Antonin Scalia, Justice on the Supreme Court, Dies at 79
By ADAM LIPTAKFEB. 13, 2016
Photo
Justice Antonin Scalia in his chambers in 1986. Credit Paul Hosefros/The New York Times
Justice
Antonin Scalia, whose transformative legal theories, vivid writing and
outsize personality made him a leader of a conservative intellectual
renaissance in his three decades on the Supreme Court, was found dead on
Saturday at a resort in West Texas, according to a statement from Chief
Justice John G. Roberts Jr. He was 79.
“He was an extraordinary
individual and jurist, admired and treasured by his colleagues,” Chief
Justice Roberts said. “His passing is a great loss to the Court and the
country he so loyally served.”
The cause of death was not immediately released.
Justice
Scalia began his service on the court as an outsider known for caustic
dissents that alienated even potential allies. But his theories,
initially viewed as idiosyncratic, gradually took hold, and not only on
the right and not only in the courts.
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He
was, Judge Richard A. Posner wrote in The New Republic in 2011, “the
most influential justice of the last quarter century.” Justice Scalia
was a champion of originalism, the theory of constitutional
interpretation that seeks to apply the understanding of those who
drafted and ratified the Constitution. In Justice Scalia’s hands,
originalism generally led to outcomes that pleased political
conservatives, but not always. His approach was helpful to criminal
defendants in cases involving sentencing and the cross-examination of
witnesses.
Justice Scalia also disdained the use of legislative
history — statements from members of Congress about the meaning and
purposes of laws — in the judicial interpretation of statutes. He railed
against vague laws that did not give potential defendants fair warning
of what conduct was criminal. He preferred bright-line rules to legal
balancing tests, and he was sharply critical of Supreme Court opinions
that did not provide lower courts and litigants with clear guidance.
All
of these views took shape in dissents. Over time, they came to
influence and in many cases dominate the debate at the Supreme Court, in
lower courts, among lawyers and in the legal academy.
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By
the time he wrote his most important majority opinion, finding that the
Second Amendment protects an individual right to bear arms, even the
dissenters were engaged in trying to determine the original meaning of
the Constitution, the approach he had championed.
That 2008
decision, District of Columbia v. Heller, also illustrated a second
point: Justice Scalia in his later years was willing to bend a little to
attract votes from his colleagues. In Heller, the price of commanding a
majority appeared to be including a passage limiting the practical
impact of the decision.
With the retirement of Justice John Paul
Stevens in 2010, Justice Scalia became the longest serving member of the
current court. By then, Justice Scalia was routinely writing for the
majority in the major cases, including ones on the First Amendment,
class actions and arbitration.
He was an exceptional stylist who
labored over his opinions and took pleasure in finding precisely the
right word or phrase. In dissent, he took no prisoners. The author of a
majority opinion could be confident that a Scalia dissent would not
overlook any shortcomings.
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Justice
Scalia wrote for a broader audience than most of his colleagues. His
opinions were read by lawyers and civilians for pleasure and
instruction.
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Highlights of Justice Antonin Scalia’s Opinions
The tenure of the conservative justice spans almost three decades, and includes a legacy of sharply written opinions.
At
oral argument, Justice Scalia took professorial delight in sparring
with the advocates before him. He seemed to play to the crowd in the
courtroom, which rewarded his jokes with generous laughter.
Justice
Scalia’s sometimes withering questioning helped transform what had been
a sleepy bench when he arrived into one that Chief Justice Roberts has
said has become too active, with the justices interrupting the lawyers
and each other.
Justice Scalia was a man of varied tastes, with a
fondness for poker, opera and hunting. His friends called him Nino, and
they said he enjoyed nothing more than a good joke at his own expense.
He
seldom agreed with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the important
questions that reached the court, but the two for years celebrated New
Year’s Eve together. Not long after Justice Elena Kagan, another
liberal, joined the court, Justice Scalia took her skeet shooting.
Family Influence
Antonin
Gregory Scalia was born on March 11, 1936, in Trenton, to Salvatore
Scalia and the former Catherine Panaro. He was their only child and was
showered with attention from his parents and their siblings, none of
whom had children of their own.
Justice Scalia and his wife, the
former Maureen McCarthy, had nine children, the upshot of what he called
Vatican roulette. “We were both devout Catholics,” Justice Scalia told
Joan Biskupic for her 2009 biography, “American Original.” “And being a
devout Catholic means you have children when God gives them to you, and
you raise them.”
He said his large family influenced his legal philosophy.
“Parents
know that children will accept quite readily all sorts of arbitrary
substantive dispositions — no television in the afternoon, or no
television in the evening, or even no television at all,” he said at a
Harvard lecture in 1989. “But try to let one brother or sister watch
television when the others do not, and you will feel the fury of the
fundamental sense of justice unleashed.”
Young Antonin was an
exceptional student, graduating as valedictorian from Xavier High School
in Lower Manhattan, first in his class at Georgetown and magna cum
laude at Harvard Law School.
He practiced law for six years in
Cleveland before accepting a position teaching law at the University of
Virginia in 1967. Four years later, he entered government service, first
as general counsel of the Office of Telecommunications Policy and then
as chairman of the Administrative Conference of the United States, an
executive branch agency that advises federal regulators. Both positions
drew on and expanded his expertise in administrative law, a topic that
would interest him throughout his career.
In 1974, President
Richard M. Nixon nominated him to be assistant attorney general in
charge of the Office of Legal Counsel, an elite unit of the Justice
Department that advises the executive branch on the law. He was
confirmed by the Senate on August 22, 1974, not long after Mr. Nixon
resigned.
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In
1977, Mr. Scalia returned to the legal academy, now joining the law
faculty at the University of Chicago. He also served as editor of
Regulation magazine, published by the American Enterprise Institute.
After
President Ronald Reagan was elected in 1980, Mr. Scalia was interviewed
for a job he coveted, solicitor general of the United States, the
lawyer who represents the federal government in the Supreme Court. He
lost out to Rex E. Lee, and it stung. “I was bitterly disappointed,”
Justice Scalia told Ms. Biskupic. “I never forgot it.”
He was
offered a seat on the federal appeals court in Chicago. But he turned it
down in the hope of being nominated instead to the United States Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, whose docket, location
and prestige appealed to him. The court was also widely viewed as a
steppingstone to the Supreme Court
The first opening on the D.C.
Circuit in the Reagan years went to another prominent conservative law
professor, Robert H. Bork. But the second one, in 1982, went to Mr.
Scalia.
He served for four years, issuing opinions favoring
executive power, skeptical of claims of employment discrimination and
hostile to the press. The opinions, which were forceful and sometimes
funny, attracted the attention of the White House.
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Related in Opinion
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He
appeared to enjoy intellectual give and take from the bench, with his
colleagues and in his chambers. On the appeals court and in his early
years on the Supreme Court, he would hire one liberal law clerk each
year to keep discussions lively.
“He made it a point of telling me
that I was his token liberal,” said E. Joshua Rosenkranz, who served as
a law clerk for Judge Scalia in 1986, his last year on the appeals
court. “To his credit, I’m sure it was largely because he wanted to be
sure he always heard the arguments against the positions he was taking.”
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Antonin Scalia Takes Supreme Court Oath
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Antonin Scalia Takes Supreme Court Oath
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by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger in September 1986. By C-SPAN on
Publish Date February 13, 2016. Photo by Charles Tasnadi/Associated
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Unanimous Confirmation
In
1986, after Chief Justice Warren Burger announced his intention to
retire, Mr. Reagan nominated Judge Scalia to the Supreme Court. Though
his conservative views were well known, he was confirmed by the Senate
by a 98-0 vote. He may have benefited from the fact that the liberal
opposition was focused on the nomination of Justice William H.
Rehnquist, who was already on the court, to succeed Chief Justice
Burger.
Judge Scalia seemed to enjoy parrying with the senators at
his confirmation hearing. When Senator Howard M. Metzenbaum, Democrat
of Ohio, recalled losing to Judge Scalia in a tennis match, he responded
that “it was a case of my integrity overcoming my judgment.”
The
lopsided vote for Justice Scalia also reflected a different era, one in
which presidents were thought to have wide latitude in naming judges.
That era seemed to come to an end in 1987, with the defeat of the
nomination of Justice Scalia’s former colleague on the D.C. Circuit,
Judge Bork.
In 1993, at the confirmation hearing for Justice
Ginsburg, Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr., who was then chairman of the
Senate Judiciary Committee, said “the vote that I most regret of all
15,000 votes I have cast as a senator” was “to confirm Judge Scalia” —
“because he was so effective.”
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Three
days before the court handed the presidency to Mr. Bush in December
2000, in Bush v. Gore, the court shut down the recount of votes in
Florida in an unsigned opinion over the dissents of the four more
liberal justices. Justice Scalia felt compelled to respond in a
concurrence.
“The counting of votes that are of questionable
legality does in my view threaten irreparable harm to” Mr. Bush “and to
the country, by casting a cloud upon what he claims to be the legitimacy
of his election,” Justice Scalia wrote. He would later say privately
that his brief concurrence doomed his chances of being named chief
justice.
He was often asked about the Bush v. Gore decision at public appearances. His stock response: “Get over it.”
Photo
Justice
Scalia with Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, who succeeded Chief
Justice Burger, in 1986. Credit Barry Thumma/Associated Press
‘Faint-Hearted Originalist’
The
centerpiece of Justice Scalia’s judicial philosophy was his commitment
to the doctrine of originalism, which sought to interpret the
Constitution as it was understood at the time of its adoption. That made
him uncomfortable with some of the Supreme Court’s most important
precedents.
“We have now determined,” he said in remarks in
Philadelphia in 2004, “that liberties exist under the federal
Constitution — the right to abortion, the right to homosexual sodomy —
which were so little rooted in the traditions of the American people
that they were criminal for 200 years.”
He added that his colleagues may soon discover a right to assisted suicide between the lines of the text of the Constitution.
“We’re not ready to announce that right,” he said, more than a little sarcastically. “Check back with us.”
Justice
Scalia said that some of the court’s leading decisions could not be
justified under the original understanding of the Constitution. The
court was wrong in Gideon v. Wainwright in 1963, Justice Scalia said, to
require the government to provide lawyers to poor people accused of
serious crimes. It was wrong in New York Times v. Sullivan in 1964, he
said, to say the First Amendment requires libel plaintiffs to meet
heightened standards.
Justice Scalia also appeared to have
reservations about Brown v. Board of Education, which struck down
segregation in public schools as a violation of the 14th Amendment’s
guarantee of equal protection. Brown, decided in 1954, is widely
considered the towering achievement of the court led by Chief Justice
Earl Warren.
But for originalists, the Brown decision is
problematic. The weight of the historical evidence is that the people
who drafted, proposed and ratified the 14th Amendment from 1866 to 1868
did not believe themselves to be doing away with segregated schools.
In
remarks at the University of Arizona in 2009, Justice Scalia suggested
that Brown reached the right result as a matter of policy but was not
required by the Constitution. He added that the decision did not refute
his theory.
“Don’t make up your mind on this significant question
between originalism and playing it by ear on the basis of whether, now
and then, the latter approach might give you a result you like,” Justice
Scalia said.
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“Hitler
developed a wonderful automobile,” he went on. “What does that prove?
I’ll stipulate that you can reach some results you like with the other
system. But that’s not the test. The test is over the long run does it
require the society to adhere to those principles contained in the
Constitution or does it lead to a society that is essentially governed
by nine justices’ version of what equal protection ought to mean?”
In
other settings, Justice Scalia took pains to say that he would not
follow his theory wherever it would take him. He was, he said, “a
faint-hearted originalist.”
“I am a textualist,” he said. “I am an originalist. I am not a nut.”
Critics
seized on the concession, saying it undid the very qualities that made
originalism appealing as a historically grounded theory that constrained
judges otherwise apt to follow their policy preferences.
“If
following a theory consistently would make you a nut, isn’t that a
problem with the theory?” asked David A. Strauss asked in his 2010 book,
“The Living Constitution.”
There was certainly a more committed
originalist on the court, Justice Thomas. Unlike Justice Thomas, Justice
Scalia, especially in his later years, was willing to compromise at the
expense of theoretical purity.
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How Scalia Compared With Other Justices
Justice
Antonin Scalia was a leader of the Supreme Court’s conservative wing
and the longest serving member of the current court.
Justice ideology based on Martin-Quinn scores
Nominated by a Republican
Nominated by a Democrat
+4
MORE CONSERVATIVE
Thomas
MORE LIBERAL
Alito
+2
Scalia
Median justice
Roberts
+0
Kennedy
Breyer
Kagan
–2
Sotomayor
Ginsburg
–4
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
2014 term
The
New York Times|Source: Ideology scores are based on voting patterns and
developed from the Supreme Court Database by Lee Epstein, Washington
University in St. Louis; Andrew D. Martin, University of Michigan; and
Kevin Quinn, University of California, Berkeley
A 2010 decision,
McDonald v. Chicago, illustrates the point. The question in the case was
whether the Second Amendment applied not only to federal gun control
laws, a point the court established in 2008, but also to state and local
laws. The answer was not much in doubt, as the five-justice majority in
the 2008 case, District of Columbia v. Heller, was still on the court.
What
was in doubt was how the court would use the 14th Amendment to apply —
or “incorporate,” in the legal jargon — the Second Amendment to the
states. Other provisions in the Bill of Rights had been applied by means
of the 14th Amendment’s due process clause.
But many judges and
scholars, including Justice Scalia, had never found that methodology
intellectually satisfactory. “Due process” after all, would seem to
protect only procedures and not substance. The very name given to the
methodology — substantive due process — sounds like an oxymoron.
Originalists
hoped the court would use the McDonald case to repudiate substantive
due process and instead rely on another provision of the 14th Amendment,
one that says “no state shall make or enforce any law which shall
abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States.”
There is evidence that the authors of the clause specifically wanted it
to apply to allowing freed slaves to have guns to defend themselves.
Justice
Scalia would have none of it. “What you argue,’’ he told a lawyer
challenging a Chicago gun law, “is the darling of the professoriate, for
sure, but it’s also contrary to 140 years of our jurisprudence.”
He
told the lawyer to focus on winning his case rather than pressing a new
constitutional theory. “Why do you want to undertake that burden,”
Justice Scalia asked, “instead of just arguing substantive due process,
which as much as I think it’s wrong, even I have acquiesced in it?”
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The
decision was 5 to 4. The justices in the majority agreed about the
result but not how to get there. Justice Scalia accepted the substantive
due process rationale, with misgivings. Justice Thomas, in a separate
opinion, relied on the privileges-or-immunities rationale that had been
pressed by originalists.
Still, Justice Scalia’s fidelity to
originalism frequently caused him to take legal positions almost
certainly at odds with his policy preferences. He voted in 1989 to
strike down a law making it a crime to burn an American flag.
He
said his fidelity to the Constitution overrode his sympathies. “I don’t
like scruffy, bearded, sandal-wearing people who go around burning the
United States flag,” he said in 2000.
Photo
Justice Scalia, right,
and Justice Stephen G. Breyer testified before the Senate Judiciary
Committee on the constitutional role of judges in 2011. Credit Stephen
Crowley/The New York Times
Transforming Criminal Law
Justice
Scalia also helped transform aspects of the criminal law, often in ways
that helped people accused of crimes. Here, too, his understanding of
the Sixth Amendment, which sets out defendants’ rights in criminal
prosecutions, may have been in tension with his policy preferences.
“The
Sixth Amendment is a meaningful presence in American courtrooms today
in large part because of Justice Scalia,” said Jeffrey L. Fisher, a law
professor at Stanford. “He followed his understanding of the original
intent of the Sixth Amendment, even when it made prosecutions harder and
less efficient. He said it was necessary to keep the people free.”
The
right to trial by an impartial jury, Justice Scalia said, means that
juries must find beyond reasonable doubt all facts that give rise to
punishment. He made the point in a 1998 dissent, and it ripened into the
majority view in Apprendi v. New Jersey in 2000, which struck down a
New Jersey hate crime law. In 2004, Justice Scalia relied on the
Apprendi decision in writing the majority opinion in Blakely v.
Washington, which struck down the sentencing system of Washington State
for giving judges too large a role. He later voted with the majority to
strike down the federal sentencing system on the same grounds.
“It’s
not because I’m in love with the jury necessarily,” Justice Scalia told
Ms. Biskupic. “It’s because I’m in love with the Constitution.”
Justice
Scalia also reinvigorated the clause of the Sixth Amendment that
guarantees a criminal defendant the right “to be confronted with the
witnesses against him.”
Here, too, he first expressed his views in
dissent. Later, in a 2004 decision, Crawford v. Washington, he wrote
for the majority that defendants have the right to live testimony at
trial from the witnesses against them, even if the accusations could be
presented in other forms.
“Dispensing with confrontation because
testimony is obviously reliable is akin to dispensing with a jury trial
because the defendant is obviously guilty,” Justice Scalia wrote. “That
is not what the Sixth Amendment prescribes.”
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Writing
for the majority in a 2009 decision that barred the introduction at
trial of crime lab reports without testimony from the analysts involved
in their preparation, Justice Scalia said the issue was one of
constitutional principle.
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“The
confrontation clause may make the prosecution of criminals more
burdensome, but that is equally true of the right to trial by jury and
the privilege against self-incrimination,” he wrote. “The confrontation
clause — like those other constitutional provisions — is binding, and we
may not disregard it at our convenience.
Justice Scalia’s
opinions were also helpful to criminal defendants charged under vague
laws. In 2009, he objected to the court’s decision not to hear an appeal
concerning a federal law that made it a crime “to deprive another of
the intangible right of honest services.” The law was so vague, he
wrote, that “it would seemingly cover a salaried employee’s phoning in
sick to go to a ballgame.”
The Supreme Court soon agreed to hear three separate cases on the law and substantially cut back its scope.
When
Justice Scalia joined the court, congressional committee reports and
similar “legislative history” were routinely used as aids in determining
the meanings of federal statutes.
In a campaign that he
maintained throughout his tenure on the court, Justice Scalia insisted
that such use of legislative history was illegitimate. Reports and floor
statements were not the law, he said; the words of the law itself were
the law.
The campaign was largely successful. Advocates and other justices rely on legislative history sparingly these days.
Justice
Scalia was also dismissive of unhelpful Supreme Court opinions.
Concurring in a 2010 privacy decision that gave lower courts only vague
guidance, he wrote: “The court’s implication that where electronic
privacy is concerned we should decide less than we otherwise would (that
is, less than the principle of law necessary to resolve the case and
guide private action) — or that we should hedge our bets by concocting
case-specific standards or issuing opaque opinions — is in my view
indefensible. The-times-they-are-a-changin’ is a feeble excuse for
disregard of duty.”
His colleagues always welcomed his writing
style, which could verge on the insulting. Dissenting in a 2002 decision
prohibiting the execution of the mentally retarded, he wrote, “seldom
has an opinion of this court rested so obviously upon nothing but the
personal views of its members.” An argument made by Justice O’Connor, he
wrote in a 1989 abortion case, “cannot be taken seriously.”
In a
2011 dissent, Justice Scalia called Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s account of
the facts of a case in her majority opinion “so transparently false
that professing to believe it demeans this institution.”
He was
not shy about making dire predictions. About a 2008 decision giving
people held at Guantánamo Bay the right to challenge their detentions:
“It will almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed.” About a
2011 decision ordering California to ease prison overcrowding: It
affirmed “the most radical injunction issued by a court in our nation’s
history” and was itself “a judicial travesty.”
Photo
The Supreme Court justices in 2010. Credit Doug Mills/The New York Times
A Public Life
Citing
long judicial tradition, Justice Scalia occasionally spoke about his
desire to stay out of the public eye. It is not clear that he meant it,
and he was certainly not always successful.
In 2004, for instance,
he went on a duck-hunting trip with Dick Cheney, who was then vice
president and a litigant in a case before the court over whether Mr.
Cheney would have to reveal who had appeared before his energy task
force. When the trip came to light, Justice Scalia issued a 21-page
defense of the trip and refused to disqualify himself from the case.
“While
the political branches can perhaps survive the constant baseless
allegations of impropriety that have become the staple of Washington
reportage, this court cannot,” he wrote. “The people must have
confidence in the integrity of the justices, and that cannot exist in a
system that assumes them to be corruptible by the slightest friendship
or favor, and in an atmosphere where the press will be eager to find
foot-faults.”
Justice Scalia later joined the seven-justice
majority in declining to force Mr. Cheney to disclose secret documents
from an energy task force.
He did step aside from a case
concerning the Pledge of Allegiance in 2003 after saying in public that
the federal appeals court in San Francisco had decided the case
incorrectly.
A gregarious man, Justice Scalia accepted many
speaking and teaching engagements from both conservative and liberal
groups. He was occasionally criticized for his choices.
In 2007,
for instance, Justice Scalia spoke on international law at a dinner in
Palm Springs, Calif., organized by Charles G. Koch, a conservative
activist. Justice Scalia’s expenses, a court spokeswoman said, were paid
for by the Federalist Society, a conservative legal group.
In
2011, he spoke at a forum organized by the Congressional Tea Party
Caucus at the invitation of Representative Michele Bachmann, Republican
of Minnesota. The session was attended by members of both parties;
Justice Scalia’s subject was the separation of powers.
Justice
Scalia did not make it easy for journalists to cover his public
appearances and generally did not allow them to be broadcast. For years,
he did not allow his remarks to be taped even by print reporters
seeking to ensure the accuracy of their notes.
He changed that
policy in 2004 after a federal marshal ordered two reporters to erase
recordings of his remarks at a high school in Hattiesburg, Miss. Justice
Scalia apologized to the reporters, saying the marshal had not been
following his instructions.
“I abhor as much as any American the
prospect of a law enforcement officer’s seizing a reporter’s notes or
recording,” he wrote to one of the reporters, Antoinette Konz of The
Hattiesburg American.
In 2006, Justice Scalia responded to a
reporter’s question after attending a Red Mass at the Cathedral of the
Holy Cross in Boston with a chin flick that some interpreted to be an
obscene gesture. The reporter had wanted to know whether Justice Scalia
had taken “a lot of flak for publicly celebrating” his religious
beliefs.
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In
a letter to The Boston Herald, Justice Scalia explained that the
gesture was Sicilian in origin and meant only, “I couldn’t care less.
It’s no business of yours. Count me out.”
He often made clear that he had little use for faculty-lounge orthodoxies.
In
2003, for instance, dissenting from a decision striking down a Texas
law that made gay sex a crime, Justice Scalia bemoaned the influence of
elite culture on the law.
“Today’s opinion,” he wrote, “is the
product of a court, which is the product of a law-profession culture,
that has largely signed on to the so-called homosexual agenda, by which I
mean the agenda promoted by some homosexual activists directed at
eliminating the moral opprobrium that has traditionally attached to
homosexual conduct.”
He predicted, too, that the decision,
Lawrence v. Texas, had laid the foundation for the recognition of a
constitutional right to same-sex marriage.
Justice Scalia insisted
that his religious beliefs played no role in his jurisprudence, and he
was deeply offended by contrary suggestions.
In 2007, Geoffrey R.
Stone, a law professor at the University of Chicago, where he was a
colleague of Justice Scalia, made what he called “a painfully awkward
observation” in The Chicago Tribune after the Supreme Court upheld the
federal Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act in Gonzales v. Carhart.
“All
five justices in the majority in Gonzales are Roman Catholic,”
Professor Stone wrote. “The four justices who are not all followed clear
and settled precedent.”
Justice Scalia was furious, telling Ms.
Biskupic that “it got me so mad that I will not appear at the University
of Chicago until he is no longer on the faculty.”
Withdrawing
from a debate was not typical of Justice Scalia, who usually welcomed
discussion with enthusiasm and confidence. Standing up for one’s
opinions, he said in a 2010 opinion, is a mark of laudable “civil
courage.”
Indeed, Justice Scalia’s appetite for the sort of
discussion and debate he enjoyed as a law professor was not sated by the
brisk conferences the justices held after oral arguments. Under Chief
Justice Rehnquist and to a lesser extent under Chief Justice Roberts,
they can consist of little more than a tally of votes.
“I don’t
like that,’’ Justice Scalia said after a speech at George Washington
University in 1988. “Maybe it’s just because I’m new. Maybe it’s because
I’m an ex-academic. Maybe it’s because I’m right.”
In a C-Span
interview in 2009, Justice Scalia reflected on his role and legacy,
sketching out a modest conception of the role of a Supreme Court
justice.
“We don’t sit here to make the law, to decide who ought
to win,” Justice Scalia said. “We decide who wins under the law that the
people have adopted. And very often, if you’re a good judge, you don’t
really like the result you’re reaching.”
Sunday, February 14, 2016
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