ALL JUDGES ARE POLITICAL. EXCEPT WHEN THEY ARE NOT.
We live in an age where one
person's judicial "activist" legislating from the bench is another's impartial
arbiter fairly interpreting the law. After the Supreme Court ended the 2000
Presidential election with its decision in Bush v. Gore, many critics claimed
that the justices had simply voted their political preferences. But Justice
Clarence Thomas, among many others, disagreed and insisted that the Court had
acted according to legal principle, stating: "I plead with you, that, whatever
you do, don't try to apply the rules of the political world to this institution;
they do not apply."
The legitimacy of our courts rests on their capacity to give
broadly acceptable answers to controversial questions. Yet Americans are divided
in their beliefs about whether our courts operate on unbiased legal principle or
political interest. Comparing law to the practice of common courtesy, Keith
Bybee explains how our courts not only survive under these suspicions of
hypocrisy, but actually depend on them.
Law, like courtesy, furnishes a means of getting along. It
frames disputes in collectively acceptable ways, and it is a habitual practice,
drummed into the minds of citizens by popular culture and formal institutions.
The rule of law, thus, is neither particularly fair nor free of paradoxical
tensions, but it endures. Although pervasive public skepticism raises fears of
judicial crisis and institutional collapse, such skepticism is also an
expression of how our legal system ordinarily functions.