८ मार्च, २००६

Justice Breyer on the newly reconfigured Supreme Court.

The AP reports:
Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer said Tuesday the high court has more discussion and debate behind closed doors with its two new members.

Breyer, though, said the court "seems to be running very well" under Chief Justice John Roberts, and he doesn't think the extra discussion is a major change.

"Perhaps it has to do with younger people," Breyer, 67, told reporters at a news conference before he was to speak at the Clinton Library....

Breyer said publicity surrounding the latest confirmations has led to greater public interest in the court's operations. That could help justices demystify what they do, he said.

"We're not the CIA. The Supreme Court isn't and shouldn't be a secret place," Breyer said. "It's an opportunity for us to explain what the court is about."...

Breyer said he didn't know if a flurry of recent unanimous decisions indicates that the newly formed court under Roberts was trying harder to agree.

"The more controversial matters tend to pile up by the end of the year," Breyer said. "Unanimity is often a function of what cases come along. If people see eye to eye, it works very well."

I'll say more later. I've got to run to class!

UPDATE: I have to keep my promise to say more. Basically, I've been hoping Roberts will bring clarity and cohesion to the Court's opinions. Breyer's comments seemed inspiring to me, but on rereading them, I can see that he's being cagey and not really saying much of anything. They're talking more. Okay.... You shouldn't be too secretive.... Yeah, well, then... say something more substantial!

१० टिप्पण्या:

jeff म्हणाले...

Interesting - when I try and view the FAIR vs. Rumsfeld post below, it cuts off the comments after only a few. Nowhere near the 26 comments it claims are actually showing up. Anyone else seeing this?

Simon म्हणाले...

Speaking of the new Court, there are seven pages of photos up at Yahoo from their new class photo:

http://news.yahoo.com/photos/sm/events/pl/120503supremecourt/p:1

Simon म्हणाले...

yetanotherjohn-
See my roundup here, concluding that the first five months of the Roberts court is either the or the second most collegial term on the Court in five years, depending on which metric is used. And that's just to reduce it to a quantitative study; just reading the opinions is enough to tell you qualitatively that this is a more collegial term thusfar.

Simon म्हणाले...

ChrisO -
I suspect the delay is because the comments page is pulled directly from a database, while the main page is a statically-coded HTML page that blogger updates on a schedule. So the comments page is up-to-the-second, while the main page is up-to-the-[whatever interval they use]

Ann Althouse म्हणाले...

I'm not doing anything funny with the comments, but I think Blogger may be a little glitchy today. Sometimes comments don't show up until another comment goes after it. I have no idea why.

Palladian म्हणाले...

Because Blogger STINKS, that's why!

Maybe you should really wipe the slate and, concurrent with moving your residence, move your blog to something like Typepad. Blogger's like the creaky, troublesome old house. Make the blog go condo!

Ok, ok, I'll shut up. For now!

Ann Althouse म्हणाले...

Typepad has had problems too. And I don't want to change my URL. I'm happy enough with Blogger. Why should I switch to a whole different source of problems, change my address, and start paying? Not attractive at all. Google is motivated to make Blogger work.

chuck b. म्हणाले...

It must be hard for the Justices to decide individually to say something substantive like Ann's talking about. If one of them says something off-key, then he ruins it for everyone. And he really stands out. The individual Supremes don't get lost in the shuffle.

vbspurs म्हणाले...

Breyer's comments seemed inspiring to me, but on rereading them, I can see that he's being cagey and not really saying much of anything. They're talking more. Okay.... You shouldn't be too secretive.... Yeah, well, then... say something more substantial!

Yeah, but it was a book shindig, not a real press conference.

I'm pleasantly surprised he commented out of school, as it were, ANYTHING at all about the composition of the new Court.

What you say about cagey, may have something to do with the new "younger" flavour of the Court, as he replied (funnily) when asked about the vetting process to the SCOTUS:

"That is like asking for the recipe for chicken a la king from the point of view of the chicken," Breyer said.

That's cute.

He also said that it was "inevitable" in his opinion, that one day cameras would penetrate the inner sanctum, and allow the public to see as well as hear the goings-on.

The thing is, Roberts has gone on record a few times (once, when C-SPAN cameras were rolling, since I heard him say this), that he would be very much opposed to this eventuality.

And I'm afraid I tend to agree with him.

For the same reason that I dislike cameras in courtrooms -- people alter themselves for the camera, and that's bad.

Cheers,
Victoria

Simon म्हणाले...

I agree with Victoria, but would add that I would go further than simply not allowing C-SPAN into the Supreme Court - I would throw it out of Congressional Committees, too, and unless or until the Seventeenth Amendment is repealed, would not be entirely hostile to the idea of throwing it out of the Senate altogether. I'm not opposed to audio, on the other hand, although I think it should not be live, in order to deter (and, if necessary, excise from the tape) the sort of outbursts we saw in the Newdown oral argument and at Scalia's recent AEI speach.