Posted by
Dean on Wednesday, November 01, 2006 12:55:07 AM
I have always wanted to get this one off my chest...
I remember reading an article in USA Today about the Supreme Court, with the usual inferential statements about the "converative" court, the possiblity that Roe would be overturned, etc. Interestingly though they supplied the years key decisions, so I thought this would be a good time to put the hypothesis to a test. How can one know if the court is conservative or liberal? Was the so-called conservative court a monolithic entity with the conservatives voting in lockstep?
The full data I'll post on my web site shortly. Just as a reminder, the justices were:
Rehnquist
Stevens
Oconnor
Scalia
Kennedy
Souter
Thomas
Ginsburg
Breyer
All I did was look to see who voted with whom. I assumed that one can safely say that Thomas, Scalia, and Rehnquist were "conservatives", Ginsburg, Stevens and Souter were "liberals", and the Breyer, Oconner and Kennedy were swing voters. The conventional wisdom was that Oconner and Kennedy were generally conservative, and that the conservative block voted together (I remember in particular that Thomas was not an independent thinker, and was a Scalia clone).
The cases were
| Rasul
vs Vush |
| Hamdi
vs Rumsfeld, Part 1 |
| Hamdi
vs. Rumsfeld Part 2 |
| Rumsfeld
vs. Padilla |
| McConnell
vs. Federal Electgion Commission |
| Ashcroft
vs. ACLU |
| Eld
Grove Unified School District vs. Newdow |
| Locke
vs. Davey |
| Blakely
vs. Washington |
| Missouri
vs. Seibert |
| United
States vs. Patane |
| Hiibel
vs. th Judicial District of Nevada |
| Cheney
vs. US District Court for the District of Columbia |
| Tennessee
v s. Lane |
| Aetna
Health Inc. vs. Davila |
| Alaska
Dept. of Environmenta Conservation vs. EPA |
| National
Archives and Records Administration vs. Favish |
| Veith
vs. Jubelirer |
| Republic
of Austria vs. Altmann |
Here's what I found:
1) the voting block, those who voted in lockstep, were the liberals. In these cases, Souter and Ginsburg
always agreed, while Souter and Stevens (and obvoiusly Ginsburg and Stevens) agreed in 18 of 19 cases. Stevens and Breyer agreed in 16 of 19 cases (84% of the time). So these 4 justices voted in virtual lockstep. Here are the top agreement pairs (with abbreviated names--hopefully not needing further clarification)
| Pair |
Agreement |
| So-G |
100.0% |
| St-So |
94.7% |
| St-G |
94.7% |
| St-B |
84.2% |
| R-K |
84.2% |
| So-B |
78.9% |
| R-T |
78.9% |
| G-B |
78.9% |
| Sc-T |
73.7% |
| R-Sc |
73.7% |
| R-O |
73.7% |
| O-B |
73.7% |
| K-Th |
73.7% |
| O-K |
68.4% |
| St-O |
57.9% |
| Sc-K |
57.9% |
| O-Sc |
57.9% |
| O-T |
52.6% |
| O-So |
52.6% |
| O-G |
52.6% |
| K-B |
52.6% |
Those that disagreed the most were Thomas/Rehnquist vs. the liberal 3 (Ginsburg, Souter, Breyer).
2) Who won (i.e. who was in the majority most often)? Here's that breakdown:
| Name |
In Majority |
| Oconnor |
16 |
| Stevens |
14 |
| Kennedy |
14 |
| Souter |
13 |
| Ginsburg |
13 |
| Breyer |
13 |
| Rehnquist |
11 |
| Thomas |
11 |
| Scalia |
10 |
Oconnor (no surprise) was on the winning side the most--the big swing voter. What I found interesting though was that Stevens was next along with Kennedy. In fact, Scalia, Thomas, and Rehnquist, the conservatives, were at the bottom of the list. So clearly this wasn't a very conservative court. If anything, I'd say this was a slightly left-of-center court; the key liberals (Souter, Ginsburg, and Breyer) won more often than the key conservatives (Rehnquist, Thomas, and Scalia). So I conclude that the hype of the media that this court was so conservative (and there did such things as through the election for Bush) is just unfounded by the data.
I'd love to do this again for the 2004-2005 and 2005-2006 dockets if I can find the data. Clearly the court has become more conservative, but by how much? Once again, the best way to answer that is with the data....