Chief Justice of the Supreme Court on June 26, 1968, when Fortas had been an Associate Justice for three 39 Maltese, 51. “Committee to Sift Brandeis Charges,” New York Times, February 1, 1916. 41 “Brandeis Charges Voiced by Barron,” New York Times, February 11, 1916. 40 21 years. Fortas’s jurisprudence while he was an Associate Justice showed a commitment to securing fair trials for criminal defendants and to protecting the underprivileged. He often supported civil rights protesters, although he was less often willing to support those protesting the Vietnam War. 42 Fortas had been a close friend and advisor to President Johnson before he was nominated to the Supreme Court, and this relationship continued after he joined the court. He sat in on cabinet meetings, gave the President advice and helped draft Presidential speeches.43 Fortas’s nomination to be Chief Justice generated bitter debate about his professional ethics and about the decisions of the Warren Court, and was defeated by a filibuster on October 1, 1968. After Lyndon Johnson withdrew the nomination, allegations about Fortas continued to surface, and on May 14, 1969, Fortas resigned from the Supreme Court. The arguments reported about Fortas’s 1968 nomination demonstrate a mix of logics, but ideology was more prevalent than it was for Brandeis’s nomination. Republican Senators made the argument that, because Lyndon Johnson was at that point a “lame duck” President, the nomination should be made by the next President, whom it was no secret that they expected to be Richard Nixon.44 This argument’s partisan slant was clear for two reasons. First of all, this logic was promoted by Southern Senators who were sharply critical of the Warren Court decisions, in which Fortas had often participated. Second of all, 1968 was an election year, and Presidential candidate Richard Nixon had not only made opposition to the Warren Court one of his campaign themes, but also publicly agreed with the argument that President Johnson’s successor should 42 Kalman, 260. Kalman, 307. 44 Maltese, 71. 43 22 nominate Earl Warren’s successor.45 The chart shows that these lame duck arguments made up 10.1% of the total arguments reported: Several senators in the opposition bloc said they based their opposition solely on the issue of a lame duck President’s making such appointments, rather than leaving them to the next President.46 Senator John O. Pastore of Rhode Island criticized the lame duck argument and noted that three Senators had announced plans to retire next January. He asked if they should be barred from voting in the Senate.47 Fortas’s opponents also argued directly that he should not be confirmed because he had shown himself, as Associate Justice, to be sympathetic to the liberal leanings of the Warren Court and therefore “soft on crime.” The chart shows that these ideologybased arguments made up 32.6% of the arguments reported, a significant jump from the 23.1% of arguments that were ideology-based in the case of Brandeis. Two former Senate Judiciary Committee staff members, Charles Callas of New York and Benjamin Ginzburg of Washington, also opposed the Fortas nomination. Mr. Ginzburg took issue with the views on civil disobedience that Mr. Fortas expressed in a book, “Concerning Dissent and Disobedience,” published recently by the New American Library.48 The Senate Democratic whip, Russell B. Long, Democrat of Louisiana, announced today he would oppose the nomination of Abe Fortas as Chief Justice because of his Supreme Court positions supporting the rights of criminal suspects.49 Many of Fortas’s supporters defended him based on his competence: Leaders in the American Bar Association have studied the records of both nominees and have deplored the Senatorial efforts to bar them on non-judicial grounds. William T. 45 Kalman, 331 and Maltese, 71. “19 in the Senate Study Filibuster,” New York Times, June 27, 1968. 47 “Senate Democrats Defend President on Court Choices,” New York Times, June 29, 1968. 48 “Dirksen Defends Johnson’s Naming Friends to Court,” New York Times, July 13, 1968. 49 “Russell Long Says He Opposes Fortas to Head High Court,” New York Times, July 14, 1968. 46 23 Gossett, the new A.B.A. president, has accused Senator Griffin of “practicing politics,” adding that Mr. Fortas has “first class intellectual equipment” for the high post.50 Fortas was invited to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee, making him the first sitting Justice ever to be called to testify. He was questioned regarding two basic objections to his confirmation. The first category of questions concerned whether the assistance he had given the President on policy matters threatened his judicial independence. This line of questioning draws on the impartiality paradigm: Senator Sam J. Ervin Jr., North Carolina Democrat, remarked that it was “sort of queer for a member of the judiciary to be involved” in consultations with the President.51 Justice Abe Fortas testified today that since he joined the Supreme Court he had assisted President Johnson in strategy planning conferences on the Vietnam War and urban riots. However, he insisted that he had never advised the President on issues that could reach the Supreme Court, and he asserted that his role in the meetings was to sum up arguments presented by others … The disclosure by a Supreme Court Justice of participation in White House decision-making was unprecedented.52 The second category of questions concerned the rulings of the Warren Court and the part that Fortas had played in them. This line of questioning draws on the ideology paradigm: Justice Fortas sat mute as Senator Ervin spent the rest of the afternoon – two hours and ten minutes – reading excerpts from recent decisions on such subjects as criminal defendants’ rights and anti-Communist loyalty oaths for public employees.53 Much of the morning’s session was taken up by testimony by representatives of Citizens for Decent Literature, an anti-pornography group that opposes the promotion of Justice Fortas. James J. Clancy of Los Angeles, an attorney for the group, testified that recent Supreme Court rulings on obscenity had legalized the sale of pornography material “that would not even be sold openly in France.” Mr. Clancy said that Justice Fortas had tended recently to vote with those justices who took a permissive view of obscenity.54 50 [editorial] “Justices, Not Candidates,” New York Times, Sept 3, 1968. “Fortas Asserts He Aided Johnson While a Justice,” New York Times, July 17, 1968. 52 “Fortas Asserts He Aided Johnson While a Justice,”New York Times, July 17, 1968. 53 “Fortas Asserts He Aided Johnson While a Justice,”New York Times, July 17, 1968. 54 “Senate Panel Bids Officials Explain Pro-Fortas Memo,” New York Times, July 23, 1968. 51 24 Fortas was the first Jew to be nominated to the Chief Justiceship, and as was the case with Brandeis, it is likely that some of the opposition to Fortas was tinged with antiSemitism and that some arguments served to mask this. However, it is impossible to determine the extent to which this was true solely by looking at arguments reported in the newspaper. Laura Kalman, Fortas’s biographer, writes that “Senator Eastland reportedly was worried that he ‘could not go back to Mississippi’ if the Senate confirmed a Jewish Chief Justice.”55 The Senate agreed to waive the rule under which President Johnson’s Supreme Court nominations would have lapsed during the Congressional recess for the national political conventions in early August of 1968.56 At the Republican convention, Presidential nominee Richard Nixon criticized “some of the courts” for weakening the cause of law and order.57 When Congress reconvened in September, new allegations regarding Fortas’s possible conflicts of interest had surfaced. A journalist had reported that Fortas had helped write President Johnson’s 1966 State of the Union speech, and Republican Senator Gordon Allott told reporters that he had witnessed Fortas’s participation in drafting legislation.58 These charges reignited the concern that Fortas’s judicial independence was tainted by allegiances to policies he had helped craft. The Senate Judiciary Committee asked Fortas to reappear for more questioning, but Fortas declined. Soon after that, Republican Senator Robert Griffin discovered that Fortas had taught a seminar at American University’s law school, and that the school had raised money from businessmen in order to pay Fortas’s salary. Although Fortas maintained that 55 Kalman, 346. “Senate Acts to Prevent Lapsing of Nominations,” New York Times, August 3, 1968. 57 Kalman, 345. 58 Kalman, 351. 56 25 he did not know the identities of any of the underwriters until the hearings,59 his opponents asserted that he had behaved improperly: Committee critics of Justice Fortas contended today that it was improper for him to receive funds solicited from financial and business leaders who might sometime be involved in litigation before the Court.60 After hearing testimony by Senator Allott regarding Fortas’s participation in drafting legislation and testimony by a member of the Los Angeles Police Department Anti-Obscenity Unit who asserted that the Supreme Court had “opened the floodgates to pornography,” the Senate Judiciary Committee voted on the nomination and reported it out with eleven in favor of confirmation and six against. The nomination reached the Senate floor on September 25 and opponents began a filibuster.61 When a vote was called on October 1, there were not enough votes to break the filibuster, and President Johnson withdrew the nomination.62 Richard Nixon was elected in November. After charges of further improprieties surfaced, and amidst pressure from the Nixon Administration, Fortas resigned on May 14, 1969.63 The arguments reported about Abe Fortas demonstrate important differences from the arguments made about Louis Brandeis. Not only did arguments using the ideology paradigm grow from 23.1% to 32.6%, but ideology-based arguments also held a more authoritative position in the Fortas confirmation, by virtue of the fact that they figured prominently in the hearings. While many of Brandeis’s opponents had probably been 59 Kalman, 352. “Fortas Refuses to Appear Again in Senate Inquiry,” New York Times, September 14, 1968. 61 Kalman, 355. 62 Kalman, 356. 63 Maltese, 71. 60 26 motivated by ideology, the only people invited to testify at the hearings were people who had worked with or against Brandeis in a professional capacity, and who could testify as to his legal competence and ethics. During Fortas’s hearings, however, several witnesses testified about the harm caused by specific cases decided by the Warren Court, and Senators on the Senate Judiciary Committee posed direct questions about Fortas’s jurisprudence. While the nominees’ ideologies may have played equivalent roles in motivating both Brandeis’s and Fortas’s opponents, this comparison of the arguments shows that participants were more willing to publicly articulate their arguments in terms of ideology in 1968 than they had been in 1916. Clarence Thomas President George H. W. Bush announced the nomination of Clarence Thomas on July 1, 1991. Thomas was nominated to replace Thurgood Marshall, the first black Supreme Court Justice, who had been a champion of civil rights. Thomas, who is also black, had demonstrated a commitment to conservative ideals and a profound disenchantment with the logic of the civil rights movement.64 Liberal groups and Senators were torn about Thomas’s nomination, because, while they did not want to be in the position of arguing against confirmation of the second black man ever nominated to the Supreme Court, they feared that Thomas, who was just 43, would help extend the Reagan Revolution for decades to come. The Thomas confirmation shows a continuation of the trends evident in the Fortas confirmation. The arguments about Thomas’s suitability for the Supreme Court 64 Timothy M. Phelps and Helen Winternitz, Capitol Games – Clarence Thomas, Anita Hill, and the Story of a Supreme Court Nomination (Hyperion: 1992), 104. 27 demonstrate more reliance on ideology than did the two previous confirmations and less reliance on neutral standards of competence or indicators of neutrality. After President Bush announced Thomas’s nomination, opposition from liberal groups was swift, and focused almost entirely on his conservative views. The National Abortion Rights Action League held a press conference in which they announced that a speech of Thomas’s strongly implied disagreement with Roe v. Wade.65 The Congressional Black Caucus voted to oppose Thomas because of his conservative views.66 The Thomas hearings began on September 10, 1991. Senators questioning Thomas emphasized concerns about his political views and asked him about his opinions on specific cases,67 but Thomas testified that he had shed his ideology when he became an Appeals Court Judge.68 On September 27, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted and tied, 7-7, sending the nomination to the floor with what amounted to a message of no confidence.69 The full Senate vote was scheduled for Tuesday October 8, but on Sunday, October 6, newspapers reported that Anita Hill, a law professor who had once worked as Thomas’s assistant, alleged that Thomas had sexually harassed her when he was her boss.70 Some Democrats urged a delay in the Senate vote to allow for an investigation of the charges. Republicans called the charges a sleazy last-minute attempt to stop the nomination, pointing to several aspects of Hill’s story that they claimed cast doubt on her 65 Phelps and Witnernitz, 19. “Blacks Spar Over Endorsing Thomas,” New York Times, July 18, 1991. 67 “The Opening Skirmish; Thomas Scores Points in the Crucial Battle Fort the First Impression, But So Do Critics,” New York Times, September 10, 1991. 68 “Sticking to the Script; Confirmation Process Lets Judge Say As Much, or as Little, as He Chooses,” New York Times, September 12, 1991. 69 Phelps and Winternitz, 221. 70 Phelps and Winternitz, 228. 66 28 truthfulness.71 Clarence Thomas asserted that he wanted a chance to clear his name, and it was decided that the vote would be delayed for one week. The second set of hearings began on Friday, October 11. Thomas testified first, denying all charges.72 Anita Hill then gave her statement describing the harassment.73 She was cross-examined about various aspects of her story, and witnesses testified for both sides. Clarence Thomas appeared again, calling the process a “circus” and a “high-tech lynching for uppity blacks.”74 The final vote was held on Tuesday, October 15, and Thomas was confirmed 52-48.75 The arguments made about Thomas’s suitability for the Supreme Court demonstrated more reliance on ideology and less reliance on impartiality or neutral standards of competence than had been demonstrated by the arguments about Fortas. The chart shows that references to intelligence, professional ethics and skill as a lawyer grew less frequent, and references to judicial temperament and impartiality did not appear at all. The percentage of reported arguments about Thomas’s suitability that used his ideology or method of Constitutional interpretation as a criterion was 33.7%, up from 32.6% for Fortas: The National Women’s Law Center is opposing Judge Clarence Thomas’s nomination to the Supreme Court, saying his record “shows no commitment to core constitutional or statutory protections for women.”76 [from an op-ed by Lawrence Tribe] While any candidate nominated to replace Justice Thurgood Marshall would likely accelerate the Court’s rightward trend, Judge Thomas’s 71 Phelps and Winternitz, 241. Phelps and Winternitz, 302. 73 Phelps and Winternitz, 310. 74 Phelps and Winternitz, 356. 75 Phelps and Winternitz, 413. 76 “Group Rejects Thomas Over Women’s Rights,” New York Times, August 23, 1991. 72 29 adherence to “natural law” as a judicial philosophy could take the Court in an even more troubling direction. Most conservatives criticize the judiciary for expanding its powers, “creating” rights rather than “interpreting” the Constitution. These critics talk of returning issues like abortion to democratically elected and politically accountable bodies. Clarence Thomas, judging from his speeches and scholarly writings, seems instead to believe judges should enforce the Founders’ natural law philosophy – the inalienable rights “given man by his Creator.”77 The percentage of reported arguments about Thomas’s suitability that cite his ideology climbs from 33.7% to 43.3% when one adds the 9.6% of arguments claiming that Thomas had not adequately answered questions about his ideology. This suggests that candidates’ views on specific issues were considered vital for assessing suitability for the Supreme Court. Thomas was coached to present himself as having no strong opinions, particularly on controversial topics such as abortion.78 When asked repeatedly about his opinion on Roe v. Wade, Thomas refused to provide an answer.79 Some observers were not swayed: In his Senate floor remarks, Mr. Biden said that Judge Thomas had declined to discuss too many things and had offered too many vague and confusing answers before the committee. “Perhaps this is what some have advised him would be the best route to confirmation and perhaps they are right about the politics,” Senator Biden said, ‘but it is a political strategy that I do not intend to endorse by voting for Judge Thomas’s confirmation.”80 Race was mentioned in 4.8% of the reported arguments about Thomas’s suitability for the Supreme Court, while religion had been mentioned in only 1.1% of the reported arguments about Fortas. Although race and religion are not the same thing, it is possible to inquire here whether there have been changes in the ways in which nominees’ minority group memberships have been discussed. This is an instance in which 77 [editorial] “Clarence Thomas and Natural Law.” New York Times, July 15, 1991. [editorial] “A Justice Until 2030?” New York Times, July 2, 1991. 79 Phelps and Winternitz, 179. 80 “Judiciary Panel Deadlocks, 7-7, On Thomas Nomination to Court,” New York Times, September 28, 1991. 78 30 quantitative content analysis was unable to capture the shape of the change in the discourse. During Brandeis’s and Fortas’s confirmation processes, the fact that these candidates were Jewish was mentioned in bluntly anti-Semitic statements by a few opponents and in praise for the “religious tolerance” shown by the appointment. During Thomas’s confirmation process, race was discussed in more complex and varied ways. Several arguments referencing race highlighted the importance of ideology in evaluating a candidate and the difficulty of tying ideology to race: “I think there is a debate in the black community about Thomas that will not be solved easily,” he [Benjamin Hooks] said, adding later, “I suspect there is a difference of opinion among the delegates” to the [NAACP] convention. That Judge Thomas is black by no means assures him of the support of the NAACP, Dr. Hooks said. “We are not going to let race blind us to the totality of the situation,” he said. The association’s staff, he said, is conducting an extensive analysis of Judge Thomas’s actions both in his current position on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit and as chairman of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.81 Thurgood Marshall, the Justice stepping down, made a similar argument. In his news conference on Friday, Justice Marshall observed that race would be a factor in the nomination of his successor, but he said it should not be used as “an excuse for doing wrong – picking the wrong Negro and saying, ‘I’m picking him because he’s a Negro.’ “ That remark was widely interpreted as pre-emptive criticism of an appointment for Judge Thomas.82 Some participants debated whether race should be considered relevant to a confirmation decision for reasons other than its effect on the nominee’s jurisprudence: Interviews with black lawyers over the past two days found resignation and fatigue, but almost no one enthusiastic about anything regarding Judge Thomas except his background and his race. Those favoring his confirmation cite the symbolic importance of having a black person, particularly one of humble origins, on the High Court, however uncongenial or heretical his views … But several black lawyers disputed the symbolic importance of having a black on the Court if that black is conservative. They expressed 81 “Court Nominee at Focus of Debate as NAACP Meets in Houston,” New York Times, July 8, 1991. 82 “Conservative Black Judge, Clarence Thomas, Is Named to Marshall’s Court Seat,” New York Times, July 2, 1991. 31 fears that Judge Thomas is so malleable and estranged from his roots that he could be manipulated by right-wing Justices eager to make their own anti-civil rights, antiaffirmative action agendas more respectable.83 One New York Times editorial claimed that Thomas should be scrutinized especially carefully because his race and his jurisprudence do not line up as expected: Neither is the nominee entitled to a presumption in his favor because of his race. On the contrary; because of the history of oppression against his race, he owes the Senate and public an explanation of why he differs so strongly with civil rights advocates about the right remedies for proven discrimination.84 It is clear from the focus on ideology in the Thomas confirmation that participants found it acceptable to frame opinions about a nominee in terms of what particular point of view the nominee would bring to the bench. However, the discussions about whether or not sexual harassment charges should be considered relevant to confirmation brought to light the lack of consensus about what factors lead to a particular point of view. Although all of the Senators on the Senate Judiciary Committee – Democrats and Republicans – had been told of Hill’s charges early during the confirmation process, none of them thought them serious enough to bring to light until the news media had made them impossible to ignore. This issue necessitates a more complete discussion than it can be given here, but for the purposes of this paper, the salient point is that there exists a difference of opinion regarding what factors define ideology or prevent impartiality. Thomas’s confirmation process is now often associated with the sexual harassment charges, and what is less often remarked on is the fact that much of the opposition to him was focused on his conservative ideology and not on the sexual harassment charges. Although Maltese shows us that confirmation decisions have always 83 “Less Pride Than Pain by Black Lawyers on Thomas,” New York Times, August 12, 1991. 84 [editorial] “A Justice Until 2030?” New York Times, July 2, 1991 (0020). 32 been at least partially based on candidates’ ideologies, the discourse surrounding Thomas’s confirmation suggests that these motivations have become more acceptable and legitimate for public debate. Conclusion In this examination of the discourse surrounding the confirmation battles over Louis Brandeis, Abe Fortas, and Clarence Thomas, we have seen evidence that the types of arguments made about candidates’ suitability have changed over the course of the 20th century. Arguments based on the conception that Justices impartially apply the law to reach “correct” answers have declined, and arguments based on the conception that jurisprudence is shaped by political views have risen. These findings suggest two questions for further research. First, why is it that arguments about candidates for the Supreme Court are increasingly framed in terms of ideology? Has this become more acceptable because of a change in the conception of the Justices’ role? Or is this development related to politicians’ strategy of “going public,” the participation of interest groups in the confirmation process, the concerns of the public, or changes in the types of cases that the Court agrees to hear? Second, what are the implications of this shift? Does evaluating Justices based on their political views bolster or subvert the Court’s work and the functioning of democracy? 33 Supreme Court Candidate Brandeis Reasons given for or against the candidate’s suitability Quality of Scholarship ABA rating Thomas 1 1.2% 1 1.2% 1 1.2% 3 3.6% 1 1.2% 4 4.8% 6 7.2% Total 2 .8% 2 .8% 10 4.0% 5 2.0% 10 4.0% 8 3.2% 9 3.6% 13 5.2% 22 8.8% 8 3.2% 12 4.8% 9 3.6% 6 2.4% 6 2.4% 6 2.4% Overcame econ. hardships Ideology, method Of Const interp. Opinions not know, hidden Sexual harassment Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate 18 23.1% 29 32.6% 28 33.7% 8 9.6% 5 6.0% 75 30.0% 8 3.2% 5 2.0% Other Count %within candidate Count % within candidate 11 14.1% 78 100% 7 7.9% 89 100% 14 16.8% 83 100% 32 35.6% 250 100% Intelligence Personality Judicial Temperament Fairness, impartiality Knowledge about important issues Prof. ethics, integrity, honesty Skill as a lawyer or judge Cronyism, does favors for friends Threatens sep. of powers Lame duck argument Prejudiced for certain interests Race or religion Total Fortas 1 1.1% 1 1.1% 5 5.6% Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count % within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate Count %within candidate 4 5.1% 2 2.6% 9 11.5% 8 10.3% 6 7.7% 7 9.0% 7 9.0% 1 1.1% 5 5.6% 10 11.2% 8 9.0% 12 13.5% 9 10.1% 5 6.4% 1 1.3% 1 1.1% 3 3.6% 1 1.2% 5 6.0% 34 Chi-Square Tests Pearson Chi-Square Value 172.832* Df 42 Asymp. Sig. (2-sided) .000 Likelihood Ratio 193.400 42 .000 Linear-by-Linear Association 3.296 1 .069 N of Value Cases 250 * 57 cells (86.4%) have expected count less than 5. The minimum expected count is 31. 35 Sources Cited James Carey, “Political Ritual on Television: Episodes in the History of Shame, Degradation, and Excommunication” in James Curran and Tamar Liebes (Eds), Media and Public: Rethinking the Part Played by People in the Flow of Mass Communication (Routledge: 1998) The Constitution of the United States, Thirteenth Edition, 1991. Published by the Commission on the Bicentennial of the United States Constitution, Washington, D.C. Nelson L. Dawson ed., Brandeis and America (Univeristy Press of Kentucky: 1989). Daniel Dayan and Elihu Katz, Media Events – The Live Broadcasting of History (Harvard University Press: 1992). Robert Entman and David Paletz, Media/Power/Politics (Free Press: 1991). Alexander Hamilton, “The Federalist No. 78: Judicial Tenure and Review,” in Roy P. Fairfield, ed., The Federalist Papers (Anchor Books: 1961). Laura Kalman, Abe Fortas – A Biography (Yale University Press: 1990). John Anthony Maltese, The Selling of Supreme Court Nominees (Johns Hopkins University Press: 1995). Judicial Roulette -- Report of the Twentieth Century Fund Task Force on Judicial Selection (Priority Press Publications: 1988). Michael Pertschuk and Wendy Schaetzel, The People Rising – The Campaign Against the Bork Nomination (Thunder’s Mouth Press: 1989). Timothy M. Phelps and Helen Winternitz, Capitol Games – Clarence Thomas, Anita Hill, and the Story of a Supreme Court Nomination (Hyperion: 1992). Philippa Strum, Louis D. Brandeis – Justice for the People (Harvard University Press: 1984). Philippa Strum, Brandeis: Beyond Progressivism (University of Kansas: 1993). 36