Greenburg on O'Connor on Bush v. Gore
O'Connor admitted to Greenburg that the written opinion was not "the Court's best effort" and that "given more time, I think we probably would've done better" in explaining the decision, but "it wouldn't have changed the result."
Everyone knows, of course, that the Court decided Bush v. Gore under incredible time pressure, and everyone also knows that the per curiam majority opinion wasn't "the Court's best effort." Wearing our realist hats, I suppose most or all of us also would have suspected that, no matter how long the Court had to decide the case, the outcome probably wouldn't have changed. But that last point is not something one would expect a member of the Court to acknowledge. When speaking publicly, members of the Court typically make an effort at least to pretend that reasoning itself matters, and that outcomes are not determined before the reasoning process has run its course. Members of the Court thus tend to deny that their decisionmaking process is outcome-driven, where they first settle on the desired outcome and then simply spend whatever time remains crafting the best defense of an outcome to which they are unalterably committed. Reflective reasoning, members of the Court typically say, matters. Contemplation can lead people to change their minds.
I'm relying here on Garrow's report of Greenburg's account of O'Connor's statement, and so it's certainly possible that something has been lost or misconveyed in the retelling. But if the above-quoted passage is accurate, it looks like O'Connor came perilously close to abandoning this commitment to reflective reasoning in her account of Bush v. Gore. (It's possible, I suppose, to read her quote as suggesting that the Court had actually thought its way through every possible argument and counter-argument in the case, but because of limited time wasn't able to write it up as well as the Justices would have liked. But I think that's implausible. There really wasn't enough time for anyone on the Court to think their way through every aspect and implication of the case, and pretty much all the opinions in the case reflect that fact.)
I don't mean to say that we should all cling to the fiction that the Court should or does decide cases without any attention to the consequences of certain outcomes. That would be both unrealistic and undesirable. But there's a difference between incorporating some consideration of consequences into one's reasoning and saying that (1) the Court really didn't have enough time to do its best work in a particular case, but that (2) even if it had had more time to think harder and more carefully about the case, there's no way the outcome would have changed.
6 Comments:
At 3:28 PM,
David C. said…
This is pure speculation, but isn't it also possible to interpret O'Connor's words (as reported by Greenburg through Garrow) to mean the following: "Although the Court did not have sufficient time to think through and present the best argument for our opinion, the per curiam voters have since reflected on the case, reviewed the academic support and criticism, and we have decided that we still would have reached the same outcome, although we may have preferred, for example, the detailed argument made by Professor Monaghan in the Columbia Law Review."
This reading would not support the realists' claim that the Justices are outcome-determinative. For example, there may be some who, before Roe v. Wade, were unsure about the constitutionality of criminalizing abortion. After Roe was handed down, they may have decided that the majority's reasoning was poor, and that it did too much violence to broader theories of constitutional interpretation. As a result, they think that Roe is wrong and should be overruled. Then, however, others come along and support the outcome in Roe as a matter of Equal Protection (I think then-lawyer R.B. Ginsberg, for one), and our court-watcher changes his mind again, deciding that Roe is right for the wrong reasons. Similarly, O'Connor could be saying that hindsight demonstrates that the Court got Bush v. Gore right, even if for the wrong reasons.
Of course, this reading might also violate punctilious Court norms; perhaps a really strict ethicist would argue that the Justices should not be discussing informally amongst themselves old cases and reconsidering arguments (and then sharing those thoughts with the media). Perhaps it's best to just revisit past cases formally, as a full Court, when they arise again in the context of new cases and controversies. But even so, this seems much more legitimate than being purely outcome-determinative.
At 4:01 PM,
Trevor Morrison said…
David's reading does indeed suggest a less outcome-based reading of Justice O'Connor's statements. But it doesn't seem like a particularly *likely* meaning to me. Supreme Court lore tells that Justice O'Connor used to have an embroidered cushion in her chambers bearing the words, "Maybe in error, but never in doubt." That does not bespeak the attitude of someone who re-thinks their prior votes with the benefit of hindsight and Professor Monaghan's excellent scholarship.
All that said, I'm admittedly just going on what Garrow says Greenburg says O'Connor said. So it's all speculation, and I could certainly be wrong about what O'Connor meant.
At 5:17 PM,
Derek said…
More speculation (although this might just be a variant of Dave's point): she could have just meant the *explanation* of the court's reasoning was poor, not the reasoning itself.
Suppose, for instance, that I have good reason to think a Kantian is committed to some complicated moral proposition. Given 5 minutes to explain why would probably result in a poor explanation. And I might afterwards say that, given more time, I would have done better explaining my position, but that my conclusion wouldn't have been any different.
At 3:11 PM,
Michael C. Dorf said…
I've heard this comment described as referring to the outcome of the ELECTION, i.e., Bush would still have ended up President if the recounts had proceeded.
At 4:54 PM,
Trevor Morrison said…
The meaning Mike refers to, if correct, would pretty much remove the concern I expressed in my post, though it might raise others worries. Have any of our readers read the book? If so, does Greenburg clarify what O'Connor was talking about here?
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