The most dangerous branch Inside the Supreme Court's assault on the Constitution

David A. Kaplan, 1956-

Book - 2018

"In a richly reported, behind-the-scenes portrait of the Supreme Court and the secret world of its nine justices, veteran national journalist David A. Kaplan shows how the Court, far from being the "least dangerous branch" of government, in the words of Alexander Hamilton, has become in many respects the most dangerous branch, subverting democracy and betraying the Constitution. Never before has the Supreme Court been more central to American politics. A sizable percentage of voters in the most recent presidential election chose a candidate based largely on who they thought Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump would nominate to replace the fiery Antonin Scalia. In the face of a dysfunctional and paralyzed Congress, it is the Court..., rather than our elected officials, that decides such divisive issues as gerrymandering, abortion, gun rights, voting rights, same sex marriage, immigration, and campaign finance. In a sweeping narrative that examines the personalities and quirks of the Justices, The Most Dangerous Branch shows how, going as far back as Roe v Wade, the Court has re-shaped America's political and social landscape in key cases on the left and the right. As much as the Chief Justice claims to be only calling balls and strikes, in fact the Court has not hesitated to put its collective thumb on the scale of justice to swing the law in the majority's direction. As a result, nine nonelected life-tenured lawyers, trained at but two elite universities (Harvard and Yale) have taken it upon themselves to decide the fate and direction of the nation. Kaplan's book gets at the heart of who these Justices are, and uncovers their personal agendas -- including that of Neil Gorsuch, President Trump's impatient and quietly radical new appointee. And with the retirement of even a single justice, the Court could, under Trump and a filibuster-proof Senate, be transformed into a insurmountable conservative voting block that will reign even more supreme over America for a generation"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Crown 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
David A. Kaplan, 1956- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xiv, 446 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, most of which are in colour ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 375-417) and index.
ISBN
9781524759902
  • Introduction the End of the World As They Knew It
  • Prologue Death at the Ranch
  • Part I. Characters
  • Chapter 1. The Marble Temple
  • Chapter 2. NO. 9
  • Chapter 3. Confirmation World
  • Chapter 4. Deploying the Warhead
  • Chapter 5. The Institutionalist and the Notorious
  • Chapter 6. The Left Flank
  • Chapter 7. The Right Flank
  • Chapter 8. Deus Ex Machina
  • Part II. Cases
  • Chapter 9. Sleeping Giant
  • Chapter 10. The Runaway Court
  • Chapter 11. Revenge of the Right
  • Chapter 12. James Madison Made Us Do It
  • Chapter 13. For the Love of Money
  • Chapter 14. A Disdain For Democracy
  • Chapter 15. Roe By Any Other Name?
  • Epilogue A Less Dangerous Branch
  • Acknowledgments
  • Note on Sources
  • Notes
  • Cases
  • Photo Credits
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

In his penetrating if anxious analysis of Supreme Court jurisprudence, Kaplan laments recent decisions lacking judicial restraint and pleads for narrow exercise of the court's power despite public pressure and ample temptation to rule broadly on controversial matters. In part, Kaplan is concerned about the interpersonal dynamics of the justices, whose quirks and rivalries and complicated political loyalties may forever fascinate us but also potentially distract from, if not inhibit, the effective interpretation of law. But the celebrity treatment of justices, Kaplan argues, is actually a symptom of a much larger problem: our expectation that the Supreme Court is the most effective forum for the granting and protection of rights. With deep distrust of our elected representatives and the legislative process, we see the justices as our saviors, and the justices follow our expectations. The result is assertive judicial decision-making that aspires to, in Chief Justice John Roberts' words, protect the people from the consequences of their political choices. And if this isn't an entirely new argument, it is certainly a timely one.--Brendan Driscoll Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Kaplan, the former legal affairs editor of Newsweek and a commentator who has appeared on both MSNBC and Fox News, turns constitutional scholar Alex Bickel's classic 1962 book on the Supreme Court, The Least Dangerous Branch, on its head, persuasively arguing that the court has lost its bearings. Kaplan provides context for his argument with engaging, gossipy, and often highly critical sketches of each of the current justices and their judicial philosophies. His main focus is what he sees as the erosion of the court's legitimacy, which he traces to Roe v. Wade, the abortion rights case vilified by conservatives and viewed with reverence by liberals. To Kaplan, Roe signified the Court's willingness to abandon coherent constitutional theory in favor of ideological views in matters "best left for the democratically accountable branches." He then takes readers through a scathing tour of recent Supreme Court decisions that he believes share Roe's deficiencies-among them cases on the Second Amendment, the 2000 presidential election, the Voting Rights Act, and campaign finance-whose reasoning he variously describes as "laughable," "fanciful," "absurd," and, most damningly, at odds with democracy. Kaplan's thesis doesn't favor either liberal or conservative views, and though readers may not agree with all of Kaplan's conclusions, they will find this a passionately argued and credible indictment of the court. (Oct.) c Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Review by Library Journal Review

Kaplan, former Newsweek legal affairs editor, chronicles the modern Supreme Court and challenges its reputation as "the least dangerous branch." He argues that the Court has too much power and is too political. In the first half of the book, Kaplan examines the modern Court and its conflicts, including the long fight over a replacement for Associate Justice Antonin Scalia (1936-2016). He further asserts that the nomination and confirmation process skirts debate over important legal issues, thereby undermining an effective democracy. The second half focuses on cases that have negatively affected the Court, such as Bush v. Gore and Roe v. Wade. Kaplan contends that these and other high-profile cases should have been decided by Congress or by lower courts. By appropriating this power for itself, the Court has overstepped its role and weakened the other branches of government. VERDICT Aimed toward general readers, especially those interested in the judiciary, this book is well researched and raises valid questions. Recommended for public and academic libraries and.-Becky Kennedy, Atlanta-Fulton P.L. © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An appeal for greater judicial restraint from the Supreme Court.Former Newsweek legal affairs editor Kaplan (Mine's Bigger: Tom Perkins and the Making of the Greatest Sailing Machine Ever Built, 2007, etc.) devotes much of the first half of the book to chatty sketches of the biographies and jurisprudence of various Supreme Court justices. These contribute little beyond establishing the author's sympathies with the liberal members of the court and snarky disapproval of the conservatives. He reserves special contempt for Justice Anthony Kennedy, "the Court's metaphysicist-in-residence," whom he sees as embodying a judicial triumphalism that has "made the Supreme Court the most dangerous branch." Kaplan then settles into a tendentious review of several recent landmark cases, starting with Roe v. Wade; though approving the result, he lambasts the decision as not an example of constitutional law at all. This sets the table for a tour of standard liberal bugbears like Bush v. Gore, Citizens United, and Shelby County v. Holder; Kaplan trashes the majority opinions and approvingly quotes at length from the dissents. Still, the author is in pursuit of a serious point. He argues persuasively that, through these decisions, the court has seized control of debates and policies best left to the legislative process, thus damaging its own integrity and our system of democratic government. Worse, it has done so by resurrecting the legal doctrine of substantive due process, thought to have been discredited in the 1930s, which tends to position the court illegitimately as a superlegislature. These developments have unnecessarily politicized the court and poisoned the confirmation process for justices. Ironically, it is often the acerbic Justice Antonin Scalia who makes Kaplan's point best in his dissents in cases like Obergefell v. Hodges which, like Roe, the author disapproves of for consistency's sake.An informed discussion of a serious issue that may be too easily dismissed for its intrusive partisan bias. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

EXCERPT FROM THE MOST DANGEROUS BRANCH: WE'RE ALL JUDICIAL ACTIVISTS NOW   In our constitutional system, the justices of the Supreme Court are deities, announcing the law of the land from on high. And while liberals and conservatives disagree about desired results, they are indistinguishable in their view about that primacy. Asked about the premise of my book, The Most Dangerous Branch --that the Court, in case after big case, too often acts when it should not--a liberal justice and a conservative each gave the same answer: "I half-agree with you!"*   Distrustful of popular will when it's inconvenient, litigants from both sides of the ideological aisle rush to the Court to prosecute grievances or to claim perceived rights that eluded them in Congress (and in state legislatures). Abortion, gun control, campaign finance, gay marriage--these are among the difficult issues that the Court chooses to resolve. So we don't bother to fight them in elections --the results of which can be overturned the following November--when a victory in the Supreme Court can cement an outcome for a lifetime? Why attempt to persuade millions of citizens to endorse a position when all you need is five of nine unaccountable justices? Each time demonstrators convene outside the Court, they surely miss the irony that they're marching right past the Capitol across the street.   When the Court anoints itself as arbiter, the winning side exalts the courage of the justices. The losers holler about "an imperial judiciary." What exactly is the difference between "making the law" and "interpreting the law"? It's merely about whether you like the way the justices voted in today's case. We all favor "judicial restraint" and oppose "judicial activism"--except, naturally, when we don't, in which case we just call them by the opposite label. "Judicial restraint"--and its cousin, "strict construction" of the Constitution-- are the chameleons of American law, instantly able to change philosophical color when expediency requires. "Judicial activism" is what the other guy does. But in truth, everybody's an activist now.   The corrosive result is twofold: an arrogant Court and an enfeebled Congress that rarely is willing to tackle the toughest issues. Each feeds on the other. The justices frequently step in because they believe the members of Congress--elected by the people though they may be--act like fools or, like cowards, fail to act. Happy to stay off the battlefield, Congress seldom raises a peep, other than to crowd the cameras during occasional Senate confirmation hearings on a new justice. The result is dwindling public faith in both institutions.   The triumphalism of the Court--its eagerness to be in the vortex of social and political disputes, its wholesale lack of deference to the other branches of government--explains in part the cynical uses to which it has been subjected by presidents and senators. That cynicism, masquerading as "fidelity to the rule of law," is understandable. But the Court's drop in standing among the public in recent decades--the reason opinion surveys and mainstream commentary have so often reflected an attitude that the justices are partisans-in-robes--is a mostly self-inflicted wound. Forget the robes--maybe the job should come with tights and a cape.   That reflects not a liberal or conservative sentiment, but a growing conviction that the Court has squandered its institutional capital. It is altogether possible to be politically liberal and to oppose an aggressive Court. It is entirely consistent to be politically conservative and to oppose an aggressive Court. Political ends do not justify judicial means.   Under Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., there is a now-ascendant conservative "bloc" of justices, appointed by Republicans, and there is a liberal "bloc," appointed by Democrats. The tendency toward viewing judges as political proxies has only accelerated during the Trump presidency.  When journalists write about a justice, they routinely include the party of the president who appointed the justice--as if members of the Court were little different than stand-ins at the Department of Agriculture. When the votes of justices in controversial cases can be predicted at the outset, constitutional law simply becomes partisan politics by another name. If you usually know beforehand how justices will come out--and if it's a function of the political party of the president who appointed them--why have a Court at all?   A month before the Constitution was ratified in 1788, Alexander Hamilton explained the source of the new Court's authority. The other branches--and the people--would obey the Court because of its prestige. Rulings would be based "neither on force nor will, but merely judgment," he wrote in Federalist No. 78. The Court lacked infantry and warships. It had no source of revenue except what Congress gave it. By Hamilton's reckoning, whereas the president "holds the sword" and Congress "commands the purse," the U.S. Supreme Court would be "the least dangerous branch."   That's no longer so. We know that Congress can pass unwise laws. We've come to realize that a president can initiate foolish wars, abuse his executive authority, and spread lies. But the Supreme Court's power grab in recent decades is more insidious, more destructive of American values in the long term. Impatiently, myopically, with deep distrust in our elected representatives, we have come to believe democracy is broken. And too often we've come to see the justices as our saviors. With so much dysfunction in government, the justices see themselves that way, too. But we need more politics, not less politics. We do not need, nor should we want, the court to save us from ourselves.   Adapted from THE MOST DANGEROUS BRANCH: INSIDE THE SUPREME COURT'S ASSAULT ON THE CONSTITUTION Copyright © 2018 by David A. Kaplan. Published by Crown Publishers, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC. Excerpted from The Most Dangerous Branch: Inside the Supreme Court's Betrayal of the Constitution by David A. Kaplan All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.