After Antonin Scalia’s Death, What’s
Next for the Supreme Court?
By Bill Blum
February 14, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Justice
Antonin Scalia is dead, and his
passing is nothing less than a legal and
political earthquake. It will have a
huge impact, not only on the court’s
present term but on the course of
constitutional law.
Beginning with his appointment to the
high court in 1986, Scalia was the
intellectual leader of what I and many
other legal commentators have termed a
conservative “judicial
counterrevolution,” aimed at wresting
control of the nation’s most powerful
legal body from the legacy of the
liberal jurists who rose to power in the
1950s and ’60s under the leadership of
then-Chief Justice Earl Warren.
Scalia was a key architect of the
jurisprudential theories of
original intent and
textualism, and the author of
numerous landmark opinions. Among his
most important rulings was the 5-4
decision in
District of Columbia v. Heller,
which held for the first time that the
Second Amendment protected an
individual’s right to bear arms.
But Scalia was also an unvarnished,
intemperate and intolerant ideologue,
railing against same-sex marriage,
voting rights, Obamacare, affirmative
action and other progressive causes. In
recent years, often finding himself in
dissent, he became unhinged at times,
ridiculing his more moderate colleagues
for engaging in what he called
analytical “argle-bargle” and
“interpretive jiggery pokery,” and for
doling out legal benefits to allegedly
undeserving litigants that he called
“pure applesauce.”
The impact of Scalia’s death will be
felt immediately in a number of pending
high-profile cases, transforming
anticipated 5-4 conservative rulings
into 4-4 stalemates. Under the court’s
rules, 4-4 decisions carry no
precedential weight and leave intact the
lower-court rulings under review.
This means that proponents of
affirmative action (Fisher
v. Texas), as well as
public-employee unions (Friedrichs
v. California Teachers Association),
can expect constitutional reprieves,
because the circuit court rulings issued
in their favor will be allowed to stand.
It also means that supporters of
abortion rights (Whole
Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt) and
immigration rights (United
States v. Texas) will have an easier
path toward overturning adverse
lower-court decisions.
Scalia’s passing will also alter the
prospects for overturning some of the
court’s most conservative recent
rulings—not only on the Second Amendment
but on campaign finance, environmental
regulation and the constitutionality of
the death penalty, among others.
Politically, Scalia’s passing will
unleash a pitched battle on two fronts:
first, in the fight to name his
successor, and second, as an issue in
the upcoming presidential elections.
In
the coming weeks and months, we can
expect to hear a rising and increasingly
hysterical chorus of Republicans
demanding that President Obama refrain
from nominating Scalia’s successor.
Indeed, if
initial press reports are any
indication, the trench warfare has
already begun.
But with roughly 11 months remaining in
his term, Obama undoubtedly will move
forward. Anyone he names will surely be
more liberal than Scalia, and anyone he
names will tip the balance of the court.
Those who remember the televised
hearings on the nominations of Justice
Clarence Thomas and former Solicitor
General Robert Bork can expect clashes
in the Senate Judiciary Committee (which
conducts hearings on Supreme Court
nominations) that will make those bygone
proceedings seem genteel.
At
the same time, the future of the Supreme
Court—always an issue in presidential
campaigns—will move front and center.
Assuming that GOP senators will
filibuster any Obama nomination—as I
think probable—voters will be asked to
contemplate what the future of America
will look like with a court molded by a
President Trump or Cruz, or a President
Sanders or Clinton. The choice facing
voters will be stark.
I
take no joy in the death of Antonin
Scalia. But speaking as a progressive
and as a staunch defender of human
rights and as one who believes our
Constitution is a living document that
must be read expansively over time, I
can’t say I will mourn his absence from
the bench.
We
have an opportunity to repair some of
the damage Scalia and his right-wing
brethren have done. Our task now is to
take advantage of the opening.
Bill Blum is a former judge and death
penalty defense attorney. He is the
author of three legal thrillers
published by Penguin/Putnam
(“Prejudicial Error,” “The Last Appeal”
and “The Face of Justice”) and is a
contributing writer for California
Lawyer magazine.