OPINION
ROSS
DOUTHAT
What Was the Strategy Behind the Supreme Court
Leak?
May 4,
2022, 5:00 a.m. ET
Credit...Damon
Winter/The New York Times
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/04/opinion/supreme-court-roe-abortion.html
Ross
Douthat
By Ross
Douthat
Opinion
Columnist
The leak of
a draft Supreme Court decision that would overturn Roe v. Wade is not a
surprise, but it is something of a mystery.
What’s
unsurprising is that the accelerating politicization of the judiciary that
began with Roe itself would overwhelm attempts to sustain an apolitical
charisma around the operations of the court. Every development and controversy
and scandal along the way — the Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas hearings, the
multistage death of the filibuster, the pocket veto of Merrick Garland, the
Brett Kavanaugh affair, the liberal enthusiasm for court-packing — cut away
some element of the apolitical illusion. The leak of a draft decision, a
violation of the secrecy around deliberations, is another escalation, but it’s
part of the same pattern, the same trend that’s defined judicial politics for
two generations now.
But the
mystery lies in the strategy behind the leak.
All we know
right now, from the leak and related reporting, is that Samuel Alito’s draft
reflected the breakdown of the court about three months ago, when his draft
first circulated — five votes to overturn Roe and Planned Parenthood v. Casey,
three votes against, John Roberts in the middle. But plenty of decisions have
changed between the initial vote and the final ruling, including the Obamacare
decision in 2012 (where Roberts switched sides) and Casey itself (where Anthony
Kennedy wrote the decision upholding abortion rights after initially voting to
overturn Roe). And in this case, it always seemed imaginable that an initial stark
split would give way, through some kind of intra-judicial persuasion, to the
kind of minimalist ruling that Roberts in particular favors.
So if you
were simply following a crude strategic logic, the fact that what’s been leaked
is a draft from months ago might suggest that a leaker on the conservative side
hopes to freeze a wavering justice — Kavanaugh being the obvious candidate —
into their initial vote, by making it seem like the very credibility of the
court rests on their not being perceived to cave under external pressure.
For support
for this theory, look no further than an editorial last week in The Wall Street
Journal, warning that Roberts might be “trying to turn” some of his colleagues
toward a more modest ruling, one that would uphold Mississippi’s 15-week
abortion ban without explicitly overturning Roe. The Journal editorial page is
well sourced inside the conservative side of the Supreme Court; one of its
editorials accurately foresaw that Roberts and Neil Gorsuch would join the
liberals to expand the Civil Rights Act’s protections to gay and transgender
Americans. So its warning last week could supply a direct conservative motive
for a leak.
But then
there is the evidence against the conservative-leaker scenario. First, the leak
did not go to The Journal or an avowedly conservative media source; it went to
reporters at Politico, an unofficially nonideological but, from a conservative
perspective, functionally liberal outlet.
Second, as
the court has moved rightward, the climate in the left-leaning part of the
elite legal world (which is to say, most of it) has become much more
self-consciously activist and anti-institutionalist than the climate among,
say, Federalist Society types — meaning that if you were betting on a big act
of institutional sabotage right now, you would bet on it coming from the left.
(And indeed, the leaker was swiftly praised by prominent voices on
liberal-legal Twitter.)
Third, you
can imagine various possible rationales for a liberal leak. At the most basic
level, there might be the hope that seeing the inevitable backlash unfold now,
while the ruling can still change, could make a figure like Kavanaugh waver
further, rather than locking in his vote.
Then, too,
to the extent that liberals hope abortion could be a galvanizing issue — for
organizing and fund-raising as well as votes — in a midterm election that’s
otherwise shaping up disastrously for the Democrats, the leaker might see this
as giving his or her side a head start, by encouraging the new Resistance to
get to work a month early.
And
finally, to the extent that a leak like this has some delegitimizing effect no
matter what, that might be an end unto itself: If the court is going to be
conservative, then let it have no mystique whatsoever.
This last
place is where most liberals will end up, I’m sure, should the draft ruling
turn out to be the final one. But there is an irony here, of course, because a
key implication of Alito’s draft — and of arguments marshaled for generations
by Roe’s critics — is that treating the judiciary as the main arbiter of our
gravest moral debates was always a mistake, one that could lead only to exactly
the kind of delegitimization that we see before us now.
Regardless
of whether the draft becomes the final decision, then, its leak has already
vindicated one of its key premises: that trying to remove an issue like
abortion from normal democratic politics was always likely to end very badly
for the court.
Ross
Douthat has been an Opinion columnist for The Times since 2009. He is the
author of several books, most recently, “The Deep Places: A Memoir of Illness
and Discovery.” @DouthatNYT • Facebook


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