Above the Fray: Changing the Stakes of Supreme Court Selection and Enhancing Legitimacy
Our Values
We are a small task force of people with diverse backgrounds and points of view who have come together to seek common ground in addressing the structural challenges facing the Supreme Court. Among us, we have experience as jurists on state and federal courts and as scholars of the judicial and legislative branches.
What brought us together is a shared commitment to fair and excellent judging. We know that our state and federal courts play a vital role in protecting rights, ensuring equality of treatment, respecting the dignity of individuals, promoting economic stability, and responding to allegations of government misconduct. Our hope is that the judges selected to serve on courts will rise above the political fray surrounding the appointment process and adjudicate cases fairly and independently.
The Problems
The political stakes of judicial selection, especially at the Supreme Court level, have cast a shadow over the integrity of that process. The U.S. Constitution commits the responsibility of judicial selection to the President and Senate, which makes politics an inherent part of the process. But, under the present system, partisans have incentives to control the composition of the courts so as to try to affect the resolution of disputes in a way that furthers particular policy objectives and politics. This process distorts the actual and the perceived fairness and independence of the courts.
“The political stakes of judicial selection, especially at the Supreme Court level, have cast a shadow over the integrity of that process.”
A variety of factors, weighted differently among us, make the stakes of federal judicial confirmation so high. On the Supreme Court, under the current structure, vacancies are rare and erratic. Therefore, a handful of people hold the power of that office for a long time. In contrast to earlier eras, today’s justices have virtually total control over which cases to hear. In recent years, the Court has relied more on forms of rapid decision-making that do not provide full development of the factual and legal issues, and, in some cases, the Court has not provided an explanation when dispositions are made. Problems of process and transparency have therefore become acute.
Judges on the district and appellate courts are at the center of federal adjudication, and once appointed, they are likewise at the forefront for consideration for the U.S. Supreme Court. Given their life-time authority and the importance of their work, the process for selecting those judges also merits review.
And finally, the current concentration of power on the Supreme Court also underscores the importance of a robust and functioning ethical framework to govern the conduct of the justices, transparency in the Court’s decision-making, and improved access to its public proceedings.
In this report, we address the interrelated concerns of the selection of judicial nominees, the procedures for decision-making on the Supreme Court, the duration of service on the Court, and conduct while on the bench. Our reasons for recommending interactive reforms, and specific changes that we believe deserve consideration, are detailed below.
A Holistic Approach
This task force has spent many months discussing how to be helpful amidst the heated discussions about the role of the federal judiciary and appointments to the bench.
Our packet of proposed reforms aims to alter some of the incentives that drive the current dysfunction. The U.S. Constitution requires the President to nominate federal judges with the advice and consent of the Senate. Further, the Constitution provides for judicial independence through protecting salaries and service during “Good Behavior.”1
But the Constitution does not set out criteria for selection of Supreme Court justices, and it does not speak to the number of justices on the Court, the place in which they sit while holding office, or their processes for decision-making. Our inquiry primarily focuses on how to adjust those aspects to try to lower the heat of nominations by altering the stakes of each individual’s selection. Judges and justices must be understood as public servants committed to a fair and impartial review of the facts and the law, and we believe that our approach will help advance that vital purpose.
“Judges and justices must be understood as public servants committed to a fair and impartial review of the facts and the law.”
Of course, the federal judiciary is embedded in a system of government, and many are concerned about the dysfunctions of the legislative and executive branches and how to maintain a robust democracy at both the state and national levels. Our focus is on the judiciary, and our view is that responses to the current problems require reconsidering how judges are selected, how power is distributed during their tenure, how long they serve in particular roles, and their obligations to be transparent and adhere to the highest ethical standards.
Dozens of proposals have been put forth in decades past and more are in view now. In this report, we blend some of these proposals together to encourage a holistic approach. The process of designing institutions that reflect and safeguard the values of our democratic society is just that—a process. There is no single solution, and reasonable people can disagree about how to move forward. In our view, at this point in time, a multi-faceted packet of reforms interacting together would modify political incentives to reduce the excessive tensions that accompany the current process.2 This package of reforms aims to protect judicial independence and support judges focused on deciding cases based on the facts before them, the relevant legal principles, and the country’s need for fair and just decision-making.
A Package of Reforms to Lower the Stakes and Enhance Legitimacy
Despite enormous changes in the country and in the lower courts, the Supreme Court’s structure has not changed for nearly a century. Because what once worked appears now no longer to be the best approach, a package of reforms to alter the concentration of power and enhance the legitimacy of the Court’s decision-making needs to address a series of issues:
- Selection for service on the federal courts;
- The structure of decision-making in the Supreme Court;
- The length of judicial service; and
- Judicial conduct, including ethical obligations, transparent decision-making, and access to the Supreme Court’s public proceedings
The proposals we discuss are built from experiences with the lower federal courts, state courts, and other constitutional democracies that are likewise committed to judicial independence, as well as ideas and proposals of many others who have also sought to mitigate the problems of the current system.
Although we may not agree on each individual proposal, we are unanimous in seeking fundamental change and agree that consideration of all of these recommendations is helpful to understanding the problems and useful responses. Our purpose here is not to mine the methods and details on implementation, but rather to sketch the larger picture. Some changes we suggest could come by the Supreme Court changing its own practices, others would require Congress to enact legislation and could, depending on different interpretations of Article III of the U.S. Constitution, require constitutional amendments.
1. Selection for Service on the Courts
A threshold question for any reform agenda is how to recruit and screen judicial candidates. Because the Constitution empowers the President and the Senate to select life-tenured federal judges, we endorse the use of screening committees, working in a transparent fashion, to assess and recommend judicial candidates based on specified and objective qualifications.
This method is familiar because it is in use in many jurisdictions, and our endorsement comes from that experience. Screening mechanisms for federal judges date back at least to the 1970s, when President Jimmy Carter created a national committee to identify nominees for the appeals courts and encouraged senators to create their own committees to screen district court nominees.3 Although no other President has replicated President Carter’s model, many senators continue to use screening committees. One count records 43 senators from 21 states, as well as representatives of the District of Columbia, who use screening committees to assist with the federal judicial nomination process.4
A similar process is currently in use within the Article III judiciary when it selects individuals to join life-tenured judges and serve as bankruptcy judges and magistrate judges. Congress has empowered appellate judges to select bankruptcy judges5 and has authorized district court judges to select magistrate judges.6 At both levels, screening committees typically identify a list of candidates from which life-tenured judges select.7
Parallel processes occur in many states. About two-thirds of the states, joined by the District of Columbia, rely on forms of screening committees to evaluate judicial nominees.8 In some jurisdictions, that process is legally mandated, and in some instances, committees both screen and propose a slate from which a selection is made by either a Governor, a legislature, or both.9
Because “their success often depends on their structure,”10 screening committees should possess clear criteria for their own membership and for their inquiries into the qualities of candidates.11 Many committees rely either on constitutional or statutory criteria or have crafted their own metrics to identify candidates who have integrity, generosity of thought, commitments to the well-being of their communities, varied practices and backgrounds, and demographic diversity.12 Moreover, in many instances, committees have made their processes transparent and make information public through a variety of mechanisms, including by livestreaming proceedings.13
Outside the United States, some countries also use screening committees for various levels of their courts, including the Supreme Court. Canada provides one illustration as it utilizes an advisory board made up of stakeholders including government appointees and representatives of the bar, bench, and academia, which offers non-binding recommendations to the prime minister.14
Based on experiences of these many screening processes, we recommend the use of screening committees for all lower courts as these judges preside over the bulk of federal litigation.15 Committees should be composed of individuals with diverse legal, personal, and professional backgrounds. They should be charged with selecting individuals with legal expertise, significant experience as lawyers, an even-keeled approach indicative of judicial temperament, a commitment to public service, and demonstrable adherence to the bar’s ethical standards. In reviewing candidates, committees should attend to individuals’ backgrounds, experiences, and legal practices to ensure that the judiciary is comprised of people who reflect the diversity of the country and are dedicated to the impartial application of the rule of law. Further, committees should publicize calls for nominations and build in transparency to make their own decisions accountable.
We also believe it would be wise for the President to consider a screening committee for Supreme Court justices. Moreover, if Supreme Court justices continue to be drawn primarily from the lower federal courts, implementation of a committee-based screening process for lower court judges would also aid in the selection of Supreme Court justices.16
2. The Structure of Decision-Making at the Supreme Court
At present, power on the Supreme Court is highly concentrated. The Court is composed of nine justices, each of whom sits on that specific court for as long as they serve. Under the current system, the justices also have unfettered discretion over the cases they vote to review. All nine justices hear every case as a group unless an individual justice steps aside. Reform is needed to diffuse the concentration of power, and to do so, reforms should consider altering the composition and the decision-making processes of the Court.
Composition of the Court
For many, the Court’s size and its method of decision-making are taken for granted. Yet the number is not fixed by the Constitution. Since 1869, the Supreme Court has been a group of nine people, but over the course of U.S. history, the size has varied and the Court has had as few as six justices and as many as 10.17 Absent a recusal, the full Court hears each case.
In contrast, in federal appellate courts, state appellate courts, and outside the United States, the justices or judges sit in panels of three and, on occasion, sit as a larger group, known as “en banc.”18 For example, the Delaware Supreme Court, which has five members, hears most of its cases in three-justice panels and sits en banc for certain types of cases or when a panel does not reach unanimity.19 In the United Kingdom, the Supreme Court is comprised of twelve justices, and the court often relies on panels of five and seats larger panels for certain cases.20
The fixed, unchanging system of sitting as a whole in the U.S. Supreme Court has helped to bring to the fore the power of individual justices. In today’s world, commentators and litigants routinely focus on and predict what each individual justice will decide in an effort to count the “five” that will form a majority. The term “swing” justice captures the idea that when an individual justice is open to moving between the perceived groups of four, that person has an outsized influence on the Court’s decision-making. By having a set practice of nine people deciding each case, the stakes of selection are amplified. Now, members of the political branches look to appoint individuals to form a majority on the Court that they believe will repeatedly and consistently shape specific areas of law.21
Enlarging the size of the bench or having justices sit in panels for at least some cases could alter this dynamic because it would disrupt static voting blocks.22 Moreover, justices who seek to shift legal doctrine may come to understand that because they will not be voting on all the cases, they need to persuade other justices about their views, and doing so may moderate efforts to take strident positions.23
Were more people and different panels in place, a sense of the fixed views of the set of nine could be diffused. Of course, many issues of implementation would need to be addressed, including the development of ways to minimize inter-panel conflicts and establish criteria for sitting in larger groups or as a whole.24
In addition to, or as an alternative to, enlarging the number of seats on the Court and shifting to a panel system, the composition of the Court could shift if some individuals rotated on and off that bench. For example, a pool of judges drawn from the lower federal appellate courts could be formed from which to identify individuals to serve on the Supreme Court for fixed terms and then return to their former position.25 Such a process, which would make Supreme Court membership time-limited, would provide specified terms and regular turnover and would diffuse the concentration of power held by a small number of justices.
As with our other suggestions, we have drawn the idea of rotating on and off the Court from former and current practices that permit federal judges to sit on a court other than that to which they were appointed. During the early days of the Republic, Supreme Court justices “rode circuit” to serve as temporary judges for lower courts.26 In modern times, retired Supreme Court justices can choose to serve on circuit courts.27 Further, federal law permits the Supreme Court’s Chief Justice to assign federal trial and appellate judges to sit at different levels and within different circuits of the federal courts.28
Our reference to the authority of the Chief Justice brings us to another issue, which is the breadth of the power held by the individual who occupies that role. The Chief Justice has unique obligations related to the primary business of the Court, such as assigning justices to author opinions when in the majority.29 Over the decades, the Chief Justice’s powers and responsibilities have grown. The Chief Justice functions as the head of the federal judiciary, including chairing the Judicial Conference of the United States, appointing judges to special courts such as the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, selecting members of rulemaking and of other committees, and approving judges who sit by designation on a lower court other than the one to which they are assigned.30 All told, the Chief Justice has roughly 80 statutorily defined duties in addition to adjudicating cases.31 None of these duties are mandated by the U.S. Constitution.32
The increase in the concentration of power in this role raises concerns that could be mitigated by altering the portfolio of the Chief Justice through limiting the array of duties or by rotating the office from one person to another.33 Here again, we draw on experiences in other courts. Congress has provided that the chief judges of federal district and circuit courts serve seven-year terms before returning to regular service.34 On many state supreme courts, chief justices serve set terms and then resume their role as associate justices.35 In some of these systems, the role is assigned by seniority and in others by the decision of the other sitting justices.
In sum, we believe that adjusting the decision-making structure of the Supreme Court and the role of the Chief Justice could help reduce some of the tensions that accompany the current selection process. In particular, these reforms could reduce the incentives to use the confirmation process to shape a particular agenda for how the Court should rule.
Case Selection
Only during the last century did the Supreme Court gain unfettered discretion to decide which cases it will hear through its decision to grant certiorari (“cert”).36 Under the current practice, four of the nine justices must agree to add a case to the Court’s docket. Several justices participate in what is known as a “cert pool,” in which their law clerks work together to review the certiorari petitions, of which thousands are filed annually.37 During the 2018 term, the last full term prior to the COVID-19 pandemic’s disruption, the Court heard argument in 73 cases.38
Astute litigants and lower court judges know how to bring cases to the attention of four justices, and some of the justices themselves have signaled through opinions or other commentary that they are looking to address certain legal issues.39 Some may view such commentary as a useful dialogue and conclude that justices are appropriately using their perch to encourage advocates with resources to develop litigation strategies. Others object that justices should not encourage resourced litigants to find cases to fit the mold of the law to which Supreme Court justices aspire.40 Whether signaling is a problem or not, the power to select cases means the Court can set its own agenda, which has repeatedly raised concerns about what cases are selected for review,41 as well as broader concerns about the type of power judges should have.42
The current system is not inevitable, nor in centuries past was the Court’s agenda-setting power so complete. One way to lessen the concentration of power is to obtain input on case selection from judges other than those on the Supreme Court. This would not only alter the power of the justices, but also provide more perspectives and vantage points from those steeped in the sweep of the case law about when the Court’s input is needed for clarification and development of legal precepts.
A variety of proposals have been put forth to reallocate some of the decision-making about the docket, and most include having the Supreme Court retain some authority as well.43 For example, in 2009, a group of commentators proposed that a few experienced circuit court judges be appointed as a “cert panel” to select cases for decision by the Court.44 Such judges could serve for a fixed number of years and then rotate off, to be replaced by others. The 2009 proposal also created mechanisms for the Supreme Court to add cases to its own docket. To ensure knowledgeable review of cases coming from state courts, such a panel should also include state supreme court justices, who could be selected by an entity like the Conference of Chief Justices.45 Other approaches would alter the degree of authority of a cert panel and render its recommendations advisory, or enhance mechanisms like certification from circuit courts to identify cases that require the Supreme Court’s attention.46
In addition, Congress could delineate more categories of cases for mandatory review by the Supreme Court. Again, history provides examples. Until 1925, when Congress gave the Court discretion over a large share of its caseload, mandatory cases were a common element of the Supreme Court docket. Congress further increased the Court’s discretion over the following six decades.47 Currently, Congress requires the Supreme Court to hear cases that arise from three-judge district courts, which are themselves now only required for a small subset of cases.48
These statutes provide examples of congressional choices to send some cases directly to the Supreme Court. Our general point is that as a matter of history, the Supreme Court did not have unfettered control over its docket, and many routes are available to achieve a reallocation of power.
3. Length of Judicial Service
Supreme Court justices serve as long as they choose, absent illness, death, or impeachment. While the actual amount of time that federal judges spend on the bench has varied over the course of the country’s history, it is now common for justices to spend two to three decades on the bench.49 The concentration of the significant power of the justices for so long raises concerns, both because few people hold this office and because it limits opportunities for others to contribute to the adjudicatory process. We endorse limits on Supreme Court tenure because more turnover could bolster the Court’s relationship to democratic legitimacy and, by expanding the number of people selected at regular intervals, reduce some of the pressures on the selection process.
The Constitution rightly shelters federal judges from political interference by protecting their tenures during their good behavior and their salaries during their term of office.50 But the Constitution does not define “good behavior,” and while it is commonly interpreted to denote holding office for life, it is not necessarily tethered to holding a particular position within the federal judiciary for that term of service.51 Many Constitutions protect the independence of judges, but often rely on fixed terms of office, mandatory retirement, or other ways to limit the length of service. Thus, as currently interpreted, Article III’s life tenure provision is unusual when contrasted with most state judiciaries and other constitutional democracies.52 For example, the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, which predates the U.S. Constitution, also grants judges tenure “during good behavior.” In 1972, Massachusetts amended its Constitution to define the term of judicial tenure as good behavior until mandatory retirement at age 70.53
Several options are available to alter the pattern, and many proposals have been put forth. One approach is to create an 18-year non-renewable term on the Supreme Court, followed by a transition to senior status or to active service on lower Article III courts.54 Again, current practice provides a model. For justices who wish to serve on lower courts after their retirement from the Supreme Court, a statute outlines the procedure to do so; Justices Sandra Day O’Connor and David Souter provide recent examples of its use.55 If the number of justices on the Court remained at nine or if that number is increased, a fixed, 18-year term would result in an open Supreme Court seat at least every other year and thereby create the opportunity for a president to nominate at least two justices each presidential term.56
Alternatively, a mandatory retirement age could be implemented.57 A number of constitutional democracies and several U.S. states have mandatory retirement ages, typically at age 70 or 75.58 The idea of linking service to age is commonplace in many other professions and aims to ensure that people have the stamina and capacity to do the required work. To address concerns about disability while in office, a 1980 statute creates a mechanism to identify such problems within the lower federal courts, but it does not create additional support to judges who retire after developing a disability.59
A retirement age, like a fixed term, creates some predictability about the duration of individuals’ service, even though individuals could leave before they reach retirement age. Because a retirement age requirement could create incentives to select younger appointees, such a reform would need to be coupled with other suggestions—such as the use of panels—to diffuse the power held by any single justice during their term of service.
Another route—again, commonplace in other working environments—is to create incentives for a justice to retire or move on.60 Many judges have indicated that a desire for public service is a key factor motivating them to take senior status rather than leaving the bench altogether.61 Therefore, while incentives are often financial, in addition to enhanced pension benefits for people choosing such options, both the courts and Congress could provide opportunities for retired justices to serve government in other roles.62 To the extent financial incentives are used, they would need to be calibrated to avoid disproportionately incentivizing judges with fewer means to step away from the bench earlier than their wealthier peers.
Overall, limits on judicial service could align the Court with democratic practices that seek to preserve the legitimacy of an independent judiciary through, in part, avoiding lifetime appointments. Such limits could also de-escalate the current tensions associated with that current selection process.
4. Conduct of the Court: Clear Ethical Obligations, Transparent Decision-Making, and Access to the Court’s Public Proceedings
Given the centrality of the Supreme Court, and its current state as untethered to the ethical and procedural obligations imposed on other courts, reform of its approach to ethics and recusal and to the accessibility and transparency of its decision-making is needed.
Ethical Obligations
Justices of the Supreme Court are not bound by codes of conduct that apply to lower federal court and to state court judges.63 Those codes address issues of partiality, prohibit participation in fundraising activities, and guide judges as they decide what roles to take in the public sphere. The justices may seek guidance from the United States Code of Conduct, yet they are not compelled to comply with it, nor does the Code address special circumstances that may face Supreme Court justices.64
Federal statutes also provide limited guidance on when a justice should step aside from a case. Federal law mandates that judges and Supreme Court justices recuse themselves in any case where their “impartiality might reasonably be questioned,” as well as under specified circumstances, such as if they have financial interests in a specific case.65 In some state courts, rules provide that a judge other than the one whose impartiality is questioned decide the question of recusal.66 Litigants can also appeal a judge’s refusal to recuse. In contrast, Supreme Court justices’ decisions about their potential conflicts are made by each individual justice, and no mechanism exists for review of their personal judgments about whether to step aside.
Creating clearer ethical obligations and guidance for Supreme Court justices and mechanisms to have more than the individual justice decide issues of impartiality would bring the institution in line with the rest of our government and end the practice of justices being “judges in their own case.”67 One way to do so would be to end the self-governance practices of the Court and replace them with a binding code of conduct. In terms of when to step aside, to be effective that code would need to address recusal determinations. One option would be to require that all justices determine recusal.68 Some state supreme courts take this approach, typically by referring a recusal motion to the full court or authorizing a party to appeal a justice’s refusal to recuse to the full court.69 Another option is to ask a panel of circuit judges to advise on requests for recusal.
Further, the code needs to address the justices’ presumption against recusal. Under the current practice of a nine-person bench, the justices’ concerns about an evenly split decision have been used to explain as weighing against recusal.70 Were more justices on the bench, or panels in place, or appellate judges rotating on and off, those concerns would be assuaged. Moreover, the experience of having a Court of eight people for many months has demonstrated that four-four split decisions, which leave a lower court decision in place, will not necessarily result from an even-numbered group of justices rendering judgments.71 Some of the justices also indicated that a sense of the need to avoid deadlock prompted more conciliatory or more modest decisions.72 Scholars have found that Supreme Court recusals do not often produce equally divided rulings.73 This history makes plain that enforcement of norms to step aside is the wiser course.74
The code also needs to address the conduct of the justices when they are off the bench. The justice’s appearance before organizations that are perceived to be partisan affects public perceptions of judicial impartiality. To avoid the specter of bias, the Code should advise justices to avoid participating in organizations, whether or not traditional political associations, that cast doubt on the justice’s impartiality.75
The system for discovering and appropriately responding to financial conflicts of interest also needs to be improved, which would, in turn, improve decision-making about recusal. The justices, like all judges, are required by statute to file financial disclosures.76 Yet examples exist of judges at all levels of the judiciary sitting on cases in which evidence of a conflict later emerges. One way to avoid a conflict is to require justices and judges to divest individual stock ownership or to place their assets in a blind trust.77 Practices from the executive branch may provide an example. In recent decades, most presidents, from both parties, have placed their assets in blind trusts or held non conflicting assets like diversified mutual funds, and it is common for incoming executive branch officials to divest assets that would present conflicts.78
Accessible and Transparent Decision-Making
“Publicity is the very soul of justice,”79 and our Constitution and common law have shaped a jurisprudence in which the public has access to all criminal and civil judicial proceedings.80 Thus, another important facet of judging is communication with the public.81
The Supreme Court’s practice of publishing opinions and orders reflects this commitment. Yet, during the past several years, the Court has entered a significant number of cases without full briefing and oral argument. Instead, in what some call a “shadow docket,” the Court has ruled on motions, granted stays, issued unsigned decisions, and taken up cases that have not reached a final decision in the lower court,82 including in death penalty cases under execution warrant.83 Likewise, when justices do recuse themselves, they do not regularly explain why.84
Furthermore, unlike all the other courts, where rulemaking is a public process with time for notice and comment, the Supreme Court makes its own rules without relying on that process.85 Lower courts rely on the Rules Enabling Act procedures to gain input from lawyers and litigants about the rules proposed to be altered, but the Supreme Court does not have the benefit of such input unless it does so on an ad hoc basis.
We need the disciplined development of precedent to guide future decisions, as well as disciplined procedure to produce that law. Adhering to the process of full briefing and arguments and publication is an important facet of this obligation, and the departure from these practices is worrisome.86 We recommend that the Court move away from its ad hoc procedure, explain the reasons for its dispositions, and regularize its rulemaking processes by adopting the procedures that it currently oversees for the lower courts.
Public Access to the Court’s Proceedings
The Supreme Court’s commitment to being accessible is part of its responsible use of power. Accordingly, the public should be able to hear and see the oral arguments of the Supreme Court. An important first step was prompted by the COVID-19 crisis, when the Court relied on telephonic oral arguments and, for the first time in its history, allowed live remote access to the audio of those proceedings.87 The significant public interest in the audio broadcasts of the Court’s telephonic arguments confirms that the time has come for regular live video and audio access to the Court’s proceedings.88
Here, as elsewhere in this report, examples from other jurisdictions are plentiful. Broadcast proceedings through closed systems have become commonplace in many state and federal courts, as well as in courts outside the United States.89 The literature on this issue is vast, and here we join with many others in calling for ready access—no matter where people live—to see and hear the public proceedings of the U.S. Supreme Court.90
A Closing Comment on These Interactive Reforms
We have outlined a packet of interrelated reforms because the various components need to work together to respond to the problems of this era. These proposals address troubling facets of the current system—from selection and nomination through the practices of decision-making and judicial tenure to ethics and transparency. If these reforms were put into place, they could work in tandem, complement one another, and create more robust and effective change than would any single proposal, standing alone.
“These proposals address troubling facets of the current system—from selection and nomination through the practices of decision-making and judicial tenure to ethics and transparency.”
We provide just brief illustrations. Consider, for example, recusal. Currently, Supreme Court justices weigh the “duty to sit” against the potential of an actual or perceived conflict of interest—frequently erring on the side of hearing a case for which objective considerations would counsel recusal. But, if enforced recusal rules were coupled with a system in which the composition of the Court is drawn from various circuit court judges, another (circuit) judge would be available to hear the case. Similarly, if the membership of the Court is increased or panels used, the recusal of one justice would not necessarily mean an even number of justices would hear a case. In short, with more people in play, there would be more dynamism in decision-making on the Court, the power concentrated in any single person on the Court would be diffused, and the justices would be better situated to decide to disqualify themselves when appropriate.
Similarly, a limit of service on the Supreme Court necessarily creates more opportunities for appointments to the Court. On its own, one might anticipate more conflicts over confirmation, but combined with the use of screening committees and compositional changes that deemphasize individual justices, the whole package of such reforms can help alter the stakes by lowering the impact of each individual selected.
In closing, we have learned a great deal through being in conversation with each other and reaching out to many other experts during the course of the many months of this project. Moreover, as is evident, we are indebted to many scholars, advocates, and policymakers who have thought about these issues in prior and current times and put forth proposals. Rather than debate each suggestion one by one, we have sought to chart a path forward by focusing on how to lower the stakes of each judicial selection. To do so requires, in our view, addressing how judicial candidates are identified and selected, the structure of decision-making on the Court, the duration of service, and the conduct of the Court itself. While there are many ways to respond, addressing each and all of these key areas is vital to ensuring the vitality and legitimacy of the federal courts.
Our hope is that, by focusing on how to alter the incentives that make judicial selection such a high stakes proposition, these proposals will assist justices in carrying out their important obligations and in staying above the political fray.
Members of the Task Force on Judicial Selection
Wallace Jefferson is a partner at Alexander Dubose & Jefferson. Prior to joining the firm in 2013, he served as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Texas. Appointed to the Supreme Court in 2001 and named Chief Justice in 2004, Justice Jefferson made Texas judicial history as the Court’s first African American Justice and Chief Justice. He led the Court’s efforts to fund access to justice programs, helped reform juvenile justice, and inaugurated a statewide electronic filing system for Texas courts. Justice Jefferson is Treasurer of the American Law Institute, Chair of the Texas Commission to Expand Civil Legal Services, and a Fellow of the American Academy of Appellate Lawyers. He is a member of the Texas Commission on Judicial Selection and has been certified in Civil Appellate Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization since 1993.
Timothy K. Lewis is Counsel at Schnader Harrison Segal & Lewis, where he focuses on domestic and international complex commercial litigation as an arbitrator, mediator, settlement counselor, and appellate advisor. Before entering private practice, Judge Lewis served on the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania. At the time of both appointments, he was the youngest federal judge in the United States. Judge Lewis began his career as an Allegheny County Assistant District Attorney and spent eight years as an Assistant United States Attorney.
Ruth McGregor served on the Arizona Supreme Court from February 1998 until June 30, 2009. She was the Court’s Chief Justice from June 2005 until her retirement. She was also a member of the Arizona Court of Appeals from 1989 until 1998, where she served as Chief Judge from 1995 to 1997. Justice McGregor has participated extensively in professional activities, particularly those involving legal education and the discipline of lawyers and judges, and in organizations dedicated to assuring a fair and impartial judiciary. During the October 1981 term, she served as law clerk to Justice Sandra Day O’Connor at the United States Supreme Court.
Judith Resnik is the Arthur Liman Professor of Law at Yale Law School, where she teaches courses on federalism, procedure, courts, prisons, equality, and citizenship. Her scholarship focuses on the relationship of democratic values to government services such as courts; the interaction among federal, state, and tribal courts; and the forms and norms of federalism. She has argued cases before the U.S. Supreme Court and the lower courts, filed amicus briefs in the Court, and written and edited numerous books, chapters, and articles about the function of courts and the processes of judgment. Professor Resnik is also the Founding Director of Yale’s Arthur Liman Center for Public Interest Law, which promotes access to justice and the fair treatment of individuals and groups seeking to use the legal system.
The task force staff is grateful to the many people who assisted in the production of this report. Special thanks to Will McAuliffe and the teams of attorneys at Covington & Burling LLP and WilmerHale and who provided extensive pro bono assistance throughout the project, including Jessica Arco, John Buchanan, Thomas Perrin Cooke, Patricio Martínez Llompart, Kate McNulty, Nicole Roberts, Darcy Slayton, Shannon Tucker, Molly Jennings, Rebecca Cooper, Jane Kim, Rebecca Lee, Amy Lishinski, Blake Roberts, Elena Satten-Lopez, Samir Sheth, and Derek Woodman.
We also thank those who provided valuable guidance and scholarship over the course of this project, including James Sample, Charles Geyh, and Danielle Brian. Many experts generously shared their time and expertise with us. Our thanks to go out to Debo Adegbile, Daniel Epps, Amanda Hollis-Brusky, Aziz Huq, Mark Gitenstein, Lisa Graves, Linda Greenhouse, Peter Keisler, Adam Liptak, David Pozen, Nancy Scherer, Ilya Shapiro, and Nina Totenberg.
Task Force Staff
Sarah Turberville, Project Director
David Janovsky, Project Analyst
Copy-Editing and Fact-Checking
Neil Gordon
Mia Steinle
Design and Layout
Leslie Garvey
Renzo Velez
Outreach
Caitlin MacNeil
Emma Coghlan
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