The surprising star at Elena Kagan's hearing: Thurgood Marshall
| New Haven, Conn.
The Kagan hearings were a sleepy affair. With no 12th-hour revelations and a candidate who acquitted herself as cagey and well qualified, the solicitor general proved adept at the kabuki dance of the Supreme Court confirmation process.
Yet there was one exception to the otherwise humdrum hearings: the bewildering decision by Republicans to taint Elena Kagan by her association with Thurgood Marshall.
Yes, that Thurgood Marshall 鈥 hero of the civil rights movement, mastermind of Brown v. Board of Education, and the first African-American Supreme Court justice.
If the senators had spent their time asking Ms. Kagan to indulge in fond reminiscences of her former boss, nobody would have blamed them, after all, Marshall is an American hero of the very first rank. But they didn鈥檛, and the reason is that they were determined to make the late Marshall their lead witness for President Obama鈥檚 鈥渆mpathy standard.鈥
The infamous e-word
You may recall that, before he nominated Sonia Sotomayor, the president called empathy 鈥渁n essential ingredient for arriving at just decisions and outcomes鈥 and thus an indispensable tool for US Supreme Court justices. When it came to filling vacancies on the court, he said, a superior legal mind was necessary but not sufficient. He would choose nominees capable of 鈥渦nderstanding and identifying with people鈥檚 hopes and struggles,鈥 nominees, that is, with a special gift for empathy.
After the president鈥檚 announcement, Republicans immediately began climbing the barricades.
Utah's Sen. Orrin Hatch called empathy 鈥渁 code word for an activist judge.鈥 Fox News political commentator Charles Krauthammer declared, 鈥渋f nothing else, [conservatism] stands unequivocally against justice as empathy 鈥 and unequivocally for the principle of blind justice.鈥 And Wendy Long of the newly rechristened Judicial Crisis Network accused Mr. Obama of aiming to 鈥渂ecome the first president in American history to make lawlessness an explicit standard for Supreme Court justices.鈥
Senate Democrats, for their part, did not exactly take up arms. Aside from a few muted protests in the Sotomayor hearings, they let the Republicans darkly define the word. More than anything else, it seemed, they hoped it would simply go away.
The president got the message
In his speech nominating Kagan, the e-word unspoken, though Obama appeared to hint at it. He quoted Kagan鈥檚 tribute to her former mentor, in which she said that Marshall liked to tell stories of his own pursuits of justice to remind his clerks that 鈥渂ehind law there are stories 鈥 stories of people鈥檚 lives as shaped by the law, stories of people鈥檚 lives as might be changed by the law.鈥
This, said the president, showed that Kagan had an 鈥渦nderstanding of law, not as an intellectual exercise or words on a page, but as it affects the lives of ordinary people,鈥 a compliment which, to Republican ears, was as good as saying that Kagan had a capacity for judicial empathy just waiting to be unleashed.
Enter Thurgood Marshall
And so Thurgood Marshall became the unlikely bridge between empathy, activist judging, and Kagan. Noting the missing word in the president鈥檚 nomination, Republican Sen. John Kyl said Obama had merely 鈥渞epackaged鈥 the empathy standard. He still believed that 鈥渋n some kind of cases, judges should abandon impartiality and instead engage in results-oriented judging.鈥 Marshall, he said, was the 鈥渆pitome鈥 of that view.
This, of course, is a caricature. The president has never said that judges should abandon impartiality. Instead, he鈥檚 tried to call attention to the limits of legal certainty and the role empathy might play in confronting them. He did this first in a rebuttal to Chief Justice John Roberts鈥檚 鈥渦mpire analogy,鈥 where the chief justice famously compared the work of a judge to that of a baseball umpire. 鈥淯mpires don鈥檛 make the rules,鈥 Roberts observed in his own confirmation hearings, 鈥渢hey apply them.鈥
Then-Senator Obama took on this rather uncomplicated view when he announced that he would not vote to confirm Roberts. 鈥淣inety-five percent鈥 of the time, he said, cases could be resolved by recourse to the 鈥渂asic precepts鈥 of judicial decisionmaking, the protocols of good behavior that nearly all judges follow.
Still, that left 5 percent, the 鈥渢ruly difficult鈥 cases where the 鈥淸l]egal process alone will not lead you to a rule of decision.鈥 Contrary to the umpire analogy, such cases did not involve a straightforward application of the law, because what the law demanded was itself unclear. A judge, Obama said, had to rely on other resources to reach her decisions, including 鈥渙ne鈥檚 deepest values, one鈥檚 core concerns, one鈥檚 broader perspectives on how the world works, and the depth and breadth of one鈥檚 empathy.鈥
Contrary to conservative conceit, this is not an unusual vision of the law. Justices as diverse as James Wilson, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Benjamin Cardozo, Sandra Day O鈥機onnor, and, most recently, David Souter have all said something similar.
In fact, in the same tribute where Kagan said that Marshall 鈥渁llowed his personal experiences, and the knowledge of suffering and deprivation gained from those experiences, to guide him,鈥 she also noted that he could be 鈥渜uite the formalist鈥 when the law was unequivocal.
Kagan described an instance where she and her co-clerks 鈥減leaded鈥 with Marshall to overlook a legal technicality in furtherance of a more just outcome. Marshall, she said, turned them down flat. 鈥淎ll you could hope for, he remarked, was that a court didn鈥檛 rule against you for illegitimate reasons; you couldn鈥檛 hope, and you had no right to expect, that a court would bend the rules in your favor.鈥
The real debate
Thus the real debate underlying the empathy controversy is not whether judges can simply make up the rules (or the laws) as they go along. That鈥檚 a strawman.
The debate is over the relative clarity of the law, especially constitutional law, and where a judge should look whenever the law is unclear.
To hear conservatives tell it, as Souter recently said, 鈥渁ll of constitutional law lies there in the Constitution waiting for a judge to read it fairly.鈥 That thought may be comforting 鈥 certainty is almost always comforting, at least when it comes to the law 鈥 but it fails 鈥渢o understand what judges have no choice but to do,鈥 which is to make a hard decision when the law won鈥檛 make it for them.
Engage the empathy debate
If the president thought mothballing one simple word would exempt his nominees from this debate, the Kagan hearings proved him wrong. That debate will continue, and by failing to engage it, the president will not only deny judicial empathy and the wisdom of experience a powerful spokesman, he will help to ensure that Americans see them as the Republicans would have it 鈥 as enemies, rather than fierce advocates, of equal justice before the law.
John Paul Rollert teaches business ethics and leadership at Harvard Summer School. He is pursuing a JD at Yale Law School and a PhD at The Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago.
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