Posted on 09/19/2020 4:02:14 PM PDT by DoodleBob
Justice Ginsburg has had quite a few health scares over the past little over a decade. She was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2009 and subsequently resisted pressure to retire from the Court under Obamas administration. With multiple hospital stays this year and a recurrence of her pancreatic cancer, many question how long she will be able to stay on the Court and if she will outlast President Trumps incumbency, while some liberals express frustration that Ginsburg did not retire under President Obama.
Retirements and replacements from the Court occur in different patterns. The current situation harkens back to Justice Thurgood Marshalls retirement from the Court in 1991. Like Ginsburg, Marshall was a liberal leader on the Court. While Ginsburg spent her early years as a practitioner working for the ACLU, Marshall established the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund prior to his nomination to the Court. Marshalls health was in decline during the Reagan years and once George H.W. Bush was elected president, he might have guessed he would need to step down before the end of Bushs minimally four years as president. Still, he was known to somewhat sarcastically confide to his clerks, If I die, prop me up and keep on voting, not wanting a conservative justice to be placed in his stead. Marshall retired from the Court with Bush still president in October 1991 citing health and age. He was replaced by Justice Clarence Thomas, one of the more conservative justices on the Court, leading to one of the biggest ideological shifts from retiring to replacing justice.
An often used metric to depict ideological shifts in the Court is the Martin-Quinn (MQ) Scores. While the MQ measures do not actually measure whether a justice is liberal or conservative, they do measure justices voting agreements with each other placing all justices on the same scale and bridging these agreement scores across time. The statistical modeler needs to define liberal-conservative dimension by deciding on a prototypic liberal and conservative justice to sit on either side of the axis. Since all justices are then on the same scale, the MQ Scores are not just pairwise measures between two justices. MQ Scores are somewhat arbitrary in amount but they have never exceeded positive ten for conservative justices or negative ten for liberal justices. These bookends are meant to provide some sense of the scores magnitude which is meaningful in a relativistic sense. Most importantly, close MQ Scores mean justices are well aligned in their voting while greater distance means they justices did not align very often in their votes.
The following graph shows the absolute values of the distance between Justice Thurgood Marshall and each of the justices on the Court in Marshalls last term (1990) and then the distance between each of these justices and Justice Thomas in his first term on the Court (1991).
Two of the justices that stand out with this distance measure are Justices Rehnquist and Scalia. As both justices were predominately conservative in their votes, they tracked closely to Thomas which is evident from the low distance value. Contrastingly, these justices are the most distant justices from Marshall as Marshall was the most liberal justice on the Court at the time of his retirement. Marshall, like Ginsburg, sat on a predominately conservative Court in his final years and was only in the majority 67.47% of the time in his final term on the Court. Thomas was in the majority almost 10% more of the time in his first term on the Court at 76.77% of time.
A comparison will help underscore the importance of the value differences between Marshall, Thomas, and each of the justices. The next chart shows the transitions in score differences between Justice Kennedy in his final year on the Court and Justice Kavanaugh in his first year. Justice Kennedy, was in the majority 92% of the time in his final term. He also tended to vote quite conservatively that term as evidenced by the fact that he voted with the conservative justices in all 14 5-4 decisions that broke down along ideological lines that term. Kavanaugh was in the majority 88% of the time in his first term on the Court and was in seven conservative majorities in 5-4 decisions compared to the one occasion where he was the swing vote for the liberal justices. Not surprisingly then, Kennedys MQ Score differences in his final term on the Court tracked quite similarly to Kavanaughs in his first term on the Court.
Where does Ginsburg fit into all of this? Like Marshall, Ginsburg is a liberal justice on a predominately conservative Court. Her frequency in the majority from this past term is on the low end for the Court and is between those of Marshall in his last term on the Court and Thomas in his first.
Seven of the justices fall into a narrow band of frequencies between 72% and 78% for OT 2019. Only justices Roberts, Kavanaugh, and Gorsuch fall outside of this band at the higher end of the spectrum. Possibly more telling is the justices rates in the majority for 5-4 decisions during the 2019 term. 13 5-4 decisions were made across ideological lines. The five more conservative justices were in ten of the majorities. Roberts sided with the liberal justices in two of these decisions and Gorsuch sided with the liberals in one. One 5-4 decision, Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, included justices of mixed ideologies in the majority. Ginsburg was in dissent in that case making her frequency in the majority 21% in 5-4 decisions this past term.
When we look at Ginsburgs MQ Score differences from the other justices on the Court for the past two terms with released scores, OT 2018 and OT 2019, we see her proximity to the liberal justices and distance from the conservative justices — including from the three conservative justices most often in the Courts majorities.
Ginsburgs distance from Kennedy in 2017 is right on par with her distance from Kavanaugh in 2018. Both Kennedy and Kavanaugh were almost triple the distance away from Ginsburg as was any of the liberal justices. This leaves a few possible scenarios for the future of the Court depending on how long Ginsburg remains.
Ginsburg needs to retain her spot on the Court until a new president is sworn in to ensure someone other than Trump fills her seat. If Trump or another republican president fills Ginsburgs seat, chances are the justice will be at least as far to the right as Roberts and Kavanaugh and will very possibly be closer to edge of the continuum like Thomas and Alito. A few republican presidents have appointed justices that have drifted in the liberal direction over time, but this is unlikely given the vetting that goes into current nominations. This seismic shift would likely look like the transition from Justice Marshall to Justice Thomas.
If Ginsburg were to retire with a democrat president in office, her seat would likely be filled by a justice who aligns most closely with Justices Breyer, Sotomayor, and Kagan. This would look a lot much more like the shift from Kennedy to Kavanaugh.
Only time will tell how the future composition of the Court will look. The likelihood of Ginsburg remaining on the Court for another four years if Trump is reelected seems minimal. Ginsburgs health over the next five months and the results of the November election, both for president and for the Senate, will likely dictate if the Court takes an even sharper turn to the right, or if it remains at least somewhat similar to how it looks today.
God works in mysterious ways.
RBG was pure trash. I am no Roberts fan either.
FILL THAT SEAT!!
Never trust a man of two minds. Roberts is an epileptic. At one point in time, epileptics could not get a driver license, but they can serve on a court.
Marshall made a career out of agreeing with Brennan. That court was simply horrible. The “conservatives” were not very conservative. Presidents Reagan and Bush changed the court. I’ll give Bush I a little credit because Thomas turned out to be an all-time great. At least we got Justice Thomas out of them.
I knew some politically connected people who were saying in the late ‘80s that Marshall was already mentally gone, spent his days watching TV, and told his clerks to do the work, but to never let drug dealers off.
I also remember when he finally retired, he referred to the pressure he received, and simply told them, “I’m falling apart.” That struck me as refreshingly honest.
RBG wanted to die in office.
So, she did, proving we need term limits for SCOTUS.
we could put a steak through the heart of commie liberals for the rest of my life if Trump is re-elected and he replaces Breyer also :) And unfortunately Thomas is probably nearing the end :( But replace both with YOUNG rock hard conservatives and we will have saved our country no matter who is president after Trump.
Sure, but the left will never be able to top that funeral it staged for that dead thug.
Complete with Cinderellas pumpkin carriage!
In both cases, good riddance to bad rubbish.
What we need more than that are Judges who are there to uphold the Constitution and not their own personal ideology
However, if they were there to uphold the Constitution and not subvert it they wouldn’t be liberals.
I have yet to personally know a liberal who, when you really get down to it with them, even believes in the rule of law. They don’t, that’s the fundamental difference.
Ginsburg’s clerks have been writing her opinions for years.
She brought in hard left ideologues knowing they would write opinions that she could simply rubber stamp.
“...proving we need term limits for SCOTUS.”
No. we just need judges who will honor their oath, and should they get to a point of not being able to do the work as they should ( requiring mostly help and they do little of the actual work) then honor their oath and respect the USofA citizens and step down. No shame in saying you are no longer up to the task. HUge shame in doing like RBG and hanging onto seat well passed your ability. No way she did much of the work in the last year with her cancer and frailty etc. She may have been so medicated too!, selfish to the end she was.
ha too funny :) nice catch
We are long overdue for term limits for Representatives and Supreme Court Justices. This needed to happen at the same time as the term limits on the Presidency under FDR's regime of corruption.
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