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Candidate For Worst Supreme Court Justice Ever: Harry Blackmun
Manhattan Contrarian ^ | 26 Jun, 2022 | Francis Menton

Posted on 06/27/2022 4:50:43 AM PDT by MtnClimber

Yes I know, the competition for the title of Worst Supreme Court Justice Ever is stiff. A decent rogue’s gallery of candidates might include , for example, the likes of William O. Douglas, Earl Warren, and William Brennan. There may be a good case to be made for any of those, and plenty more. But none of them has the distinction of having authored Roe v. Wade. So for today, permit me to make the case for Blackmun.

Blackmun did not author any large number of important Supreme Court decisions. One might surmise that his colleagues did not trust him with the tough ones. If you wonder if that might be true, try reading the Roe decision. In any event, the Roe decision by itself is a strong qualification for the Worst Justice Ever award.

Blackmun was appointed by President Richard Nixon in 1970. Nixon had said explicitly that he intended with his nominations to roll back the excesses of the Warren Court, a process begun the previous year with the appointment of Chief Justice Warren Burger. For his next nomination, Nixon set out to appoint a known conservative, preferably from the South, but he failed to anticipate the ferocious opposition that his plan would encounter, and his staff failed badly at the vetting process. Nixon’s first choice for the seat, Clement Haynsworth, was a distinguished judge, Chief Judge of the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals; but Haynsworth’s opponents in the labor and civil rights movements managed to trip him up on some small claimed conflicts of interest. Nixon next nominated G. Harrold Carswell, only recently elevated to the Fifth Circuit from the Florida District Court. It turned out that Carswell had made some explicitly segregationist statements during a campaign for the Georgia legislature 20 years previously. Strike two.

So, on the recommendation of new Chief Justice Warren Burger (who was Blackmun’s personal friend), Nixon nominated Judge Blackmun. Blackmun was formerly chief counsel of the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota, and had spent the most recent decade not making any waves on the Eighth Circuit.

Despite the recent arrival of Burger, when Blackmun got to Washington in 1970 the Court was still in its giddy phase, riding high in its perceived role of super-legislature to enact the priorities of the left that couldn’t make it through Congress. Nixon’s hope that Blackmun would become part of the resistance to that role seemed to start out well. Over his first couple of years on the Court, Blackmun voted with Burger close to 90% of the time.

In 1972 Blackmun joined the dissents in the 5-4 decision in Furman v. Georgia. For those too young to remember, that’s the case where the Supreme Court struck down the death penalty statutes in every state in one blow, and threw the imposition of the death penalty into chaos nationwide for several years. Furman is a bizarre decision, consisting of a two-sentence per curiam Order, followed by some 230 pages of separate opinions, where eight of the nine justices wrote their own separate opinions, five concurrences and three dissents. The only one who did not write separately was Blackmun, who just joined each of the other three dissents. But Blackmun must have sensed the frisson of excitement that could be had by wielding the huge power to strike down 50 states worth of statutes all at once. And the states just meekly accepted the Court’s edict, and got to work completely reworking their death penalty statutes (or, in some cases, abandoning them). Wow, that was cool!

And then, only two and a half years into his tenure, and six months after Furman, there came Roe v. Wade in January 1973.

Roe took the Supreme Court’s power grabbing to a whole new level beyond Furman. First, although capital punishment had been a standard feature of state criminal law from the beginning, there actually is a provision in the Constitution, Eighth Amendment, prohibiting the imposition of “cruel and unusual punishment.” So Furman had a bona fide if debatable basis in constitutional text. Second, although some of the justices expressed the view that the death penalty should be prohibited in all cases, most of the concurrences emphasized only procedural defects in its imposition, meaning that the states could reinstate the death penalties by reworking their statutes, which is in fact what occurred.

By contrast, Roe had no basis in constitutional text and, by declaring abortion to be an absolute constitutional right, left the states little to no wiggle room to reinstate restrictions that their citizens or legislatures thought appropriate.

Of all the Supreme Court’s power grabs from the Warren Court era through the 1970s, Roe is unquestionably the most dramatic and consequential. The huge significance of the decision has to have been understood by all members of the Court when it was in the works. And yet the decision is shockingly weak. It’s hard even to discern a logic. Most of the decision is history and background, and then the whole reasoning comes down to a few sentences, most of them entirely unmoored from the Constitution itself:

This right of privacy, whether it be founded in the Fourteenth Amendment's concept of personal liberty and restrictions upon state action, as we feel it is, or, as the District Court determined, in the Ninth Amendment's reservation of rights to the people, is broad enough to encompass a woman's decision whether or not to terminate her pregnancy. The detriment that the State would impose upon the pregnant woman by denying this choice altogether is apparent. Specific and direct harm medically diagnosable even in early pregnancy may be involved. Maternity, or additional offspring, may force upon the woman a distressful life and future. Psychological harm may be imminent. Mental and physical health may be taxed by child care. There is also the distress, for all concerned, associated with the unwanted child, and there is the problem of bringing a child into a family already unable, psychologically and otherwise, to care for it. In other cases, as in this one, the additional difficulties and continuing stigma of unwed motherhood may be involved. All these are factors the woman and her responsible physician necessarily will consider in consultation.

Huh? How does any of that follow from something in the Constitution? I’ll bet if you went to a demonstration protesting the overruling of Roe, and asked the demonstrators how the Supreme Court found a right to abortion in the Constitution, you wouldn’t be able to find a single person who could articulate this basis, supposedly in the Due Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment (“No State shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law. . . .”). Is that really the best that our highest Court could do to justify this hugely consequential decision?

You might ask, if the basis for the decision is so slim, how did it gather seven votes? My theory is that Warren Burger only joined the majority when it became clear that its position would prevail, and he thereby got to assign the writing of the decision to the Court’s weakest link, Blackmun.

Meanwhile, if Blackmun and his colleagues thought that they could remove the issue of abortion from the political realm by the Roe decision, the truth turned out to be the opposite. Abortion became and has remained the hottest among hot button political issues, and has poisoned the entire process of Supreme Court appointments now for several decades. Meanwhile, in Europe the issue worked its way through the democratic process, where most countries have come to a position of allowing the procedure through approximately the first trimester.

Blackmun’s career on the Supreme Court went 24 years, to 1994. His ideological movement during that time is what the New York Times likes to call “growth.” According to this bio of Blackmun at Wikipedia, during his first five years on the Court Blackmun sided with Burger in 87.5% of the closely divided cases; but in his later years on the Court, he became the very most liberal justice, and from 1986-1990 voted with Justices Brennan and Marshall 97.1% and 95.8% of the time.

The former New York Times Supreme Court reporter Linda Greenhouse even wrote a 2006 book about Blackmun with the title “Becoming Justice Blackmun” — basically about his wonderful transition from unthinking conservative to compassionate liberal.

In an April 1994 article in the Times, at the time of Blackmun’s pending retirement, Greenhouse previewed the themes that later turned into the book. First, Blackmun undertook to be the very personal defender of Roe, never of course taking the trouble to try to ground the decision in the actual Constitution. Greenhouse has two quotes from Blackmun dissents in later cases. From Webster v. Reproductive Health Services:

"The signs [that there might no longer be majority support for Roe] are evident and ominous, and a chill wind blows."

And from Planned Parenthood v. Casey:

"I fear for the darkness as four Justices anxiously await the single vote necessary to extinguish the light."

Anyone who disagreed with him was part of the forces of “darkness.”

Blackmun in the end even reversed his position on the death penalty. From Greenhouse’s Times piece:

Just two months ago [i.e., February 1994] Justice Blackmun, who had voted to uphold death sentences throughout his judicial career, startled the country by denouncing capital punishment as a failed experiment and declaring that "from this day forward, I no longer shall tinker with the machinery of death."

Again, now that he has moved to the left, everyone who disagrees with him is a moral monster.

I think he’s a pretty good candidate for the Worst Supreme Court Justice Ever award. But I am sure that good cases can also be made for others.


TOPICS: Government; Society
KEYWORDS: abortion; blackmun; constitution; roevwade; scotus

1 posted on 06/27/2022 4:50:43 AM PDT by MtnClimber
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To: MtnClimber

Author of Roe v. Wade. Yep. But we have several marxists now competing for the honor of being the absolute worst.


2 posted on 06/27/2022 4:51:05 AM PDT by MtnClimber (For photos of Colorado scenery and wildlife, click on my screen name for my FR home page.)
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To: MtnClimber

Banning alcohol was bad but at least it was a constitutional amendment. Roe versus Wade was a subversive judicial plot to kill millions of babies. Thank God AND Trump for its reversal.


3 posted on 06/27/2022 4:59:17 AM PDT by HighSierra5 (The only way you know a commie is lying is when they open their pieholes.)
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To: HighSierra5

“Hold muh beer,” says Ketanji.


4 posted on 06/27/2022 5:00:46 AM PDT by bwest
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To: MtnClimber

<>the Court was still in its giddy phase, riding high in its perceived role of super-legislature to enact the priorities of the left that couldn’t make it through Congress<>

Listening to the questions at Scotus hearings from Kagan and especially The Wide Latina, and you’d think they were on a legislative committee considering the pro/con of a proposed law.

Tyranny is at hand when judges become legislators.


5 posted on 06/27/2022 5:04:08 AM PDT by Jacquerie (ArticleVBlog.com)
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To: MtnClimber

Kennedy’s decision on gay marriage in Obergefell was just as bad IMO. Like Roe, it had zero basis in the Constitution and has led directly, in only 7 years, to drag queen story hour in kindergartens and confused boys being pushed into having their privates chopped off. Sad. And by a Reagan appointee.


6 posted on 06/27/2022 5:24:52 AM PDT by Stingray51 ( )
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To: MtnClimber
My vote for worst SCOTUS justice is Robert H. Jackson. He wrote the opinion in Wickard v Filburn that basically said the federal government can regulate what a farmer grows on his own land for his own (or his animals') consumption because in Jackson's feeble mind it still counted as "interstate commerce".

This threw the enumerations clause of the Constitution into the trash bin. It set a precedent by government calling anything they want to regulate by any terminology that the Constitution gives the government the authority of.

7 posted on 06/27/2022 5:26:14 AM PDT by Tell It Right (1st Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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To: MtnClimber
Rodger Taney, author of the Dred Scott decision.
8 posted on 06/27/2022 5:29:19 AM PDT by nuke_road_warrior (Making the world safe for nuclear power for over 20 years)
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To: MtnClimber

Stephens and Suter are way up there too.


9 posted on 06/27/2022 7:25:56 AM PDT by Bonemaker (invictus maneo)
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To: MtnClimber

Blackmun was a weak man whose wife heavily pressured to toe the leftist line on abortion. He agonized for years after…. Good! He said he felt much better when, after a speech, Jane Roe herself ran on the stage and gave him a hug .


10 posted on 06/27/2022 7:44:46 AM PDT by j.havenfarm (21 years on Free Republic, 12/10/21! More than 5000 replies and still not shutting up!)
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To: MtnClimber

Don’t forget David Souter. I don’t think he EVER got one right.


11 posted on 06/27/2022 7:58:17 AM PDT by libertylover (Democrats are as determined to kill innocent people as the Nazis.)
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To: libertylover

Including when to retire. He gave us the wide latina.


12 posted on 06/27/2022 8:01:49 AM PDT by kosciusko51
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To: MtnClimber

I vote for Earl Warren, no one is close to his destructiveness.


13 posted on 06/27/2022 8:15:35 AM PDT by Midwesterner53
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To: kosciusko51
Including when to retire. He gave us the wide latina.

The only positive thing about Mitchie McConnell is that he prevented Merrick Garland from getting on the Court.

14 posted on 06/27/2022 8:52:50 AM PDT by The Sons of Liberty (Ultra MAGA!)
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To: MtnClimber

Oliver Wendell Holmes

Author of Buck v Bell. States could forcibly sterilize mentally defective and undesirable individuals. Technically still valid as the SC never overturned it.

“Three generations of imbeciles are enough”

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buck_v._Bell


15 posted on 06/27/2022 9:01:17 AM PDT by sloanrb
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To: The Sons of Liberty

“The only positive thing about Mitchie McConnell is that he prevented Merrick Garland from getting on the Court.”

By literally doing nothing. It was McConnell’s prerogative, as the senate majority leader, to decline a full senate vote for Merrick Garland. And that’s what he did.

There was no pressure. The Republican base was overwhelmingly supportive of McConnell’s action.

Most other Republican senators put in that position would have done the same thing.


16 posted on 06/27/2022 9:09:44 AM PDT by Mr. N. Wolfe
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To: MtnClimber
Blackmun also voted to let Cassius Clay off the hook on his conviction for draft-dodging.

SCOTUS overturned his conviction not on the merits of the case but on the fact that the court that convicted Clay didn't publish its reasons for rejecting the Louisville Lip's claim of Conscientious Objection. The fact that the claim was absurd on its face (because the Nation of Islam in institutionalized racism posing as a religion) didn't seem to sway the Supreme Court.

Then as today, to qualify as a Conscientious Objector, one's objection must be a blanket moral objection to war in general, and not to the moral basis for any given war. Clay never voiced any overarching objection to war in general but repeatedly stated he didn't want to fight in Vietnam because, “...[N]o Vietcong ever called me n*gger.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/27/opinion/muhammad-ali-vietnam-war.html

17 posted on 06/27/2022 9:12:12 AM PDT by Paal Gulli
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To: MtnClimber
“cruel and unusual punishment.”
I always thought it was "cruel and unusual" to put a duly sentenced criminal through years of appeals that mostly end the same: zaap.

Yes, DNA evidence has absolved a few of these, but the larger damage to justice from Furman has been far worse.
18 posted on 06/27/2022 9:49:56 AM PDT by nicollo (the rule of law is not arbitrary)
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To: MtnClimber

How did Eisnhower and Nixon pick a Liberal like Blackmun.

Blackmun first gained a clerkship with Judge John B. Sanborn, a newly appointed judge to the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. After clerking for Sanborn, Blackmun took a job as an associate for Junell, Driscoll, Fletcher, Dorsey & Barker, the best law firm in Minneapolis. He worked there for 16 years on taxation, trusts and estates, and civil litigation. During this time, Blackmun met Dorothy Clark in 1937 while playing tennis. The two married on June 21, 1941, and later had three daughters.

Motivated by his initial passion for medicine, Blackmun accepted a position as resident counsel for Mayo Clinic. His time at the clinic, which he described as the happiest decade of his life, earned him the attention of President Dwight D. Eisenhower to replace Sanborn’s seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in 1959. Blackmun established himself as a conservative on the court. The majority of his opinions centered on taxation.

Math, not law was his basic and original academic groudning, followed by his personal interest towards medicine which he regreeted not folling. His legal work and his appealate decisions were primarily around commercial interests.

Maybe it was in that work that Eisenhower and Nixon saw a Conservative.

It would not be the first or last time Conservative politicians would misread favortism toward commercial interests as necessessarily “Conservative”. Then again, Eisenhower was no real Conservative and Nixon was mostly just “anti-Communist” and made many decisions as President that were not Conservative at all - like price controls, and the mistake of the opening to the CCP.


19 posted on 06/27/2022 9:55:18 AM PDT by Wuli
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To: MtnClimber

I nominate William O. Douglas as the worst, appointed by FDR, promoter of invented Constitutional rights via substantive due process, the most leftists of leftist judges, and who inflicted incalculable damage upon this nation during his 36 years on the top bench, the longest ever.


20 posted on 06/27/2022 9:56:13 AM PDT by nicollo (the rule of law is not arbitrary)
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