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The Supreme Court of the United States SCOTUS is the highest court in the federal judiciary of the United States It has ultimate appellate jurisdiction over all U S federal court cases and over state court cases that turn on questions of U S constitutional or federal law It also has original jurisdiction over a narrow range of cases specifically all Cases affecting Ambassadors other public Ministers and Consuls and those in which a State shall be Party The court holds the power of judicial review the ability to invalidate a statute for violating a provision of the Constitution It is also able to strike down presidential directives for violating either the Constitution or statutory law Supreme Court of the United States38 53 26 N 77 00 16 W 38 89056 N 77 00444 W 38 89056 77 00444EstablishedMarch 4 1789 235 years ago 1789 03 04 Location1 First Street NE Washington D C U S Coordinates38 53 26 N 77 00 16 W 38 89056 N 77 00444 W 38 89056 77 00444Composition methodPresidential nomination with Senate confirmationAuthorized byU S ConstitutionJudge term lengthLife tenureNumber of positions9 by statuteWebsitesupremecourt wbr govChief Justice of the United StatesCurrentlyJohn RobertsSinceSeptember 29 2005 Established by Article Three of the United States Constitution the composition and procedures of the Supreme Court were originally established by the 1st Congress through the Judiciary Act of 1789 The court consists of nine justices the chief justice of the United States and eight associate justices and the justices meet at the Supreme Court Building in Washington D C Justices have lifetime tenure meaning they remain on the court until they die retire resign or are impeached and removed from office When a vacancy occurs the president with the advice and consent of the Senate appoints a new justice Each justice has a single vote in deciding the cases argued before the court When in the majority the chief justice decides who writes the opinion of the court otherwise the most senior justice in the majority assigns the task of writing the opinion The Supreme Court receives on average about 7 000 petitions for writs of certiorari each year but grants only about 80 better source needed needs update HistoryThe Royal Exchange New York City the first meeting place of the Supreme CourtThe court lacked its own building until 1935 From 1791 to 1801 it met in Philadelphia s City Hall before moving to the Capitol Building in Washington D C It was while debating the separation of powers between the legislative and executive departments that delegates to the 1787 Constitutional Convention established the parameters for the national judiciary Creating a third branch of government was a novel idea citation needed in the English tradition judicial matters had been treated as an aspect of royal executive authority Early on the delegates who were opposed to having a strong central government argued that national laws could be enforced by state courts while others including James Madison advocated for a national judicial authority consisting of tribunals chosen by the national legislature It was proposed that the judiciary should have a role in checking the executive s power to veto or revise laws citation needed Eventually the framers compromised by sketching only a general outline of the judiciary in Article Three of the United States Constitution vesting federal judicial power in one supreme Court and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish better source needed They delineated neither the exact powers and prerogatives of the Supreme Court nor the organization of the judicial branch as a whole citation needed The 1st United States Congress provided the detailed organization of a federal judiciary through the Judiciary Act of 1789 The Supreme Court the country s highest judicial tribunal was to sit in the nation s capital and would initially be composed of a chief justice and five associate justices The act also divided the country into judicial districts which were in turn organized into circuits Justices were required to ride circuit and hold circuit court twice a year in their assigned judicial district non primary source needed Immediately after signing the act into law President George Washington nominated the following people to serve on the court John Jay for chief justice and John Rutledge William Cushing Robert H Harrison James Wilson and John Blair Jr as associate justices All six were confirmed by the Senate on September 26 1789 however Harrison declined to serve and Washington later nominated James Iredell in his place non primary source needed The Supreme Court held its inaugural session from February 2 through February 10 1790 at the Royal Exchange in New York City then the U S capital A second session was held there in August 1790 The earliest sessions of the court were devoted to organizational proceedings as the first cases did not reach it until 1791 When the nation s capital was moved to Philadelphia in 1790 the Supreme Court did so as well After initially meeting at Independence Hall the court established its chambers at City Hall Early beginnings John Marshall chief justice from 1801 to 1835 Under chief justices Jay Rutledge and Ellsworth 1789 1801 the court heard few cases its first decision was West v Barnes 1791 a case involving procedure As the court initially had only six members every decision that it made by a majority was also made by two thirds voting four to two However Congress has always allowed less than the court s full membership to make decisions starting with a quorum of four justices in 1789 The court lacked a home of its own and had little prestige a situation not helped by the era s highest profile case Chisholm v Georgia 1793 which was reversed within two years by the adoption of the Eleventh Amendment The court s power and prestige grew substantially during the Marshall Court 1801 1835 Under Marshall the court established the power of judicial review over acts of Congress including specifying itself as the supreme expositor of the Constitution Marbury v Madison and making several important constitutional rulings that gave shape and substance to the balance of power between the federal government and states notably Martin v Hunter s Lessee McCulloch v Maryland and Gibbons v Ogden The Marshall Court also ended the practice of each justice issuing his opinion seriatim a remnant of British tradition and instead issuing a single majority opinion Also during Marshall s tenure although beyond the court s control the impeachment and acquittal of Justice Samuel Chase from 1804 to 1805 helped cement the principle of judicial independence From Taney to Taft The Taney Court 1836 1864 made several important rulings such as Sheldon v Sill which held that while Congress may not limit the subjects the Supreme Court may hear it may limit the jurisdiction of the lower federal courts to prevent them from hearing cases dealing with certain subjects Nevertheless it is primarily remembered for its ruling in Dred Scott v Sandford which helped precipitate the American Civil War In the Reconstruction era the Chase Waite and Fuller Courts 1864 1910 interpreted the new Civil War amendments to the Constitution and developed the doctrine of substantive due process Lochner v New York Adair v United States The size of the court was last changed in 1869 when it was set at nine Under the White and Taft Courts 1910 1930 the court held that the Fourteenth Amendment had incorporated some guarantees of the Bill of Rights against the states Gitlow v New York grappled with the new antitrust statutes Standard Oil Co of New Jersey v United States upheld the constitutionality of military conscription Selective Draft Law Cases and brought the substantive due process doctrine to its first apogee Adkins v Children s Hospital New Deal era The U S Supreme Court Building current home of the Supreme Court which opened in 1935The Hughes Court in 1937 photographed by Erich Salomon Members include Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes center Louis Brandeis Benjamin N Cardozo Harlan Stone Owen Roberts and the Four Horsemen Pierce Butler James Clark McReynolds George Sutherland and Willis Van Devanter who opposed New Deal policies During the Hughes Stone and Vinson courts 1930 1953 the court gained its own accommodation in 1935 and changed its interpretation of the Constitution giving a broader reading to the powers of the federal government to facilitate President Franklin D Roosevelt s New Deal most prominently West Coast Hotel Co v Parrish Wickard v Filburn United States v Darby and United States v Butler During World War II the court continued to favor government power upholding the internment of Japanese Americans Korematsu v United States and the mandatory Pledge of Allegiance Minersville School District v Gobitis Nevertheless Gobitis was soon repudiated West Virginia State Board of Education v Barnette and the Steel Seizure Case restricted the pro government trend The Warren Court 1953 1969 dramatically expanded the force of Constitutional civil liberties It held that segregation in public schools violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment Brown v Board of Education Bolling v Sharpe and Green v County School Bd and that legislative districts must be roughly equal in population Reynolds v Sims It recognized a general right to privacy Griswold v Connecticut limited the role of religion in public school most prominently Engel v Vitale and Abington School District v Schempp incorporated most guarantees of the Bill of Rights against the states prominently Mapp v Ohio the exclusionary rule and Gideon v Wainwright right to appointed counsel and required that criminal suspects be apprised of all these rights by police Miranda v Arizona At the same time the court limited defamation suits by public figures New York Times Co v Sullivan and supplied the government with an unbroken run of antitrust victories Burger Rehnquist and Roberts Justices of the Supreme Court with President George W Bush center right in October 2005 The justices left to right are Ruth Bader Ginsburg David Souter Antonin Scalia John Paul Stevens John Roberts Sandra Day O Connor Anthony Kennedy Clarence Thomas and Stephen Breyer The Burger Court 1969 1986 saw a conservative shift It also expanded Griswold s right to privacy to strike down abortion laws Roe v Wade but divided deeply on affirmative action Regents of the University of California v Bakke and campaign finance regulation Buckley v Valeo It also wavered on the death penalty ruling first that most applications were defective Furman v Georgia but later that the death penalty itself was not unconstitutional Gregg v Georgia The Rehnquist Court 1986 2005 was known for its revival of judicial enforcement of federalism emphasizing the limits of the Constitution s affirmative grants of power United States v Lopez and the force of its restrictions on those powers Seminole Tribe v Florida City of Boerne v Flores It struck down single sex state schools as a violation of equal protection United States v Virginia laws against sodomy as violations of substantive due process Lawrence v Texas and the line item veto Clinton v New York but upheld school vouchers Zelman v Simmons Harris and reaffirmed Roe s restrictions on abortion laws Planned Parenthood v Casey The court s decision in Bush v Gore which ended the electoral recount during the 2000 United States presidential election remains especially controversial with debate ongoing over the rightful winner and whether or not the ruling should set a precedent The Roberts Court 2005 present is regarded as more conservative and controversial than the Rehnquist Court Some of its major rulings have concerned federal preemption Wyeth v Levine civil procedure Twombly Iqbal voting rights and federal preclearance Shelby County abortion Gonzales v Carhart and Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization climate change Massachusetts v EPA same sex marriage United States v Windsor and Obergefell v Hodges and the Bill of Rights such as in Citizens United v Federal Election Commission First Amendment Heller McDonald Bruen Second Amendment and Baze v Rees Eighth Amendment CompositionNomination confirmation and appointment John Roberts giving testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee during the 2005 hearings on his nomination to be chief justice Article II Section 2 Clause 2 of the United States Constitution known as the Appointments Clause empowers the president to nominate and with the confirmation advice and consent of the United States Senate to appoint public officials including justices of the Supreme Court This clause is one example of the system of checks and balances inherent in the Constitution The president has the plenary power to nominate while the Senate possesses the plenary power to reject or confirm the nominee The Constitution sets no qualifications for service as a justice such as age citizenship residence or prior judicial experience thus a president may nominate anyone to serve and the Senate may not set any qualifications or otherwise limit who the president can choose In modern times the confirmation process has attracted considerable attention from the press and advocacy groups which lobby senators to confirm or to reject a nominee depending on whether their track record aligns with the group s views The Senate Judiciary Committee conducts hearings and votes on whether the nomination should go to the full Senate with a positive negative or neutral report The committee s practice of personally interviewing nominees is relatively recent The first nominee to appear before the committee was Harlan Fiske Stone in 1925 who sought to quell concerns about his links to Wall Street and the modern practice of questioning began with John Marshall Harlan II in 1955 Once the committee reports out the nomination the full Senate considers it Rejections are relatively uncommon the Senate has explicitly rejected twelve Supreme Court nominees most recently Robert Bork nominated by President Ronald Reagan in 1987 Although Senate rules do not necessarily allow a negative or tied vote in committee to block a nomination prior to 2017 a nomination could be blocked by filibuster once debate had begun in the full Senate President Lyndon B Johnson s nomination of sitting associate justice Abe Fortas to succeed Earl Warren as Chief Justice in 1968 was the first successful filibuster of a Supreme Court nominee It included both Republican and Democratic senators concerned with Fortas s ethics President Donald Trump s nomination of Neil Gorsuch to the seat left vacant by Antonin Scalia s death was the second Unlike the Fortas filibuster only Democratic senators voted against cloture on the Gorsuch nomination citing his perceived conservative judicial philosophy and the Republican majority s prior refusal to take up President Barack Obama s nomination of Merrick Garland to fill the vacancy This led the Republican majority to change the rules and eliminate the filibuster for Supreme Court nominations Ruth Bader Ginsburg giving testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee during the 1993 hearings on her nomination to be an associate justice Not every Supreme Court nominee has received a floor vote in the Senate A president may withdraw a nomination before an actual confirmation vote occurs typically because it is clear that the Senate will reject the nominee this occurred with President George W Bush s nomination of Harriet Miers in 2005 The Senate may also fail to act on a nomination which expires at the end of the session President Dwight Eisenhower s first nomination of John Marshall Harlan II in November 1954 was not acted on by the Senate Eisenhower re nominated Harlan in January 1955 and Harlan was confirmed two months later Most recently the Senate failed to act on the March 2016 nomination of Merrick Garland as the nomination expired in January 2017 and the vacancy was filled by Neil Gorsuch an appointee of President Trump Once the Senate confirms a nomination the president must prepare and sign a commission to which the Seal of the Department of Justice must be affixed before the appointee can take office The seniority of an associate justice is based on the commissioning date not the confirmation or swearing in date After receiving their commission the appointee must then take the two prescribed oaths before assuming their official duties The importance of the oath taking is underscored by the case of Edwin M Stanton Although confirmed by the Senate on December 20 1869 and duly commissioned as an associate justice by President Ulysses S Grant Stanton died on December 24 prior to taking the prescribed oaths He is not therefore considered to have been a member of the court Before 1981 the approval process of justices was usually rapid From the Truman through Nixon administrations justices were typically approved within one month From the Reagan administration to the present the process has taken much longer and some believe this is because Congress sees justices as playing a more political role than in the past According to the Congressional Research Service the average number of days from nomination to final Senate vote since 1975 is 67 days 2 2 months while the median is 71 days 2 3 months Recess appointments When the Senate is in recess a president may make temporary appointments to fill vacancies Recess appointees hold office only until the end of the next Senate session less than two years The Senate must confirm the nominee for them to continue serving of the two chief justices and eleven associate justices who have received recess appointments only Chief Justice John Rutledge was not subsequently confirmed No U S president since Dwight D Eisenhower has made a recess appointment to the court and the practice has become rare and controversial even in lower federal courts In 1960 after Eisenhower had made three such appointments the Senate passed a sense of the Senate resolution that recess appointments to the court should only be made in unusual circumstances such resolutions are not legally binding but are an expression of Congress s views in the hope of guiding executive action The Supreme Court s 2014 decision in National Labor Relations Board v Noel Canning limited the ability of the president to make recess appointments including appointments to the Supreme Court the court ruled that the Senate decides when the Senate is in session or in recess Writing for the court Justice Breyer stated We hold that for purposes of the Recess Appointments Clause the Senate is in session when it says it is provided that under its own rules it retains the capacity to transact Senate business This ruling allows the Senate to prevent recess appointments through the use of pro forma sessions Tenure Lifetime tenure of justices can only be found for US Supreme Court Justices and the State of Rhode Island s Supreme Court justices with all other democratic nations and all other US states having set term limits or mandatory retirement ages Larry Sabato wrote The insularity of lifetime tenure combined with the appointments of relatively young attorneys who give long service on the bench produces senior judges representing the views of past generations better than views of the current day Sanford Levinson has been critical of justices who stayed in office despite medical deterioration based on longevity James MacGregor Burns stated lifelong tenure has produced a critical time lag with the Supreme Court institutionally almost always behind the times Proposals to solve these problems include term limits for justices as proposed by Levinson and Sabato and a mandatory retirement age proposed by Richard Epstein among others Alexander Hamilton in Federalist 78 argued that one benefit of lifetime tenure was that nothing can contribute so much to its firmness and independence as permanency in office non primary source needed The interior of the United States Supreme Court Article Three Section 1 of the Constitution provides that justices shall hold their offices during good behavior which is understood to mean that they may serve for the remainder of their lives until death furthermore the phrase is generally interpreted to mean that the only way justices can be removed from office is by Congress via the impeachment process The Framers of the Constitution chose good behavior tenure to limit the power to remove justices and to ensure judicial independence No constitutional mechanism exists for removing a justice who is permanently incapacitated by illness or injury but unable or unwilling to resign The only justice ever to be impeached was Samuel Chase in 1804 The House of Representatives adopted eight articles of impeachment against him however he was acquitted by the Senate and remained in office until his death in 1811 No subsequent effort to impeach a sitting justice has progressed beyond referral to the Judiciary Committee For example William O Douglas was the subject of hearings twice in 1953 and again in 1970 and Abe Fortas resigned while hearings were being organized in 1969 Because justices have indefinite tenure timing of vacancies can be unpredictable Sometimes they arise in quick succession as in September 1971 when Hugo Black and John Marshall Harlan II left within days of each other the shortest period of time between vacancies in the court s history Sometimes a great length of time passes between vacancies such as the 11 year span from 1994 to 2005 from the retirement of Harry Blackmun to the death of William Rehnquist which was the second longest timespan between vacancies in the court s history On average a new justice joins the court about every two years Despite the variability all but four presidents have been able to appoint at least one justice William Henry Harrison died a month after taking office although his successor John Tyler made an appointment during that presidential term Likewise Zachary Taylor died 16 months after taking office but his successor Millard Fillmore also made a Supreme Court nomination before the end of that term Andrew Johnson who became president after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln was denied the opportunity to appoint a justice by a reduction in the size of the court Jimmy Carter is the only person elected president to have left office after at least one full term without having the opportunity to appoint a justice Presidents James Monroe Franklin D Roosevelt and George W Bush each served a full term without an opportunity to appoint a justice but made appointments during their subsequent terms in office No president who has served more than one full term has gone without at least one opportunity to make an appointment Size of the court One of the smallest Supreme Courts in the world the US Supreme Court consists of nine members one chief justice and eight associate justices The U S Constitution does not specify the size of the Supreme Court nor does it specify any specific positions for the court s members The Constitution assumes the existence of the office of the chief justice because it mentions in Article I Section 3 Clause 6 that the Chief Justice must preside over impeachment trials of the President of the United States The power to define the Supreme Court s size and membership has been assumed to belong to Congress which initially established a six member Supreme Court composed of a chief justice and five associate justices through the Judiciary Act of 1789 The size of the court was first altered by the Midnight Judges Act of 1801 which would have reduced the size of the court to five members upon its next vacancy as federal judges have life tenure but the Judiciary Act of 1802 promptly negated the 1801 act restoring the court s size to six members before any such vacancy occurred As the nation s boundaries grew across the continent and as Supreme Court justices in those days had to ride the circuit an arduous process requiring long travel on horseback or carriage over harsh terrain that resulted in months long extended stays away from home Congress added justices to correspond with the growth such that the number of seats for associate justices plus the chief justice became seven in 1807 nine in 1837 and ten in 1863 At the behest of Chief Justice Chase and in an attempt by the Republican Congress to limit the power of Democrat Andrew Johnson Congress passed the Judicial Circuits Act of 1866 providing that the next three justices to retire would not be replaced which would thin the bench to seven justices by attrition Consequently one seat was removed in 1866 and a second in 1867 Soon after Johnson left office the new president Ulysses S Grant a Republican signed into law the Judiciary Act of 1869 This returned the number of justices to nine where it has since remained and allowed Grant to immediately appoint two more judges President Franklin D Roosevelt attempted to expand the court in 1937 His proposal envisioned the appointment of one additional justice for each incumbent justice who reached the age of 70 years 6 months and refused retirement up to a maximum bench of 15 justices The proposal was ostensibly to ease the burden of the docket on elderly judges but the actual purpose was widely understood as an effort to pack the court with justices who would support Roosevelt s New Deal The plan usually called the court packing plan failed in Congress after members of Roosevelt s own Democratic Party believed it to be unconstitutional It was defeated 70 20 in the Senate and the Senate Judiciary Committee reported that it was essential to the continuance of our constitutional democracy that the proposal be so emphatically rejected that its parallel will never again be presented to the free representatives of the free people of America The expansion of a 5 4 conservative majority to a 6 3 supermajority during the presidency of Donald Trump led to analysts calling the court the most conservative since the 1930s as well as calls for an expansion in the court s size to fix what some saw as an imbalance with Republicans having now appointed 14 of the last 18 justices In April 2021 during the 117th Congress some Democrats in the House of Representatives introduced the Judiciary Act of 2021 a bill to expand the Supreme Court from nine to 13 seats It met divided views within the party and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi did not bring it to the floor for a vote Shortly after taking office in January 2021 Joe Biden established a presidential commission to study possible reforms to the Supreme Court The commission s December 2021 final report discussed but took no position on expanding the size of the court At nine members the U S Supreme Court is one of the smallest supreme courts in the world David Litt argues the court is too small to represent the perspectives of a country the United States size Lawyer and legal scholar Jonathan Turley advocates for 19 justices with the court being gradually expanded by two new members per presidential term bringing the U S Supreme Court to a similar size as its counterparts in other developed countries He says that a bigger court would reduce the power of the swing justice ensure the court has a greater diversity of views and make confirmation of new justices less politically contentious MembershipCurrent justices There are currently nine justices on the Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and eight associate justices Among the current members of the court Clarence Thomas is the longest serving justice with a tenure of 11 941 days 32 years 253 days as of July 2 2024 the most recent justice to join the court is Ketanji Brown Jackson whose tenure began on June 30 2022 after being confirmed by the senate on April 7 Current justices of the Supreme Court Justice birthdate and place Appointed by party SCV Age at Start date length of service SucceededStart Present Chief Justice John Roberts January 27 1955 Buffalo New York G W Bush R 78 22 50 69 September 29 2005 18 years 277 days RehnquistClarence Thomas June 23 1948 Pin Point Georgia G H W Bush R 52 48 43 76 October 23 1991 32 years 253 days MarshallSamuel Alito April 1 1950 Trenton New Jersey G W Bush R 58 42 55 74 January 31 2006 18 years 153 days O ConnorSonia Sotomayor June 25 1954 New York City New York Obama D 68 31 55 70 August 8 2009 14 years 329 days SouterElena Kagan April 28 1960 New York City New York Obama D 63 37 50 64 August 7 2010 13 years 330 days StevensNeil Gorsuch August 29 1967 Denver Colorado Trump R 54 45 49 56 April 10 2017 7 years 83 days ScaliaBrett Kavanaugh February 12 1965 Washington D C Trump R 50 48 53 59 October 6 2018 5 years 270 days KennedyAmy Coney Barrett January 28 1972 New Orleans Louisiana Trump R 52 48 48 52 October 27 2020 3 years 249 days GinsburgKetanji Brown Jackson September 14 1970 Washington D C Biden D 53 47 51 53 June 30 2022 2 years 2 days Breyer This graphical timeline depicts the length of each current Supreme Court justice s tenure not seniority as the chief justice has seniority over all associate justices regardless of tenure on the court Court demographics The court currently has five male and four female justices Among the nine justices there are two African American justices Justices Thomas and Jackson and one Hispanic justice Justice Sotomayor One of the justices was born to at least one immigrant parent Justice Alito s father was born in Italy At least six justices are Roman Catholics one is Jewish and one is Protestant It is unclear whether Neil Gorsuch considers himself a Catholic or an Episcopalian Historically most justices have been Protestants including 36 Episcopalians 19 Presbyterians 10 Unitarians 5 Methodists and 3 Baptists The first Catholic justice was Roger Taney in 1836 and 1916 saw the appointment of the first Jewish justice Louis Brandeis In recent years the historical situation has reversed as most recent justices have been either Catholic or Jewish Three justices are from the state of New York two are from Washington D C and one each is from New Jersey Georgia Colorado and Louisiana Eight of the current justices received their Juris Doctor from an Ivy League law school Neil Gorsuch Ketanji Brown Jackson Elena Kagan and John Roberts from Harvard plus Samuel Alito Brett Kavanaugh Sonia Sotomayor and Clarence Thomas from Yale Only Amy Coney Barrett did not she received her Juris Doctor at Notre Dame Previous positions or offices judicial or federal government prior to joining the court by order of seniority following the Chief Justice include Justice Position or officeJohn Roberts Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 2003 2005 Clarence Thomas Chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission 1982 1990 Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 1990 1991 Samuel Alito United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey 1987 1990 Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit 1990 2006 Sonia Sotomayor Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York 1992 1998 Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 1998 2009 Elena Kagan Solicitor General of the United States 2009 2010 Neil Gorsuch Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit 2006 2017 Brett Kavanaugh Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 2006 2018 Amy Coney Barrett Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit 2017 2020 Ketanji Brown Jackson Vice Chair of the United States Sentencing Commission 2010 2014 Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia 2013 2021 Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 2021 2022 The first four female justices O Connor Sotomayor Ginsburg and Kagan For much of the court s history every justice was a man of Northwestern European descent and almost always Protestant Diversity concerns focused on geography to represent all regions of the country rather than religious ethnic or gender diversity Racial ethnic and gender diversity in the court increased in the late 20th century Thurgood Marshall became the first African American justice in 1967 Sandra Day O Connor became the first female justice in 1981 In 1986 Antonin Scalia became the first Italian American justice Marshall was succeeded by African American Clarence Thomas in 1991 O Connor was joined by Ruth Bader Ginsburg the first Jewish woman on the Court in 1993 After O Connor s retirement Ginsburg was joined in 2009 by Sonia Sotomayor the first Hispanic and Latina justice and in 2010 by Elena Kagan After Ginsburg s death on September 18 2020 Amy Coney Barrett was confirmed as the fifth woman in the court s history on October 26 2020 Ketanji Brown Jackson is the sixth woman and first African American woman on the court There have been six foreign born justices in the court s history James Wilson 1789 1798 born in Caskardy Scotland James Iredell 1790 1799 born in Lewes England William Paterson 1793 1806 born in County Antrim Ireland David Brewer 1889 1910 born to American missionaries in Smyrna Ottoman Empire now Izmir Turkey George Sutherland 1922 1939 born in Buckinghamshire England and Felix Frankfurter 1939 1962 born in Vienna Austria Hungary now in Austria Since 1789 about one third of the justices have been U S military veterans Samuel Alito is the only veteran currently serving on the court Retired justices Stephen Breyer and Anthony Kennedy also served in the U S military Judicial leanings Justices are nominated by the president in power and receive confirmation by the Senate historically holding many of the views of the nominating president s political party While justices do not represent or receive official endorsements from political parties as is accepted practice in the legislative and executive branches organizations such as the Federalist Society do officially filter and endorse judges that have a sufficiently conservative view of the law Jurists are often informally categorized in the media as being conservatives or liberal Attempts to quantify the ideologies of jurists include the Segal Cover score Martin Quinn score and Judicial Common Space score Devins and Baum argue that before 2010 the Court never had clear ideological blocs that fell perfectly along party lines In choosing their appointments Presidents often focused more on friendship and political connections than on ideology Republican presidents sometimes appointed liberals and Democratic presidents sometimes appointed conservatives As a result between 1790 and early 2010 there were only two decisions that the Guide to the U S Supreme Court designated as important and that had at least two dissenting votes in which the Justices divided along party lines about one half of one percent 316 Even in the turbulent 1960s and 1970s Democratic and Republican elites tended to agree on some major issues especially concerning civil rights and civil liberties and so did the justices But since 1991 they argue ideology has been much more important in choosing justices all Republican appointees have been committed conservatives and all Democratic appointees have been liberals 331 344 As the more moderate Republican justices retired the court has become more partisan The Court became more divided sharply along partisan lines with justices appointed by Republican presidents taking increasingly conservative positions and those appointed by Democrats taking moderate liberal positions 357 Balance of the US Supreme Court since 2020 shaded by party of the nominating president Blue represents a Democratic president and red a Republican president Following the confirmation of Amy Coney Barrett in 2020 after the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg the court is composed of six justices appointed by Republican presidents and three appointed by Democratic presidents It is popularly accepted that Chief Justice Roberts and associate justices Thomas Alito Gorsuch Kavanaugh and Barrett appointed by Republican presidents compose the court s conservative wing and that Justices Sotomayor Kagan and Jackson appointed by Democratic presidents compose the court s liberal wing Prior to Justice Ginsburg s death in 2020 the conservative Chief Justice Roberts was sometimes described as the court s median justice with four justices more liberal and four more conservative than him Darragh Roche argues that Kavanaugh as 2021 s median justice exemplifies the rightward shift in the court needs update FiveThirtyEight found the number of unanimous decisions dropped from the 20 year average of nearly 50 to nearly 30 in 2021 while party line rulings increased from a 60 year average just above zero to a record high 21 That year Ryan Williams pointed to the party line votes for confirmations of justices as evidence that the court is of partisan importance to the Senate In 2022 Simon Lazarus of Brookings critiqued the U S Supreme Court as an increasingly partisan institution Retired justices There are currently three living retired justices of the Supreme Court of the United States Anthony Kennedy David Souter and Stephen Breyer As retired justices they no longer participate in the work of the Supreme Court but may be designated for temporary assignments to sit on lower federal courts usually the United States Courts of Appeals Such assignments are formally made by the chief justice on request of the chief judge of the lower court and with the consent of the retired justice In recent years Justice Souter has frequently sat on the First Circuit the court of which he was briefly a member before joining the Supreme Court The status of a retired justice is analogous to that of a circuit or district court judge who has taken senior status and eligibility of a Supreme Court justice to assume retired status rather than simply resign from the bench is governed by the same age and service criteria In recent times justices tend to strategically plan their decisions to leave the bench with personal institutional ideological partisan and political factors playing a role The fear of mental decline and death often motivates justices to step down The desire to maximize the court s strength and legitimacy through one retirement at a time when the court is in recess and during non presidential election years suggests a concern for institutional health Finally especially in recent decades many justices have timed their departure to coincide with a philosophically compatible president holding office to ensure that a like minded successor would be appointed Retired justices of the Supreme Court Justice Birthdate and place Appointed by Age at Tenure active service Retirement Present Start date End date LengthAnthony Kennedy July 23 1936 Sacramento California Reagan R 82 87 February 18 1988 July 31 2018 30 years 163 daysDavid Souter September 17 1939 Melrose Massachusetts G H W Bush R 69 84 October 9 1990 June 29 2009 18 years 263 daysStephen Breyer August 15 1938 San Francisco California Clinton D 83 85 August 3 1994 June 30 2022 27 years 331 daysSalary As of 2024 associate justices receive a yearly salary of 298 500 and the chief justice is paid 312 200 per year Once a justice meets age and service requirements the justice may retire with a pension based on the same formula used for federal employees As with other federal courts judges their pension can never be less than their salary at the time of retirement according to the Compensation Clause of Article III of the Constitution citation needed Seniority and seating This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Supreme Court of the United States news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message The Roberts Court since June 2022 Front row left to right Sonia Sotomayor Clarence Thomas Chief Justice John Roberts Samuel Alito and Elena Kagan Back row left to right Amy Coney Barrett Neil Gorsuch Brett Kavanaugh and Ketanji Brown Jackson For the most part the day to day activities of the justices are governed by rules of protocol based upon the seniority of justices The chief justice always ranks first in the order of precedence regardless of the length of their service The associate justices are then ranked by the length of their service The chief justice sits in the center on the bench or at the head of the table during conferences The other justices are seated in order of seniority The senior most associate justice sits immediately to the chief justice s right the second most senior sits immediately to their left The seats alternate right to left in order of seniority with the most junior justice occupying the last seat Therefore since the October 2022 term the court sits as follows from left to right from the perspective of those facing the court Barrett Gorsuch Sotomayor Thomas most senior associate justice Roberts chief justice Alito Kagan Kavanaugh and Jackson Likewise when the members of the court gather for official group photographs justices are arranged in order of seniority with the five most senior members seated in the front row in the same order as they would sit during Court sessions currently from left to right Sotomayor Thomas Roberts Alito and Kagan and the four most junior justices standing behind them again in the same order as they would sit during Court sessions Barrett Gorsuch Kavanaugh and Jackson In the justices private conferences current practice is for them to speak and vote in order of seniority beginning with the chief justice first and ending with the most junior associate justice By custom the most junior associate justice in these conferences is charged with any menial tasks the justices may require as they convene alone such as answering the door of their conference room serving beverages and transmitting orders of the court to the clerk FacilitiesFrom the 1860s until the 1930s the court sat in the Old Senate Chamber of the U S Capitol The Supreme Court first met on February 1 1790 at the Merchants Exchange Building in New York City When Philadelphia became the capital the court met briefly in Independence Hall before settling in Old City Hall from 1791 until 1800 After the government moved to Washington D C the court occupied various spaces in the Capitol building until 1935 when it moved into its own purpose built home The four story building was designed by Cass Gilbert in a classical style sympathetic to the surrounding buildings of the Capitol and Library of Congress and is clad in marble The building includes the courtroom justices chambers an extensive law library various meeting spaces and auxiliary services including a gymnasium The Supreme Court building is within the ambit of the Architect of the Capitol but maintains its own Supreme Court Police separate from the Capitol Police Located across First Street from the United States Capitol at One First Street NE and Maryland Avenue the building is open to the public from 9 am to 4 30 pm weekdays but closed on weekends and holidays Visitors may not tour the actual courtroom unaccompanied There is a cafeteria a gift shop exhibits and a half hour informational film When the court is not in session lectures about the courtroom are held hourly from 9 30 am to 3 30 pm and reservations are not necessary When the court is in session the public may attend oral arguments which are held twice each morning and sometimes afternoons on Mondays Tuesdays and Wednesdays in two week intervals from October through late April with breaks during December and February Visitors are seated on a first come first served basis One estimate is there are about 250 seats available The number of open seats varies from case to case for important cases some visitors arrive the day before and wait through the night The court releases opinions beginning at 10 am on scheduled non argument days also called opinion days These sessions which typically last 15 to 30 minute are also open to the public From mid May until the end of June at least one opinion day is scheduled each week Supreme Court Police are available to answer questions JurisdictionCongress is authorized by Article III of the federal Constitution to regulate the Supreme Court s appellate jurisdiction Original jurisdiction The Supreme Court has original and exclusive jurisdiction over cases between two or more states but may decline to hear such cases It also possesses original but not exclusive jurisdiction to hear all actions or proceedings to which ambassadors other public ministers consuls or vice consuls of foreign states are parties all controversies between the United States and a State and all actions or proceedings by a State against the citizens of another State or against aliens In 1906 the court asserted its original jurisdiction to prosecute individuals for contempt of court in United States v Shipp The resulting proceeding remains the only contempt proceeding and only criminal trial in the court s history The contempt proceeding arose from the lynching of Ed Johnson in Chattanooga Tennessee the evening after Justice John Marshall Harlan granted Johnson a stay of execution to allow his lawyers to file an appeal Johnson was removed from his jail cell by a lynch mob aided by the local sheriff who left the prison virtually unguarded and hanged from a bridge after which a deputy sheriff pinned a note on Johnson s body reading To Justice Harlan Come get your nigger now The local sheriff John Shipp cited the Supreme Court s intervention as the rationale for the lynching The court appointed its deputy clerk as special master to preside over the trial in Chattanooga with closing arguments made in Washington before the Supreme Court justices who found nine individuals guilty of contempt sentencing three to 90 days in jail and the rest to 60 days in jail In all other cases the court has only appellate jurisdiction including the ability to issue writs of mandamus and writs of prohibition to lower courts It considers cases based on its original jurisdiction very rarely almost all cases are brought to the Supreme Court on appeal In practice the only original jurisdiction cases heard by the court are disputes between two or more states Appellate jurisdiction The court s appellate jurisdiction consists of appeals from federal courts of appeal through certiorari certiorari before judgment and certified questions the United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces through certiorari the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico through certiorari the Supreme Court of the Virgin Islands through certiorari the District of Columbia Court of Appeals through certiorari and final judgments or decrees rendered by the highest court of a State in which a decision could be had through certiorari In the last case an appeal may be made to the Supreme Court from a lower state court if the state s highest court declined to hear an appeal or lacks jurisdiction to hear an appeal For example a decision rendered by one of the Florida District Courts of Appeal can be appealed to the U S Supreme Court if a the Supreme Court of Florida declined to grant certiorari e g Florida Star v B J F or b the district court of appeal issued a per curiam decision simply affirming the lower court s decision without discussing the merits of the case since the Supreme Court of Florida lacks jurisdiction to hear appeals of such decisions The power of the Supreme Court to consider appeals from state courts rather than just federal courts was created by the Judiciary Act of 1789 and upheld early in the court s history by its rulings in Martin v Hunter s Lessee 1816 and Cohens v Virginia 1821 The Supreme Court is the only federal court that has jurisdiction over direct appeals from state court decisions although there are several devices that permit so called collateral review of state cases It has to be noted that this collateral review often only applies to individuals on death row and not through the regular judicial system Since Article Three of the United States Constitution stipulates that federal courts may only entertain cases or controversies the Supreme Court cannot decide cases that are moot and it does not render advisory opinions as the supreme courts of some states may do For example in DeFunis v Odegaard 1974 the court dismissed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of a law school affirmative action policy because the plaintiff student had graduated since he began the lawsuit and a decision from the court on his claim would not be able to redress any injury he had suffered However the court recognizes some circumstances where it is appropriate to hear a case that is seemingly moot If an issue is capable of repetition yet evading review the court would address it even though the party before the court would not themselves be made whole by a favorable result In Roe v Wade 1973 and other abortion cases the court addresses the merits of claims pressed by pregnant women seeking abortions even if they are no longer pregnant because it takes longer than the typical human gestation period to appeal a case through the lower courts to the Supreme Court Another mootness exception is voluntary cessation of unlawful conduct in which the court considers the probability of recurrence and plaintiff s need for relief Justices as circuit justices The United States is divided into thirteen circuit courts of appeals each of which is assigned a circuit justice from the Supreme Court Although this concept has been in continuous existence throughout the history of the republic its meaning has changed through time Under the Judiciary Act of 1789 each justice was required to ride circuit or to travel within the assigned circuit and consider cases alongside local judges This practice encountered opposition from many justices who cited the difficulty of travel Moreover there was a potential for a conflict of interest on the court if a justice had previously decided the same case while riding circuit Circuit riding ended in 1901 when the Circuit Court of Appeals Act was passed and circuit riding was officially abolished by Congress in 1911 The circuit justice for each circuit is responsible for dealing with certain types of applications that by law and the rules of the court may be addressed by a single justice Ordinarily a justice will resolve such an application by simply endorsing it granted or denied or entering a standard form of order however the justice may elect to write an opinion referred to as an in chambers opinion Congress has specifically authorized one justice to issue a stay pending certiorari in 28 U S C 2101 f inappropriate external link Each justice also decides routine procedural requests such as for extensions of time Before 1990 the rules of the Supreme Court also stated that a writ of injunction may be granted by any Justice in a case where it might be granted by the Court However this part of the rule and all other specific mention of injunctions was removed in the Supreme Court s rules revision of December 1989 Nevertheless requests for injunctions under the All Writs Act are sometimes directed to the circuit justice In the past when circuit justices also sometimes granted motions for bail in criminal cases writs of habeas corpus and applications for writs of error granting permission to appeal A circuit justice may sit as a judge on the Court of Appeals of that circuit but over the past hundred years this has rarely occurred A circuit justice sitting with the Court of Appeals has seniority over the chief judge of the circuit The chief justice has traditionally been assigned to the District of Columbia Circuit the Fourth Circuit which includes Maryland and Virginia the states surrounding the District of Columbia and since it was established the Federal Circuit Each associate justice is assigned to one or two judicial circuits As of September 28 2022 the allotment of the justices among the circuits is as follows Circuit JusticeDistrict of Columbia Circuit Chief Justice RobertsFirst Circuit Justice JacksonSecond Circuit Justice SotomayorThird Circuit Justice AlitoFourth Circuit Chief Justice RobertsFifth Circuit Justice AlitoSixth Circuit Justice KavanaughSeventh Circuit Justice BarrettEighth Circuit Justice KavanaughNinth Circuit Justice KaganTenth Circuit Justice GorsuchEleventh Circuit Justice ThomasFederal Circuit Chief Justice Roberts Five of the current justices are assigned to circuits on which they previously sat as circuit judges Chief Justice Roberts D C Circuit Justice Sotomayor Second Circuit Justice Alito Third Circuit Justice Barrett Seventh Circuit and Justice Gorsuch Tenth Circuit ProcessCase selection Nearly all cases come before the court by way of petitions for writs of certiorari commonly referred to as cert upon which the court grants a writ of certiorari The court may review via this process any civil or criminal case in the federal courts of appeals It may also review by certiorari a final judgment of the highest court of a state if the judgment involves a question of federal statutory or constitutional law A case may alternatively come before the court as a direct appeal from a three judge federal district court The party that petitions the court for review is the petitioner and the non mover is the respondent Case names before the court are styled petitioner v respondent regardless of which party initiated the lawsuit in the trial court For example criminal prosecutions are brought in the name of the state and against an individual as in State of Arizona v Ernesto Miranda If the defendant is convicted and his conviction then is affirmed on appeal in the state supreme court when he petitions for cert the name of the case becomes Miranda v Arizona The court also hears questions submitted to it by appeals courts themselves via a process known as certification The Supreme Court relies on the record assembled by lower courts for the facts of a case and deals solely with the question of how the law applies to the facts presented There are however situations where the court has original jurisdiction such as when two states have a dispute against each other or when there is a dispute between the United States and a state In such instances a case is filed with the Supreme Court directly Examples of such cases include United States v Texas a case to determine whether a parcel of land belonged to the United States or to Texas and Virginia v Tennessee a case turning on whether an incorrectly drawn boundary between two states can be changed by a state court and whether the setting of the correct boundary requires Congressional approval Although it has not happened since 1794 in the case of Georgia v Brailsford parties in an action at law in which the Supreme Court has original jurisdiction may request that a jury determine issues of fact Georgia v Brailsford remains the only case in which the court has empaneled a jury in this case a special jury Two other original jurisdiction cases involve colonial era borders and rights under navigable waters in New Jersey v Delaware and water rights between riparian states upstream of navigable waters in Kansas v Colorado A cert petition is voted on at a session of the court called conference A conference is a private meeting of the nine justices by themselves the public and the justices clerks are excluded The rule of four permits four of the nine justices to grant a writ of certiorari If it is granted the case proceeds to the briefing stage otherwise the case ends Except in death penalty cases and other cases in which the court orders briefing from the respondent the respondent may but is not required to file a response to the cert petition The court grants a petition for cert only for compelling reasons spelled out in the court s Rule 10 Such reasons include Resolving a conflict between circuit courts in the interpretation of a federal law or a provision of the federal Constitution Correcting an egregious departure from the accepted and usual course of judicial proceedings Resolving an important question of federal law or to expressly review a decision of a lower court that conflicts directly with a previous decision of the court When a conflict of interpretations arises from differing interpretations of the same law or constitutional provision issued by different federal circuit courts of appeals lawyers call this situation a circuit split if the court votes to deny a cert petition as it does in the vast majority of such petitions that come before it it does so typically without comment A denial of a cert petition is not a judgment on the merits of a case and the decision of the lower court stands as the case s final ruling To manage the high volume of cert petitions received by the court each year of the more than 7 000 petitions the court receives each year it will usually request briefing and hear oral argument in 100 or fewer the court employs an internal case management tool known as the cert pool currently all justices except for Justices Alito and Gorsuch participate in the cert pool Oral argument Seth P Waxman at oral argument presents his case and answers questions from the justices When the court grants a cert petition the case is set for oral argument Both parties will file briefs on the merits of the case as distinct from the reasons they may have argued for granting or denying the cert petition With the consent of the parties or approval of the court amici curiae or friends of the court may also file briefs The court holds two week oral argument sessions each month from October through April Each side has thirty minutes to present its argument the court may choose to give more time although this is rare and during that time the justices may interrupt the advocate and ask questions In 2019 the court adopted a rule generally allowing advocates to speak uninterrupted for the first two minutes of their argument The petitioner gives the first presentation and may reserve some time to rebut the respondent s arguments after the respondent has concluded Amici curiae may also present oral argument on behalf of one party if that party agrees The court advises counsel to assume that the justices are familiar with and have read the briefs filed in a case Decision At the conclusion of oral argument the case is submitted for decision Cases are decided by majority vote of the justices After the oral argument is concluded usually in the same week as the case was submitted the justices retire to another conference at which the preliminary votes are tallied and the court sees which side has prevailed One of the justices in the majority is then assigned to write the court s opinion also known as the majority opinion an assignment made by the most senior justice in the majority with the chief justice always being considered the most senior Drafts of the court s opinion circulate among the justices until the court is prepared to announce the judgment in a particular case Justices are free to change their votes on a case up until the decision is finalized and published In any given case a justice is free to choose whether or not to author an opinion or else simply join the majority or another justice s opinion There are several primary types of opinions Opinion of the court this is the binding decision of the Supreme Court An opinion that more than half of the justices join usually at least five justices since there are nine justices in total but in cases where some justices do not participate it could be fewer is known as majority opinion and creates binding precedent in American law Whereas an opinion that fewer than half of the justices join is known as a plurality opinion and is only partially binding precedent Concurring a justice agrees with and joins the majority opinion but authors a separate concurrence to give additional explanations rationales or commentary Concurrences do not create binding precedent Concurring in the judgment a justice agrees with the outcome the court reached but disagrees with its reasons for doing so A justice in this situation does not join the majority opinion Like regular concurrences these do not create binding precedent Dissent a justice disagrees with the outcome the court reached and its reasoning Justices who dissent from a decision may author their own dissenting opinions or if there are multiple dissenting justices in a decision may join another justice s dissent Dissents do not create binding precedent A justice may also join only part s of a particular decision and may even agree with some parts of the outcome and disagree with others It is the court s practice to issue decisions in all cases argued in a particular term by the end of that term Within that term the court is under no obligation to release a decision within any set time after oral argument Since recording devices are banned inside the courtroom of the Supreme Court Building the delivery of the decision to the media has historically been done via paper copies in what was known as the Running of the Interns However this practice has become passe as the Court now posts electronic copies of the opinions on its website as they are being announced It is possible that through recusals or vacancies the court divides evenly on a case If that occurs then the decision of the court below is affirmed but does not establish binding precedent In effect it results in a return to the status quo ante For a case to be heard there must be a quorum of at least six justices If a quorum is not available to hear a case and a majority of qualified justices believes that the case cannot be heard and determined in the next term then the judgment of the court below is affirmed as if the court had been evenly divided For cases brought to the Supreme Court by direct appeal from a United States District Court the chief justice may order the case remanded to the appropriate U S Court of Appeals for a final decision there This has only occurred once in U S history in the case of United States v Alcoa 1945 Published opinions This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2021 The court s opinions are published in three stages First a slip opinion is made available on the court s web site and through other outlets Next several opinions and lists of the court s orders are bound together in paperback form called a preliminary print of United States Reports the official series of books in which the final version of the court s opinions appears About a year after the preliminary prints are issued a final bound volume of U S Reports is issued by the Reporter of Decisions The individual volumes of U S Reports are numbered so that users may cite this set of reports or a competing version published by another commercial legal publisher but containing parallel citations to allow those who read their pleadings and other briefs to find the cases quickly and easily As of January 2019 update there are Final bound volumes of U S Reports 569 volumes covering cases through June 13 2013 part of the October 2012 term Slip opinions 21 volumes 565 585 for 2011 2017 terms three two part volumes each plus part 1 of volume 586 2018 term As of March 2012 update the U S Reports have published a total of 30 161 Supreme Court opinions covering the decisions handed down from February 1790 to March 2012 citation needed This figure does not reflect the number of cases the court has taken up as several cases can be addressed by a single opinion see for example Parents v Seattle where Meredith v Jefferson County Board of Education was also decided in the same opinion by a similar logic Miranda v Arizona actually decided not only Miranda but also three other cases Vignera v New York Westover v United States and California v Stewart A more unusual example is The Telephone Cases which are a single set of interlinked opinions that take up the entire 126th volume of the U S Reports Opinions are also collected and published in two unofficial parallel reporters Supreme Court Reporter published by West now a part of Thomson Reuters and United States Supreme Court Reports Lawyers Edition simply known as Lawyers Edition published by LexisNexis In court documents legal periodicals and other legal media case citations generally contain cites from each of the three reporters for example citation to Citizens United v Federal Election Commission is presented as Citizens United v Federal Election Com n 585 U S 50 130 S Ct 876 175 L Ed 2d 753 2010 with S Ct representing the Supreme Court Reporter and L Ed representing the Lawyers Edition Citations to published opinions Lawyers use an abbreviated format to cite cases in the form vol U S page pin year where vol is the volume number page is the page number on which the opinion begins and year is the year in which the case was decided Optionally pin is used to pinpoint to a specific page number within the opinion For instance the citation for Roe v Wade is 410 U S 113 1973 which means the case was decided in 1973 and appears on page 113 of volume 410 of U S Reports For opinions or orders that have not yet been published in the preliminary print the volume and page numbers may be replaced with Supreme Court bar In order to plead before the court an attorney must first be admitted to the court s bar Approximately 4 000 lawyers join the bar each year The bar contains an estimated 230 000 members In reality pleading is limited to several hundred attorneys citation needed The rest join for a one time fee of 200 with the court collecting about 750 000 annually Attorneys can be admitted as either individuals or as groups The group admission is held before the current justices of the Supreme Court wherein the chief justice approves a motion to admit the new attorneys Lawyers commonly apply for the cosmetic value of a certificate to display in their office or on their resume They also receive access to better seating if they wish to attend an oral argument Members of the Supreme Court Bar are also granted access to the collections of the Supreme Court Library Term A term of the Supreme Court commences on the first Monday of each October and continues until June or early July of the following year Each term consists of alternating periods of around two weeks known as sittings and recesses justices hear cases and deliver rulings during sittings and discuss cases and write opinions during recesses Institutional powersInscription on the wall of the Supreme Court Building from Marbury v Madison in which Chief Justice John Marshall outlined the concept of judicial review The federal court system and the judicial authority to interpret the Constitution received little attention in the debates over the drafting and ratification of the Constitution The power of judicial review in fact is nowhere mentioned in it Over the ensuing years the question of whether the power of judicial review was even intended by the drafters of the Constitution was quickly frustrated by the lack of evidence bearing on the question either way Nevertheless the power of judiciary to overturn laws and executive actions it determines are unlawful or unconstitutional is a well established precedent Many of the Founding Fathers accepted the notion of judicial review in Federalist No 78 Alexander Hamilton wrote A Constitution is in fact and must be regarded by the judges as a fundamental law It therefore belongs to them to ascertain its meaning and the meaning of any particular act proceeding from the legislative body If there should happen to be an irreconcilable variance between the two that which has the superior obligation and validity ought of course to be preferred or in other words the Constitution ought to be preferred to the statute The Supreme Court established its own power to declare laws unconstitutional in Marbury v Madison 1803 consummating the American system of checks and balances In explaining the power of judicial review Chief Justice John Marshall stated that the authority to interpret the law was the particular province of the courts part of the duty of the judicial department to say what the law is His contention was not that the court had privileged insight into constitutional requirements but that it was the constitutional duty of the judiciary as well as the other branches of government to read and obey the dictates of the Constitution This decision was criticized by then President Thomas Jefferson who said the Constitution on this hypothesis is a mere thing of wax in the hands of the judiciary which they may twist and shape into any form they please Since the founding of the republic there has been a tension between the practice of judicial review and the democratic ideals of egalitarianism self government self determination and freedom of conscience At one pole are those who view the federal judiciary and especially the Supreme Court as being the most separated and least checked of all branches of government Indeed federal judges and justices on the Supreme Court are not required to stand for election by virtue of their tenure during good behavior and their pay may not be diminished while they hold their position Section 1 of Article Three Although subject to the process of impeachment only one justice has ever been impeached and no Supreme Court justice has been removed from office At the other pole are those who view the judiciary as the least dangerous branch with little ability to resist the exhortations of the other branches of government Constraints The Supreme Court cannot directly enforce its rulings instead it relies on respect for the Constitution and for the law for adherence to its judgments One notable instance of nonacquiescence came in 1832 when the state of Georgia ignored the Supreme Court s decision in Worcester v Georgia President Andrew Jackson who sided with the Georgia courts is supposed to have remarked John Marshall has made his decision now let him enforce it Some state governments in the South also resisted the desegregation of public schools after the 1954 judgment Brown v Board of Education More recently many feared that President Nixon would refuse to comply with the court s order in United States v Nixon 1974 to surrender the Watergate tapes Nixon ultimately complied with the Supreme Court s ruling Supreme Court decisions can be purposefully overturned by constitutional amendment something that has happened on six occasions Chisholm v Georgia 1793 overturned by the Eleventh Amendment 1795 Dred Scott v Sandford 1857 overturned by the Thirteenth Amendment 1865 and the Fourteenth Amendment 1868 Pollock v Farmers Loan amp Trust Co 1895 overturned by the Sixteenth Amendment 1913 Minor v Happersett 1875 overturned by the Nineteenth Amendment 1920 Breedlove v Suttles 1937 overturned by the Twenty fourth Amendment 1964 Oregon v Mitchell 1970 overturned by the Twenty sixth Amendment 1971 When the court rules on matters involving the interpretation of laws rather than of the Constitution simple legislative action can reverse the decisions for example in 2009 Congress passed the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act of 2009 superseding the limitations given in Ledbetter v Goodyear Tire amp Rubber Co in 2007 Also the Supreme Court is not immune from political and institutional consideration lower federal courts and state courts sometimes resist doctrinal innovations as do law enforcement officials In addition the other two branches can restrain the court through other mechanisms Congress can increase the number of justices giving the president power to influence future decisions by appointments as in Roosevelt s Court Packing Plan discussed above Congress can pass legislation that restricts the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and other federal courts over certain topics and cases this is suggested by language in Section 2 of Article Three where the appellate jurisdiction is granted with such Exceptions and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make The court sanctioned such congressional action in the Reconstruction Era case ex parte McCardle 1869 although it rejected Congress power to dictate how particular cases must be decided in United States v Klein 1871 On the other hand tone through its power of judicial review the Supreme Court has defined the scope and nature of the powers and separation between the legislative and executive branches of the federal government for example in United States v Curtiss Wright Export Corp 1936 Dames amp Moore v Regan 1981 and notably in Goldwater v Carter 1979 which effectively gave the presidency the power to terminate ratified treaties without the consent of Congress The court s decisions can also impose limitations on the scope of Executive authority as in Humphrey s Executor v United States 1935 the Steel Seizure Case 1952 and United States v Nixon 1974 citation needed Law clerksEach Supreme Court justice hires several law clerks to review petitions for writ of certiorari research them prepare bench memorandums and draft opinions Associate justices are allowed four clerks The chief justice is allowed five clerks but Chief Justice Rehnquist hired only three per year and Chief Justice Roberts usually hires only four Generally law clerks serve a term of one to two years The first law clerk was hired by Associate Justice Horace Gray in 1882 Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr and Louis Brandeis were the first Supreme Court justices to use recent law school graduates as clerks rather than hiring a stenographer secretary Most law clerks are recent law school graduates The first female clerk was Lucile Lomen hired in 1944 by Justice William O Douglas The first African American William T Coleman Jr was hired in 1948 by Justice Felix Frankfurter A disproportionately large number of law clerks have obtained law degrees from elite law schools especially Harvard Yale the University of Chicago Columbia and Stanford From 1882 to 1940 62 of law clerks were graduates of Harvard Law School Those chosen to be Supreme Court law clerks usually have graduated in the top of their law school class and were often an editor of the law review or a member of the moot court board By the mid 1970s clerking previously for a judge in a federal court of appeals had also become a prerequisite to clerking for a Supreme Court justice Ten Supreme Court justices previously clerked for other justices Byron White for Frederick M Vinson John Paul Stevens for Wiley Rutledge William Rehnquist for Robert H Jackson Stephen Breyer for Arthur Goldberg John Roberts for William Rehnquist Elena Kagan for Thurgood Marshall Neil Gorsuch for both Byron White and Anthony Kennedy Brett Kavanaugh also for Kennedy Amy Coney Barrett for Antonin Scalia and Ketanji Brown Jackson for Stephen Breyer Justices Gorsuch and Kavanaugh served under Kennedy during the same term Gorsuch is the first justice to clerk for and subsequently serve alongside the same justice serving alongside Kennedy from April 2017 through Kennedy s retirement in 2018 With the confirmation of Justice Kavanaugh for the first time a majority of the Supreme Court was composed of former Supreme Court law clerks Roberts Breyer Kagan Gorsuch and Kavanaugh now joined by Barrett and Jackson Several current Supreme Court justices have also clerked in the federal courts of appeals John Roberts for Judge Henry Friendly of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Justice Samuel Alito for Judge Leonard I Garth of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit Elena Kagan for Judge Abner J Mikva of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit Neil Gorsuch for Judge David B Sentelle of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Brett Kavanaugh for Judge Walter Stapleton of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit and Judge Alex Kozinski of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and Amy Coney Barrett for Judge Laurence Silberman of the U S Court of Appeals for the D C Circuit Politicization of the court Clerks hired by each of the justices of the Supreme Court are often given considerable leeway in the opinions they draft Supreme Court clerkship appeared to be a nonpartisan institution from the 1940s into the 1980s according to a study published in 2009 by the law review of Vanderbilt University Law School As law has moved closer to mere politics political affiliations have naturally and predictably become proxies for the different political agendas that have been pressed in and through the courts former federal court of appeals judge J Michael Luttig said David J Garrow professor of history at the University of Cambridge stated that the court had thus begun to mirror the political branches of government We are getting a composition of the clerk workforce that is getting to be like the House of Representatives Professor Garrow said Each side is putting forward only ideological purists According to the Vanderbilt Law Review study this politicized hiring trend reinforces the impression that the Supreme Court is a superlegislature responding to ideological arguments rather than a legal institution responding to concerns grounded in the rule of law Criticism and controversiesThe following are some of the criticisms and controversies about the Court that are not discussed in previous sections Unlike in most high courts the United States Supreme Court has lifetime tenure an unusual amount of power over elected branches of government and a difficult constitution to amend These among other factors have been attributed by some critics to the Court s diminished stature abroad and lower approval ratings at home which have dropped from the mid 60s in the late 1980s to around 40 in the early 2020s Additional factors cited by critics include the polarization of national politics ethics scandals and specific controversial partisan rulings including the relaxation of campaign finance rules increased gerrymandering weakened voting rights Dobbs v Jackson and Bush v Gore The continued consolidation of power by the court and as a result of its rulings the Republican party has sparked debate over when democratic backsliding becomes entrenched single party rule Approval ratings Public trust in the court peaked in the late 1980s Since the 2022 Dobbs ruling that overturned Roe v Wade and permitted states to restrict abortion rights Democrats and independents have increasingly lost trust in the court seen the court as political and expressed support for reforming the institution Historically the court had relatively more trust than other government institutions After recording recent high approval ratings in the late 1980s around 66 approval the court s ratings have declined to an average of around 40 between mid 2021 and February 2024 Composition and selection The electoral college which elects the President who nominates the justices and the U S Senate which confirms the justices have selection biases that favor rural states that tend to vote Republican resulting in a conservative Supreme Court Ziblatt and Levitsky estimate that 3 or 4 of the seats held by conservative justices on the court would be held by justices appointed by a Democratic president if the Presidency and Senate were selected directly by the popular vote The three Trump appointees to the court were all nominated by a president who finished second in the popular vote and confirmed by Senators representing a minority of Americans In addition Clarence Thomas confirmation and Merrick Garland s blocked confirmation in 2016 were both decided by Senators representing a minority of Americans Greg Price also critiqued the Court as minority rule Moreover the Federalist Society acted as a filter for judicial nominations during the Trump administration ensuring the latest conservative justices lean even further to the right 86 of judges Trump appointed to circuit courts and the Supreme Court were Federalist Society members David Litt critiques it as an attempt to impose rigid ideological dogma on a profession once known for intellectual freedom Kate Aronoff criticizes the donations from special interests like fossil fuel companies and other dark money groups to the Federalist Society and related organizations seeking to influence lawyers and Supreme Court Justices The 2016 stonewalling of Merrick Garland s confirmation and subsequent filling with Neil Gorsuch has been critiqued as a stolen seat citing precedent from the 20th century of confirmations during election years while proponents cited three blocked nominations between 1844 and 1866 In recent years Democrats have accused Republican leaders such as Mitch McConnell of hypocrisy as they were instrumental in blocking the nomination of Merrick Garland but then rushed through the appointment of Amy Coney Barrett even though both vacancies occurred close to an election Ethics Ethical controversies have grown with reports of justices and their close family members accepting expensive gifts travel business deals and speaking fees without oversight or recusals from cases that present conflicts of interest Spousal income and connections to cases has been redacted from the Justices ethical disclosure forms while justices such as Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas failed to disclose many large financial gifts including free vacations valued at as much as 500 000 In 2024 Justices Alito and Thomas have refused calls to recuse themselves from January 6th cases where their spouses have taken public stances or been involved in efforts to overturn the election The Supreme Court Historical Society s controversies include fundraising done by the Justices from corporations and wealthy donors apparently seeking access to the justices On November 13 2023 the court issued its first ever Code of Conduct for Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States to set ethics rules and principles that guide the conduct of the Members of the Court The Code has generally been received as a significant first step but also as a measure that does not address the ethics concerns of many notable critics who found the Code relatively weaker than those for federal judges the legislature and the executive branch while also lacking an enforcement mechanism The Code s commentary denied past wrongdoing by saying that the Justices have largely abided by these principles and are simply publishing them now This has prompted some criticism that the court hopes to legitimize past and future scandals through this Code Lack of accountability The ethics rules guiding the court s members are set and enforced by the justices meaning the members of the court have no external checks on their behavior other than the impeachment of a justice by Congress Chief Justice Roberts refused to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee in April 2023 reasserting his desire for the Supreme Court to continue to monitor itself despite mounting ethics scandals Lower courts by contrast discipline according to the 1973 Code of Conduct for U S judges which is enforced by the Judicial Conduct and Disability Act of 1980 Article III Section I of the Constitution of the United States 1776 establishes that the justices hold their office during good behavior Thus far only one justice Associate Justice Samuel Chase in 1804 has ever been impeached yet none have ever been removed from office The lack of external enforcement of ethics or other conduct violations makes the Supreme Court an outlier in modern organizational best practices 2024 reform legislation has been blocked by congressional Republicans The Court has also been critiqued for citing falsehoods often supplied to the Justices by amicus briefs from groups advocating a particular outcome Allison Orr Larsen that the court should address this by requiring disclosure of all funders of amicus briefs and the studies they cite only admit briefs that stay within the expertise of the authors as is required in lower courts and require the briefs to be submitted much earlier in the process so the history and facts have time to be challenged and uncovered Individual rights This section may contain excessive or irrelevant examples Please help improve the article by adding descriptive text and removing less pertinent examples March 2024 Some of the most notable historical decisions that were criticized for failing to protect individual rights include the Dred Scott 1857 decision that upheld slavery Plessy v Ferguson 1896 that upheld segregation under the doctrine of separate but equal the Civil Rights Cases 1883 and Slaughter House Cases 1873 that all but undermined civil rights legislation enacted during the Reconstruction era However others argue that the court is too protective of some individual rights particularly those of people accused of crimes or in detention For example Chief Justice Warren Burger criticized the exclusionary rule and Justice Scalia criticized Boumediene v Bush for being too protective of the rights of Guantanamo detainees arguing habeas corpus should be limited to sovereign territory Protestors in support of keeping Roe v Wade After Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization overturned nearly 50 years of precedent set by Roe v Wade some experts expressed concern that this may be the beginning of a rollback of individual rights that had been previously established under the Substantive due process principle in part because Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in his concurring opinion in Dobbs that the decision should prompt the court to reconsider all of the court s past substantive due process decisions Due process rights claimed to be at risk are The right to privacy including a right to contraceptives Established in Griswold v Connecticut 1965 The right to privacy with regard to private sexual acts Established in Lawrence v Texas 2003 The right to marry an individual of the same sex Established in Obergefell v Hodges 2015 Some experts such as Melissa Murray law professor at N Y U School of Law have claimed that protections for interracial marriage established in Loving v Virginia 1967 may also be at risk Other experts such as Josh Blackman law professor at South Texas College of Law Houston argued that Loving actually relied more heavily upon Equal Protection Clause grounds than substantive due process Substantive due process has also been the primary vehicle used by the Supreme Court to incorporate the Bill of Rights against state and local governments Clarence Thomas referred to it as legal fiction preferring the Privileges or Immunities Clause for incorporating the Bill of Rights However outside of Neil Gorsuch s commentary in Timbs v Indiana Thomas has received little support for this viewpoint better source needed Judicial activism This section may contain excessive or irrelevant examples Please help improve the article by adding descriptive text and removing less pertinent examples March 2024 The Supreme Court has been criticized for engaging in judicial activism This criticism is leveled by those who believe the court should not interpret the law in any way besides through the lens of past precedent or Textualism However those on both sides of the political aisle often level this accusation at the court The debate around judicial activism typically involves accusing the other side of activism whilst denying that your own side engages in it Conservatives often cite the decision in Roe v Wade 1973 as an example of liberal Judicial activism In its decision the court legalized abortion on the basis of a right to privacy that they found inherent in the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment Roe v Wade was overturned nearly fifty years later by Dobbs v Jackson 2022 ending the recognition of abortion access as a constitutional right and returning the issue of abortion back to the states David Litt criticized the decision in Dobbs as activism on the part of the court s conservative majority because the court failed to respect past precedent eschewing the principle of Stare decisis that usually guides the court s decisions The decision in Brown v Board of Education which banned racial segregation in public schools was criticized as activist by conservatives Pat Buchanan Robert Bork and Barry Goldwater More recently Citizens United v Federal Election Commission was criticized for expanding upon the precedent in First National Bank of Boston v Bellotti 1978 that the First Amendment applies to corporations Outdated and an outlier Colm Quinn says that a criticism leveled at the court as well as other American institutions is that after two centuries they are beginning to look their age He cites four features of the United States Supreme Court that make it different from high courts in other countries that help explain why polarization is an issue in the United States court It is high profile the high court in the United States is one of the few courts in the world that can unilaterally strike down legislation passed by other politically accountable branches The United States Constitution is very difficult to amend other countries allow for constitutional changes via referendum or with a supermajority in the legislature The United States Supreme Court has a politicized nominating process The United States Supreme Court lacks term limits or mandatory retirements Power Michael Waldman argued that no other country gives its Supreme Court as much power Warren E Burger before becoming Chief Justice argued that since the Supreme Court has such unreviewable power it is likely to self indulge itself and unlikely to engage in dispassionate analysis Larry Sabato wrote that the federal courts and especially the Supreme Court have excessive power Suja A Thomas argues the Supreme Court has taken most of the constitutionally defined power from juries in the United States for itself thanks in part to the influence of legal elites and companies that prefer judges over juries as well as the inability of the jury to defend its power Some members of Congress considered the results from the 2021 2022 term a shift of government power into the Supreme Court and a judicial coup The 2021 2022 term of the court was the first full term following the appointment of three judges by Republican president Donald Trump Neil Gorsuch Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett which created a six strong conservative majority on the court Subsequently at the end of the term the court issued a number of decisions that favored this conservative majority while significantly changing the landscape with respect to rights These included Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization which overturned Roe v Wade and Planned Parenthood v Casey in recognizing abortion is not a constitutional right New York State Rifle amp Pistol Association Inc v Bruen which made public possession of guns a protected right under the Second Amendment Carson v Makin and Kennedy v Bremerton School District which both weakened the Establishment Clause separating church and state and West Virginia v EPA which weakened the power of executive branch agencies to interpret their congressional mandate Federalism debate There has been debate throughout American history about the boundary between federal and state power While Framers such as James Madison and Alexander Hamilton argued in The Federalist Papers that their then proposed Constitution would not infringe on the power of state governments others argue that expansive federal power is good and consistent with the Framers wishes The Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution explicitly grants powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution nor prohibited by it to the States are reserved to the States respectively or to the people The court has been criticized for giving the federal government too much power to interfere with state authority One criticism is that it has allowed the federal government to misuse the Commerce Clause by upholding regulations and legislation which have little to do with interstate commerce but that were enacted under the guise of regulating interstate commerce and by voiding state legislation for allegedly interfering with interstate commerce For example the Commerce Clause was used by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals to uphold the Endangered Species Act thus protecting six endemic species of insect near Austin Texas despite the fact that the insects had no commercial value and did not travel across state lines the Supreme Court let that ruling stand without comment in 2005 Chief Justice John Marshall asserted Congress s power over interstate commerce was complete in itself may be exercised to its utmost extent and acknowledges no limitations other than are prescribed in the Constitution Justice Alito said congressional authority under the Commerce Clause is quite broad modern day theorist Robert B Reich suggests debate over the Commerce Clause continues today Advocates of states rights such as constitutional scholar Kevin Gutzman have also criticized the court saying it has misused the Fourteenth Amendment to undermine state authority Justice Brandeis in arguing for allowing the states to operate without federal interference suggested that states should be laboratories of democracy One critic wrote the great majority of Supreme Court rulings of unconstitutionality involve state not federal law Others see the Fourteenth Amendment as a positive force that extends protection of those rights and guarantees to the state level More recently the issue of federal power is central in the prosecution of Gamble v United States which is examining the doctrine of separate sovereigns whereby a criminal defendant can be prosecuted by a state court and then by a federal court Ruling on political questions Some Court decisions have been criticized for injecting the court into the political arena and deciding questions that are the purview of the elected branches of government The Bush v Gore decision in which the Supreme Court intervened in the 2000 presidential election awarding George W Bush the presidency over Al Gore received scrutiny as political based on the controversial justifications used by the 5 conservative justices to elevate a fellow conservative to the presidency Democratic backsliding Thomas Keck argues that because the Court has historically not served as a strong bulwark for democracy the Roberts Court has the opportunity to go down in history as a defender of democracy However he believes that if the court shields Trump from criminal prosecution after ensuring his access to the ballot then the risks that come with an anti democratic status quo of the current court will outweigh the dangers that come from court reform including court packing Aziz Z Huq points to the blocking progress of democratizing institutions increasing the disparity in wealth and power and empowering an authoritarian white nationalist movement as evidence that the Supreme Court has created a permanent minority incapable of democratic defeat Secretive proceedings The court has been criticized for keeping its deliberations hidden from public view For example the increasing use of a shadow docket facilitates the court making decisions in secret without knowing how each Justice came to their decision In 2024 after comparing the analysis of shadow docket decisions to Kremlinology Matt Ford called this trend of secrecy increasingly troubling arguing the court s power comes entirely from persuasion and explanation A 2007 review of Jeffrey Toobin s book compared the Court to a cartel where its inner workings are mostly unknown arguing this lack of transparency reduces scrutiny which hurts ordinary Americans who know little about the nine extremely consequential Justices A 2010 poll found that 61 of American voters agreed that televising Court hearings would be good for democracy and 50 of voters stated they would watch Court proceedings if they were televised Too few cases Ian Millhiser of Vox speculates that the decades long decline in cases heard could be due to the increasing political makeup of judges that he says might be more interested in settling political disputes than legal ones Too slow British constitutional scholar Adam Tomkins sees flaws in the American system of having courts and specifically the Supreme Court act as checks on the Executive and Legislative branches he argues that because the courts must wait sometimes for years for cases to navigate their way through the system their ability to restrain other branches is severely weakened In contrast various other countries have a dedicated constitutional court that has original jurisdiction on constitutional claims brought by persons or political institutions for example the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany which can declare a law unconstitutional when challenged Critics have accused the Court of slow walking important cases relating to former President Donald Trump in order to benefit his election chances in the face of the 2024 United States presidential election The Court is considering a Presidential immunity claim as part of the Federal prosecution of Donald Trump election obstruction case Critics argue that the Court has acted slowly in order to delay this case until after the election They point out that the Court can move quickly when it wants to as it did when it disregarded typical procedures in Bush v Gore granting the petition on a Saturday receiving briefs on Sunday holding oral arguments on Monday and issuing the final opinion on Tuesday Author Sonja West of Slate argues that the Federal prosecution of Donald Trump election obstruction case is of similar importance to Bush v Gore and should therefore be treated as expeditiously but the Court seems to be taking the opposite approach Waning influence Adam Liptak wrote in 2008 that the court has declined in relevance in other constitutional courts He cites factors like American exceptionalism the relatively few updates to the constitution or the courts the rightward shift of the court and the diminished stature of the United States abroad Leaks and inadvertent publications Sometimes draft opinions are deliberately leaked or inadvertently released before they are published Such releases are often purported to harm the court s reputation Chief Justice Roberts has previously described leaks as an egregious breach of trust that undermine the integrity of our operations in reference to the leaked draft opinion for Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization In addition to leaks the Court has sometimes mistakenly released opinions before they are ready to be published On June 26 2024 the Court inadvertently posted an opinion for Moyle v United States to its website that seemed to indicate that the court will temporarily allow abortions in medical emergencies in Idaho See alsoJudicial appointment history for United States federal courts List of courts which publish audio or video of arguments List of pending United States Supreme Court cases List of presidents of the United States by judicial appointments List of supreme courts by country Lists of United States Supreme Court cases Models of judicial decision making Reporter of Decisions of the Supreme Court of the United StatesSelected landmark Supreme Court decisions Marbury v Madison 1803 judicial review McCulloch v Maryland 1819 implied powers Gibbons v Ogden 1824 interstate commerce Dred Scott v Sandford 1857 slavery Civil Rights Cases 1883 civil rights law Plessy v Ferguson 1896 separate but equal treatment of races Lochner v New York 1905 labor law Buck v Bell 1927 upheld forced sterilization laws Wickard v Filburn 1942 federal regulation of economic activity Korematsu v U S 1942 Japanese internment Brown v Board of Education 1954 school segregation of races Engel v Vitale 1962 state sponsored prayers in public schools Abington School District v Schempp 1963 Bible readings and recitation of the Lord s prayer in U S public schools Gideon v Wainwright 1963 right to an attorney Griswold v Connecticut 1965 contraception Miranda v Arizona 1966 rights of those detained by police Loving v Virginia 1967 interracial marriage Lemon v Kurtzman 1971 religious activities in public schools New York Times Co v United States 1971 freedom of the press Eisenstadt v Baird 1972 contraception Roe v Wade 1973 abortion Miller v California 1973 obscenity United States v Nixon 1974 executive privilege Buckley v Valeo 1976 campaign finance Chevron v N R D C 1984 most cited administrative law case Bush v Gore 2000 presidential election Lawrence v Texas 2003 sodomy District of Columbia v Heller 2008 gun rights Citizens United v FEC 2010 campaign finance United States v Windsor 2013 same sex marriage Shelby County v Holder 2013 voting rights Obergefell v Hodges 2015 same sex marriage Bostock v Clayton County 2020 discrimination on LGBT workers McGirt v Oklahoma 2020 tribal reservation rights Dobbs v Jackson Women s Health Organization 2022 abortion New York State Rifle and Pistol Association v Bruen 2022 firearms Students for Fair Admissions v Harvard 2023 affirmative action Loper Bright Enterprises v Raimondo 2024 overruled Chevron deference ReferencesLawson Gary Seidman Guy 2001 When Did the Constitution Become Law Notre Dame Law Review 77 1 37 from the original on October 26 2020 Retrieved October 23 2017 U S Constitution Article III Section 2 This was narrowed by the Eleventh Amendment to exclude suits against states that are brought by persons who are not citizens of that state Turley Jonathan Essays on Article III Good Behavior Clause Heritage Guide to the Constitution Washington D C The Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on August 22 2020 Retrieved September 3 2018 WIPO International Patent Case Management Judicial Guide United States 2022 SSRN Electronic Journal P S Menell A A Schmitt doi 10 2139 ssrn 4106648 Pushaw Robert J Jr Essays on Article III Judicial Vesting Clause Heritage Guide to the Constitution Washington D C The Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on August 22 2020 Retrieved September 3 2018 Watson Bradley C S Essays on Article III Supreme Court Heritage Guide to the Constitution Washington D C The Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on August 22 2020 Retrieved September 3 2018 The Court as an Institution Washington D C Supreme Court of the United States from the original on December 7 2020 Retrieved September 3 2018 Supreme Court Nominations present 1789 Washington D C Office of the Secretary United States Senate from the original on December 9 2020 Retrieved September 3 2018 Hodak George February 1 2011 February 2 1790 Supreme Court Holds Inaugural Session abajournal com Chicago Illinois American Bar Association from the original on December 3 2020 Retrieved September 3 2018 Pigott Robert 2014 New York s Legal Landmarks A Guide to Legal Edifices Institutions Lore History and Curiosities on the City s Streets New York Attorney Street Editions p 7 ISBN 978 0 61599 283 9 Building History Washington D C Supreme Court of the United States from the original on December 5 2020 Retrieved September 3 2018 Ashmore Anne August 2006 Dates of Supreme Court decisions and arguments United States Reports volumes 2 107 1791 82 PDF Library Supreme Court of the United States PDF from the original on July 23 2011 Retrieved April 26 2009 Shugerman Jed A Six Three Rule Reviving Consensus and Deference on the Supreme Court Georgia Law Review 37 893 Irons Peter A People s History of the Supreme Court p 101 Penguin 2006 Scott Douglas Gerber ed 1998 Seriatim The Supreme Court Before John Marshall New York University Press p 3 ISBN 0 8147 3114 7 from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved October 31 2009 Finally many scholars cite the absence of a separate Supreme Court building as evidence that the early Court lacked prestige Manning John F 2004 The Eleventh Amendment and the Reading of Precise Constitutional Texts Yale Law Journal 113 8 1663 1750 doi 10 2307 4135780 JSTOR 4135780 from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved July 16 2019 Epps Garrett October 24 2004 Don t Do It Justices The Washington Post from the original on November 26 2020 Retrieved October 31 2009 The court s prestige has been hard won In the early 1800s Chief Justice John Marshall made the court respected The Supreme Court had first used the power of judicial review in the case Ware v Hylton 1796 wherein it overturned a state law that conflicted with a treaty between the United States and Great Britain Rosen Jeffrey July 5 2009 Black Robe Politics book review of Packing the Court by James MacGregor Burns The Washington Post from the original on August 14 2020 Retrieved October 31 2009 From the beginning Burns continues the Court has established its supremacy over the president and Congress because of Chief Justice John Marshall s brilliant political coup in Marbury v Madison 1803 asserting a power to strike down unconstitutional laws U S News amp World Report 2003 Archived from the original on September 20 2003 Retrieved October 31 2009 With his decision in Marbury v Madison Chief Justice John Marshall established the principle of judicial review an important addition to the system of checks and balances created to prevent any one branch of the Federal Government from becoming too powerful A Law repugnant to the Constitution is void Sloan Cliff McKean David February 21 2009 Why Marbury V Madison Still Matters Newsweek from the original on August 2 2009 Retrieved October 31 2009 More than 200 years after the high court ruled the decision in that landmark case continues to resonate The Constitution in Law Its Phases Construed by the Federal Supreme Court PDF The New York Times February 27 1893 PDF from the original on December 17 2020 Retrieved October 31 2009 The decision in Martin vs Hunter s Lessee is the authority on which lawyers and Judges have rested the doctrine that where there is in question in the highest court of a State and decided adversely to the validity of a State statute such claim is reviewable by the Supreme Court Ginsburg Ruth Bader Stevens John P Souter David Breyer Stephen December 13 2000 USA Today Archived from the original on May 25 2010 Retrieved December 8 2019 Rarely has this Court rejected outright an interpretation of state law by a state high court The Virginia court refused to obey this Court s Fairfax s Devisee mandate to enter judgment for the British subject s successor in interest That refusal led to the Court s pathmarking decision in Martin v Hunter s Lessee 1 Wheat 304 1816 Decisions of the Supreme Court Historic Decrees Issued in One Hundred and Eleven Years PDF The New York Times February 3 1901 PDF from the original on December 5 2020 Retrieved October 31 2009 Very important also was the decision in Martin vs Hunter s lessee in which the court asserted its authority to overrule within certain limits the decisions of the highest State courts The Washington Post October 2 2000 Archived from the original on April 29 2011 Retrieved October 31 2009 According to the Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States Marshall s most important innovation was to persuade the other justices to stop seriatim opinions each issuing one so that the court could speak in a single voice Since the mid 1940s however there s been a significant increase in individual concurring and dissenting opinions Slater Dan April 18 2008 Justice Stevens on the Death Penalty A Promise of Fairness Unfulfilled The Wall Street Journal from the original on August 14 2020 Retrieved October 31 2009 The first Chief Justice John Marshall set out to do away with seriatim opinions a practice originating in England in which each appellate judge writes an opinion in ruling on a single case You may have read old tort cases in law school with such opinions Marshall sought to do away with this practice to help build the Court into a coequal branch Suddath Claire December 19 2008 Time Archived from the original on December 19 2008 Retrieved October 31 2009 Congress tried the process again in 1804 when it voted to impeach Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase on charges of bad conduct As a judge Chase was overzealous and notoriously unfair But Chase never committed a crime he was just incredibly bad at his job The Senate acquitted him on every count Greenhouse Linda April 10 1996 Rehnquist Joins Fray on Rulings Defending Judicial Independence The New York Times from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved October 31 2009 the 1805 Senate trial of Justice Samuel Chase who had been impeached by the House of Representatives This decision by the Senate was enormously important in securing the kind of judicial independence contemplated by Article III of the Constitution Chief Justice Rehnquist said Edward Keynes Randall K Miller 1989 The Court vs Congress Prayer Busing and Abortion Duke University Press ISBN 0 8223 0968 8 from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved October 31 2009 page 115 Grier maintained that Congress has plenary power to limit the federal courts jurisdiction Ifill Sherrilyn A May 27 2009 Sotomayor s Great Legal Mind Long Ago Defeated Race Gender Nonsense U S News amp World Report Retrieved October 31 2009 But his decision in Dred Scott v Sandford doomed thousands of black slaves and freedmen to a stateless existence within the United States until the passage of the 14th Amendment Justice Taney s coldly self fulfilling statement in Dred Scott that blacks had no rights which the white man was bound to respect has ensured his place in history not as a brilliant jurist but as among the most insensitive Irons Peter 2006 A People s History of the Supreme Court The Men and Women Whose Cases and Decisions Have Shaped Our Constitution United States Penguin Books pp 176 177 ISBN 978 0 14 303738 5 The rhetorical battle that followed the Dred Scott decision as we know later erupted into the gunfire and bloodshed of the Civil War p 176 his opinion Taney s touched off an explosive reaction on both sides of the slavery issue p 177 Exploring Constitutional Conflicts October 31 2009 Archived from the original on November 22 2009 Retrieved October 31 2009 The term substantive due process is often used to describe the approach first used in Lochner the finding of liberties not explicitly protected by the text of the Constitution to be impliedly protected by the liberty clause of the Fourteenth Amendment In the 1960s long after the Court repudiated its Lochner line of cases substantive due process became the basis for protecting personal rights such as the right of privacy the right to maintain intimate family relationships Adair v United States 208 U S 161 Cornell University Law School 1908 from the original on April 24 2012 Retrieved October 31 2009 No 293 Argued October 29 30 1907 Decided January 27 1908 Bodenhamer David J James W Ely 1993 The Bill of Rights in modern America Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press p 245 ISBN 978 0 253 35159 3 from the original on November 18 2020 Retrieved October 29 2020 of what eventually became the incorporation doctrine by which various federal Bill of Rights guarantees were held to be implicit in the Fourteenth Amendment due process or equal protection White Edward Douglass Opinion for the Court Arver v U S 245 U S 366 from the original on May 1 2011 Retrieved March 30 2011 Finally as we are unable to conceive upon what theory the exaction by government from the citizen of the performance of his supreme and noble duty of contributing to the defense of the rights and honor of the nation as the result of a war declared by the great representative body of the people can be said to be the imposition of involuntary servitude in violation of the prohibitions of the Thirteenth Amendment we are constrained to the conclusion that the contention to that effect is refuted by its mere statement Siegan Bernard H 1987 The Supreme Court s Constitution Transaction Publishers p 146 ISBN 978 0 88738 671 8 from the original on February 20 2021 Retrieved October 31 2009 In the 1923 case of Adkins v Children s Hospital the court invalidated a classification based on gender as inconsistent with the substantive due process requirements of the fifth amendment At issue was congressional legislation providing for the fixing of minimum wages for women and minors in the District of Columbia p 146 Biskupic Joan March 29 2005 Supreme Court gets makeover USA Today from the original on June 5 2009 Retrieved October 31 2009 The building is getting its first renovation since its completion in 1935 Justice Roberts September 21 2005 Responses of Judge John G Roberts Jr to the Written Questions of Senator Joseph R Biden PDF The Washington Post PDF from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved October 31 2009 I agree that West Coast Hotel Co v Parrish correctly overruled Adkins Lochner era cases Adkins in particular evince an expansive view of the judicial role inconsistent with what I believe to be the appropriately more limited vision of the Framers Lipsky Seth October 22 2009 All the News That s Fit to Subsidize The Wall Street Journal from the original on December 19 2013 Retrieved October 31 2009 He was a farmer in Ohio during the 1930s when subsidies were brought in for farmers With subsidies came restrictions on how much wheat one could grow even Filburn learned in a landmark Supreme Court case Wickard v Filburn 1942 wheat grown on his modest farm Cohen Adam December 14 2004 What s New in the Legal World A Growing Campaign to Undo the New Deal The New York Times from the original on March 7 2013 Retrieved October 31 2009 Some prominent states rights conservatives were asking the court to overturn Wickard v Filburn a landmark ruling that laid out an expansive view of Congress s power to legislate in the public interest Supporters of states rights have always blamed Wickard for paving the way for strong federal action Justice Black Dies at 85 Served on Court 34 Years The New York Times United Press International UPI September 25 1971 from the original on October 15 2009 Retrieved October 31 2009 Justice Black developed his controversial theory first stated in a lengthy scholarly dissent in 1947 that the due process clause applied the first eight amendments of the Bill of Rights to the states U S News amp World Report May 17 1954 Archived from the original on November 6 2009 Retrieved October 31 2009 On May 17 1954 U S Supreme Court Justice Earl Warren delivered the unanimous ruling in the landmark civil rights case Brown v Board of Education of Topeka Kansas State sanctioned segregation of public schools was a violation of the 14th amendment and was therefore unconstitutional This historic decision marked the end of the separate but equal and served as a catalyst for the expanding civil rights movement Time July 15 1966 Archived from the original on October 13 2009 Retrieved October 31 2009 The biggest legal milestone in this field was last year s Supreme Court decision in Griswold v Connecticut which overthrew the state s law against the use of contraceptives as an invasion of marital privacy and for the first time declared the right of privacy to be derived from the Constitution itself Gibbs Nancy December 9 1991 Time Archived from the original on November 2 2007 Retrieved October 31 2009 In the landmark 1962 case Engel v Vitale the high court threw out a brief nondenominational prayer composed by state officials that was recommended for use in New York State schools It is no part of the business of government ruled the court to compose official prayers for any group of the American people to recite Mattox William R Jr Trinko Katrina August 17 2009 USA Today Archived from the original on August 20 2009 Retrieved October 31 2009 Public schools need not proselytize indeed must not in teaching students about the Good Book In Abington School District v Schempp decided in 1963 the Supreme Court stated that study of the Bible or of religion when presented objectively as part of a secular program of education was permissible under the First Amendment Time June 18 1965 Archived from the original on April 23 2008 Retrieved October 31 2009 Last week in a 7 to 2 decision the court refused for the first time to give retroactive effect to a great Bill of Rights decision Mapp v Ohio 1961 Time April 16 1965 Archived from the original on May 28 2010 Retrieved October 31 2009 Sixth Amendment s right to counsel Gideon v Wainwright in 1963 the court said flatly in 1904 The Sixth Amendment does not apply to proceedings in state criminal courts But in the light of Gideon ruled Black statements generally declaring that the Sixth Amendment does not apply to states can no longer be regarded as law Guilt and Mr Meese The New York Times January 31 1987 from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved October 31 2009 1966 Miranda v Arizona decision That s the famous decision that made confessions inadmissible as evidence unless an accused person has been warned by police of the right to silence and to a lawyer and waived it Graglia Lino A October 2008 PDF Engage 9 3 Archived from the original PDF on June 21 2017 Retrieved February 6 2016 Earl M Maltz The Coming of the Nixon Court The 1972 Term and the Transformation of Constitutional Law University Press of Kansas 2016 O Connor Karen January 22 2009 Roe v Wade On Anniversary Abortion Is out of the Spotlight U S News amp World Report from the original on March 26 2009 Retrieved October 31 2009 The shocker however came in 1973 when the Court by a vote of 7 to 2 relied on Griswold s basic underpinnings to rule that a Texas law prohibiting abortions in most situations was unconstitutional invalidating the laws of most states Relying on a woman s right to privacy Time July 10 1978 Archived from the original on October 14 2010 Retrieved October 31 2009 Split almost exactly down the middle the Supreme Court last week offered a Solomonic compromise It said that rigid quotas based solely on race were forbidden but it also said that race might legitimately be an element in judging students for admission to universities It thus approved the principle of affirmative action Time to Rethink Buckley v Valeo The New York Times November 12 1998 from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved October 31 2009 Buckley v Valeo The nation s political system has suffered ever since from that decision which held that mandatory limits on campaign spending unconstitutionally limit free speech The decision did much to promote the explosive growth of campaign contributions from special interests and to enhance the advantage incumbents enjoy over underfunded challengers Supreme Court Justice Rehnquist s Key Decisions The Washington Post June 29 1972 from the original on May 25 2010 Retrieved October 31 2009 Furman v Georgia Rehnquist dissents from the Supreme Court conclusion that many state laws on capital punishment are capricious and arbitrary and therefore unconstitutional History of the Court in Hall Ely Jr Grossman and Wiecek eds The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States Oxford University Press 1992 ISBN 0 19 505835 6 A Supreme Revelation The Wall Street Journal April 19 2008 from the original on August 24 2017 Retrieved October 31 2009 Thirty two years ago Justice John Paul Stevens sided with the majority in a famous never mind ruling by the Supreme Court Gregg v Georgia in 1976 overturned Furman v Georgia which had declared the death penalty unconstitutional only four years earlier Greenhouse Linda January 8 2009 The Chief Justice on the Spot The New York Times from the original on May 12 2011 Retrieved October 31 2009 The federalism issue at the core of the new case grows out of a series of cases from 1997 to 2003 in which the Rehnquist court applied a new level of scrutiny to Congressional action enforcing the guarantees of the Reconstruction amendments Greenhouse Linda September 4 2005 William H Rehnquist Chief Justice of Supreme Court Is Dead at 80 The New York Times from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved October 31 2009 United States v Lopez in 1995 raised the stakes in the debate over federal authority even higher The decision declared unconstitutional a Federal law the Gun Free School Zones Act of 1990 that made it a federal crime to carry a gun within 1 000 feet of a school Greenhouse Linda June 12 2005 The Rehnquist Court and Its Imperiled States Rights Legacy The New York Times from the original on May 5 2011 Retrieved October 31 2009 Intrastate activity that was not essentially economic was beyond Congress s reach under the Commerce Clause Chief Justice Rehnquist wrote for the 5 to 4 majority in United States v Morrison Greenhouse Linda March 22 2005 Inmates Who Follow Satanism and Wicca Find Unlikely Ally The New York Times from the original on March 26 2014 Retrieved October 31 2009 His Rehnquist s reference was to a landmark 1997 decision City of Boerne v Flores in which the court ruled that the predecessor to the current law the Religious Freedom Restoration Act exceeded Congress s authority and was unconstitutional as applied to the states Amar Vikram David July 27 2005 Casing John Roberts The New York Times from the original on October 14 2008 Retrieved October 31 2009 Seminole Tribe v Florida 1996 In this seemingly technical 11th Amendment dispute about whether states can be sued in federal courts Justice O Connor joined four others to override Congress s will and protect state prerogatives even though the text of the Constitution contradicts this result Greenhouse Linda April 1 1999 Justices Seem Ready to Tilt More Toward States in Federalism The New York Times from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved October 31 2009 The argument in this case Alden v Maine No 98 436 proceeded on several levels simultaneously On the surface On a deeper level the argument was a continuation of the Court s struggle over an even more basic issue the Government s substantive authority over the states Lindenberger Michael A Time Archived from the original on June 29 2008 Retrieved October 31 2009 The decision in the Lawrence v Texas case overturned convictions against two Houston men whom police had arrested after busting into their home and finding them engaged in sex And for the first time in their lives thousands of gay men and women who lived in states where sodomy had been illegal were free to be gay without being criminals Justice Sotomayor July 16 2009 USA Today Archived from the original on August 22 2009 Retrieved October 31 2009 The court s decision in Planned Parenthood v Casey reaffirmed the court holding of Roe That is the precedent of the court and settled in terms of the holding of the court Kamiya Gary July 5 2001 Against the Law Salon Retrieved November 21 2012 the remedy was far more harmful than the problem By stopping the recount the high court clearly denied many thousands of voters who cast legal votes as defined by established Florida law their constitutional right to have their votes counted It cannot be a legitimate use of law to disenfranchise legal voters when recourse is available Krauthammer Charles December 18 2000 Time Archived from the original on November 22 2010 Retrieved October 31 2009 Re enter the Rehnquist court Amid the chaos somebody had to play Daddy the Supreme Court eschewed subtlety this time and bluntly stopped the Florida Supreme Court in its tracks and stayed its willfulness By mind you MacDougall Ian November 1 2020 Why Bush v Gore Still Matters in 2020 ProPublica Retrieved March 18 2024 Payson Denney Wade October 31 2015 So who really won What the Bush v Gore studies showed CNN Politics CNN Retrieved March 18 2024 Babington Charles Baker Peter September 30 2005 Roberts Confirmed as 17th Chief Justice The Washington Post from the original on January 16 2010 Retrieved November 1 2009 John Glover Roberts Jr was sworn in yesterday as the 17th chief justice of the United States enabling President Bush to put his stamp on the Supreme Court for decades to come even as he prepares to name a second nominee to the nine member court Greenhouse Linda July 1 2007 In Steps Big and Small Supreme Court Moved Right The New York Times from the original on April 17 2009 Retrieved November 1 2009 It was the Supreme Court that conservatives had long yearned for and that liberals feared This was a more conservative court sometimes muscularly so sometimes more tentatively its majority sometimes differing on methodology but agreeing on the outcome in cases big and small Liptak Adam July 24 2010 Court Under Roberts Is Most Conservative in Decades The New York Times from the original on August 24 2021 Retrieved February 1 2019 When Chief Justice John G Roberts Jr and his colleagues on the Supreme Court left for their summer break at the end of June they marked a milestone the Roberts court had just completed its fifth term In those five years the court not only moved to the right but also became the most conservative one in living memory based on an analysis of four sets of political science data Caplan Lincoln October 10 2016 A new era for the Supreme Court the transformative potential of a shift in even one seat The American Prospect from the original on February 2 2019 Retrieved February 1 2019 The Court has gotten increasingly more conservative with each of the Republican appointed chief justices Warren E Burger 1969 1986 William H Rehnquist 1986 2005 and John G Roberts Jr 2005 present All told Republican presidents have appointed 12 of the 16 most recent justices including the chiefs During Roberts s first decade as chief the Court was the most conservative in more than a half century and likely the most conservative since the 1930s Savage Charlie July 14 2009 Respecting Precedent or Settled Law Unless It s Not Settled The New York Times from the original on May 11 2011 Retrieved November 1 2009 Gonzales v Carhart in which the Supreme Court narrowly upheld a federal ban on the late term abortion procedure opponents call partial birth abortion to be settled law A Bad Day for Democracy The Christian Science Monitor January 22 2010 from the original on January 25 2010 Retrieved January 22 2010 Barnes Robert October 1 2009 Justices to Decide if State Gun Laws Violate Rights The Washington Post from the original on April 23 2018 Retrieved November 1 2009 The landmark 2008 decision to strike down the District of Columbia s ban on handgun possession was the first time the court had said the amendment grants an individual right to own a gun for self defense But the 5 to 4 opinion in District of Columbia v Heller Greenhouse Linda April 18 2008 Justice Stevens Renounces Capital Punishment The New York Times from the original on December 11 2008 Retrieved November 1 2009 His renunciation of capital punishment in the lethal injection case Baze v Rees was likewise low key and undramatic Greenhouse Linda June 26 2008 Supreme Court Rejects Death Penalty for Child Rape The New York Times from the original on September 13 2019 Retrieved November 1 2009 The death penalty is unconstitutional as a punishment for the rape of a child a sharply divided Supreme Court ruled Wednesday The 5 to 4 decision overturned death penalty laws in Louisiana and five other states McGinnis John O Essays on Article II Appointments Clause The Heritage Guide To The Constitution Heritage Foundation Archived from the original on August 22 2020 Retrieved June 19 2019 Qualifications To Become A Supreme Court Justice The Law Dictionary from the original on July 8 2023 Retrieved July 8 2023 Frequently Asked Questions General Information Supreme Court of the United States www supremecourt gov from the original on July 8 2023 Retrieved July 8 2023 United States Senate Nominations from the original on April 7 2019 Retrieved February 16 2018 Brunner Jim March 24 2017 Sen Patty Murray will oppose Neil Gorsuch for Supreme Court The Seattle Times from the original on April 10 2017 Retrieved April 9 2017 In a statement Friday morning Murray cited Republicans refusal to confirm or even seriously consider President Obama s nomination of Judge Merrick Garland a similarly well qualified jurist and went on to lambaste President Trump s conduct in his first few months in office And Murray added she s deeply troubled by Gorsuch s extreme conservative perspective on women s health citing his inability to state a clear position on Roe v Wade the landmark abortion legalization decision and his comments about the Hobby Lobby decision allowing employers to refuse to provide birth control coverage Flegenheimer Matt April 6 2017 Senate Republicans Deploy Nuclear Option to Clear Path for Gorsuch The New York Times from the original on October 2 2018 Retrieved April 7 2017 After Democrats held together Thursday morning and filibustered President Trump s nominee Republicans voted to lower the threshold for advancing Supreme Court nominations from 60 votes to a simple majority U S Senate Supreme Court Nominations Present 1789 United States Senate from the original on December 9 2020 Retrieved April 8 2017 See 5 U S C 2902 28 U S C 4 If two justices are commissioned on the same date then the oldest one has precedence Mears Bill August 6 2010 Facts about Supreme Court oath ceremonies CNN from the original on May 17 2022 Retrieved May 17 2022 Satola James W December 2017 Mr Justice Stanton PDF The Federal Lawyer Arlington Virginia Federal Bar Association pp 5 9 76 77 ISSN 1080 675X PDF from the original on June 22 2022 Retrieved May 17 2022 Justices 1789 to Present Supreme Court of the United States from the original on April 15 2010 Retrieved May 17 2022 Balkin Jack M Jurist Archived from the original on December 18 2007 Retrieved February 13 2008 The Stakes of the 2016 Election Just Got Much Much Higher The Huffington Post from the original on February 14 2016 Retrieved February 14 2016 McMillion Barry J October 19 2015 Supreme Court Appointment Process Senate Debate and Confirmation Vote PDF Congressional Research Service PDF from the original on December 28 2015 Retrieved February 14 2016 Hall Kermit L ed 1992 Appendix Two Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States Oxford University Press pp 965 971 ISBN 978 0 19 505835 2 See Evans v Stephens 387 F 3d 1220 11th Cir 2004 which concerned the recess appointment of William H Pryor Jr Concurring in denial of certiorari Justice Stevens observed that the case involved the first such appointment of an Article III judge in nearly a half century 544 U S 942 2005 Stevens J concurring in denial of certiorari Fisher Louis September 5 2001 Recess Appointments of Federal Judges PDF CRS Report for Congress Congressional Research Service RL31112 16 PDF from the original on April 17 2020 Retrieved August 6 2010 Resolved That it is the sense of the Senate that the making of recess appointments to the Supreme Court of the United States may not be wholly consistent with the best interests of the Supreme Court the nominee who may be involved the litigants before the Court nor indeed the people of the United States and that such appointments therefore should not be made except under unusual circumstances and for the purpose of preventing or ending a demonstrable breakdown in the administration of the Court s business The resolution passed by a vote of 48 to 37 mainly along party lines Democrats supported the resolution 48 4 and Republicans opposed it 33 0 National Relations Board v Noel Canning et al PDF pp 34 35 PDF from the original on December 12 2020 Retrieved June 27 2017 The Court continued In our view however the pro forma sessions count as sessions not as periods of recess We hold that for purposes of the Recess Appointments Clause the Senate is in session when it says it is provided that under its own rules it retains the capacity to transact Senate business The Senate met that standard here Later the opinion states For these reasons we conclude that we must give great weight to the Senate s own determination of when it is and when it is not in session But our deference to the Senate cannot be absolute When the Senate is without the capacity to act under its own rules it is not in session even if it so declares Obama Won t Appoint Scalia Replacement While Senate Is Out This Week NPR from the original on December 3 2020 Retrieved January 25 2017 Ziblatt Daniel Levitsky Steven September 5 2023 How American Democracy Fell So Far Behind The Atlantic from the original on September 20 2023 Retrieved September 20 2023 Sabato Larry September 26 2007 It s Time to Reshape the Constitution and Make America a Fairer Country The Huffington Post from the original on May 31 2010 Retrieved October 23 2009 Greenhouse Linda September 10 2007 New Focus on the Effects of Life Tenure The New York Times from the original on July 26 2010 Retrieved October 10 2009 Kakutani Michiko July 6 2009 Appointees Who Really Govern America The New York Times from the original on May 12 2011 Retrieved October 27 2009 Levinson Sanford February 9 2009 Supreme court prognosis Ruth Bader Ginsburg s surgery for pancreatic cancer highlights why US supreme court justices shouldn t serve life terms The Guardian Manchester from the original on September 6 2013 Retrieved October 10 2009 See also Arthur D Hellman Reining in the Supreme Court Are Term Limits the Answer in Roger C Cramton and Paul D Carrington eds Reforming the Court Term Limits for Supreme Court Justices Carolina Academic Press 2006 p 291 Richard Epstein Mandatory Retirement for Supreme Court Justices in Roger C Cramton and Paul D Carrington eds Reforming the Court Term Limits for Supreme Court Justices Carolina Academic Press 2006 p 415 Brian Opeskin Models of Judicial Tenure Reconsidering Life Limits Age Limits and Term Limits for Judges Oxford J Legal Studies 2015 35 627 663 Hamilton Alexander June 14 1788 The Federalist No 78 Independent Journal from the original on January 11 2010 Retrieved October 28 2009 and that as nothing can contribute so much to its firmness and independence as permanency in office this quality may therefore be justly regarded as an indispensable ingredient in its constitution and in a great measure as the citadel of the public justice and the public security Prakash Saikrishna Smith Steven D 2006 Mis Understanding Good Behavior Tenure The Yale Law Journal 116 1 159 169 doi 10 2307 20455716 JSTOR 20455716 S2CID 52212217 Garnett Richard W Strauss David A Article III Section One Philadelphia Pennsylvania National Constitution Center from the original on April 29 2022 Retrieved April 29 2022 Federal Judicial Center fjc gov Archived from the original on September 15 2012 Retrieved March 18 2012 Appel Jacob M August 22 2009 Anticipating the Incapacitated Justice The Huffington Post from the original on August 27 2009 Retrieved August 23 2009 Impeachment Trial of Justice Samuel Chase 1804 05 Washington D C Senate Historical Office from the original on May 3 2022 Retrieved April 29 2022 Yarbrough Tinsley E 1992 John Marshall Harlan Great Dissenter of the Warren Court Oxford University Press p 334 ISBN 0 19 506090 3 from the original on November 16 2023 Retrieved April 12 2022 Comiskey Michael 2008 The Supreme Court Appointment Process Lessons from Filling the Rehnquist and O Connor Vacancies PS Political Science and Politics 41 2 355 358 doi 10 1017 S1049096508080542 JSTOR 20452185 S2CID 154590128 The Court as an Institution Washington D C Supreme Court of the United States from the original on December 7 2020 Retrieved May 6 2022 Federal Judiciary Act 1789 November 5 2020 at the Wayback Machine National Archives and Records Administration retrieved September 12 2017 Judges on Horseback PDF U S Courts Library 8th Circuit PDF from the original on November 3 2020 Retrieved April 4 2021 Why does the Supreme Court have nine Justices Constitution Center from the original on December 14 2021 Retrieved December 14 2021 16 Stat 44 Mintz S 2007 Digital History University of Houston Archived from the original on May 5 2008 Retrieved October 27 2009 Hodak George 2007 February 5 1937 FDR Unveils Court Packing Plan ABAjournal com American Bar Association from the original on August 15 2011 Retrieved January 29 2009 TSHA Court Packing Plan of 1937 from the original on May 6 2021 Retrieved April 4 2021 Some Democrats Want to Make the Supreme Court Bigger Here s the History of Court Packing October 17 2019 from the original on February 1 2021 Retrieved April 4 2021 How FDR lost his brief war on the Supreme Court National Constitution Center from the original on March 29 2021 Retrieved April 4 2021 Biskupic Joan September 26 2020 Analysis The Supreme Court hasn t been this conservative since the 1930s CNN Politics CNN Retrieved March 20 2024 Totenberg Nina July 5 2022 The Supreme Court is the most conservative in 90 years PBS Retrieved March 19 2024 Pelosi has no plans to bring bill expanding Supreme Court to House floor CBS News April 15 2021 from the original on June 25 2022 Retrieved June 25 2022 Is the Supreme Court confirmation process irreparably broken Some senators say yes NBC News April 2 2022 from the original on June 25 2022 Retrieved June 25 2022 Kruzel John December 7 2021 Biden Supreme Court study panel unanimously approves final report The Hill from the original on October 8 2022 Retrieved October 8 2022 Litt David 2020 Democracy in One Book or Less How It Works Why It Doesn t and Why Fixing It Is Easier Than You Think Ecco p 352 ISBN 978 0 06 287936 3 Turley Jonathan February 1 2017 Op Ed Battling over Neil Gorsuch is beside the point The Supreme Court needs an institutional overhaul Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 22 2023 Turley Jonathan April 4 2019 Op Ed Make the Supreme Court bigger but not the Democrats way Los Angeles Times Retrieved February 22 2023 Cathey Libby Senate confirms Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to Supreme Court in historic vote ABC News from the original on May 15 2022 Retrieved April 7 2022 Current Members www supremecourt gov Washington D C Supreme Court of the United States from the original on July 21 2011 Retrieved October 21 2018 Walthr Matthew April 21 2014 The American Spectator Archived from the original on May 22 2017 Retrieved June 15 2017 via The ANNOTICO Reports DeMarco Megan February 14 2008 The Times Trenton New Jersey Archived from the original on July 30 2017 Retrieved June 15 2017 Neil Gorsuch was raised Catholic but attends an Episcopalian church It is unclear if he considers himself a Catholic or a Protestant Burke Daniel March 22 2017 What is Neil Gorsuch s religion It s complicated CNN from the original on June 25 2017 Retrieved April 7 2017 Springer said she doesn t know whether Gorsuch considers himself a Catholic or an Episcopalian I have no evidence that Judge Gorsuch considers himself an Episcopalian and likewise no evidence that he does not Gorsuch s younger brother J J said he too has no idea how he would fill out a form He was raised in the Catholic Church and confirmed in the Catholic Church as an adolescent but he has been attending Episcopal services for the past 15 or so years adherents com January 31 2006 Archived from the original on April 5 2001 Retrieved July 9 2010 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Segal Jeffrey A Spaeth Harold J 2002 The Supreme Court and the Attitudinal Model Revisited Cambridge Univ Press p 183 ISBN 978 0 521 78971 4 Schumacher Alvin Roger B Taney Encyclopaedia Britannica from the original on August 24 2017 Retrieved May 3 2017 He was the first Roman Catholic to serve on the Supreme Court Supreme Court of the United States Archived from the original on March 20 2017 Retrieved May 3 2017 Biden s court pick Ketanji Brown Jackson has navigated a path few Black women have The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 from the original on April 30 2021 Retrieved July 8 2022 Mark Sherman Is Supreme Court in need of regional diversity August 14 2020 at the Wayback Machine May 1 2010 Shane Scott Eder Steve Ruiz Rebecca R Liptak Adam Savage Charlie Protess Ben July 15 2018 Influential Judge Loyal Friend Conservative Warrior and D C Insider The New York Times p A1 from the original on July 16 2018 Retrieved July 16 2018 O Brien David M 2003 Storm Center The Supreme Court in American Politics 6th ed W W Norton amp Company p 46 ISBN 978 0 393 93218 8 de Vogue Ariane October 22 2016 Clarence Thomas Supreme Court legacy CNN from the original on April 2 2017 Retrieved May 3 2017 The Four Justices Smithsonian Institution October 21 2015 from the original on August 20 2016 Retrieved May 3 2017 Preston Matthew April 15 2022 Ketanji Brown Jackson s Historic Rise Leaves Just One Military Veteran on the Supreme Court USA Today from the original on April 15 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Shurtleff Kathy May 12 2021 In Celebration of Armed Forces Day Washington D C Supreme Court Historical Society from the original on October 10 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Hasen Richard L May 11 2019 Polarization and the Judiciary Annual Review of Political Science 22 1 261 276 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 051317 125141 ISSN 1094 2939 Harris Allison P Sen Maya May 11 2019 Bias and Judging Annual Review of Political Science 22 1 241 259 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 051617 090650 ISSN 1094 2939 Devins Neal Baum Lawrence 2017 Split definitive How party polarization turned the Supreme Court into a partisan court The Supreme Court Review 2016 1 University of Chicago Law School 301 365 doi 10 1086 691096 S2CID 142355294 Retrieved November 13 2022 Baum Lawrence Devins Neal 2019 The company they keep How partisan divisions came to the Supreme Court PDF Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0190278052 Liptak Adam February 25 2022 Judge Jackson s Rulings Detailed Methodical and Leaning Left The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 from the original on May 3 2023 Retrieved May 3 2023 Betz Bradford March 2 2019 Chief Justice Roberts recent votes raise doubts about conservative revolution on Supreme Court Fox News from the original on November 18 2020 Retrieved April 20 2019 Erwin Chemerinsky a law professor at the University of California at Berkeley told Bloomberg that Roberts recent voting record may indicate that he is taking his role as the median justice very seriously and that the recent period was perhaps the beginning of his being the swing justice Roeder Oliver October 6 2018 How Kavanaugh will change the Supreme Court FiveThirtyEight from the original on December 7 2020 Retrieved April 20 2019 Based on what we know about measuring the ideology of justices and judges the Supreme Court will soon take a hard and quick turn to the right It s a new path that is likely to last for years Chief Justice John Roberts a George W Bush appointee will almost certainly become the new median justice defining the court s new ideological center Roche Darragh October 5 2021 Brett Kavanaugh Is Supreme Court s Ideological Median as New Term Begins Newsweek from the original on October 30 2021 Retrieved October 30 2021 Thomson DeVeaux Amelia Bronner Laura July 5 2022 Just How Sharp Was The Supreme Court s Rightward Turn This Term FiveThirtyEight Graphics by Elena Mejia from the original on February 9 2023 Retrieved February 8 2023 Williams Ryan C September 19 2021 Opinion Supreme Court justices upset at perceptions of partisanship need to look in the mirror NBC News from the original on February 8 2023 Retrieved February 8 2023 Lazarus Simon March 23 2022 How to rein in partisan Supreme Court justices Brookings from the original on February 8 2023 Retrieved February 8 2023 Sandra Day O Connor first woman on the Supreme Court withdraws from public life CNBC October 22 2018 from the original on June 30 2022 Retrieved June 30 2022 For more than a decade after leaving the court in 2006 O Connor kept up an active schedule serving as a visiting federal appeals court judge speaking on issues she cared about and founding her own education organization But the 88 year old for more than two decades often the deciding vote in important cases is now fully retired David N Atkinson Leaving the Bench University Press of Kansas 1999 ISBN 0 7006 0946 6 Greenhouse Linda September 9 2010 An Invisible Chief Justice The New York Times from the original on November 25 2020 Retrieved September 9 2010 Had O Connor anticipated that the chief justice would not serve out the next Supreme Court term she told me after his death she would have delayed her own retirement for a year rather than burden the court with two simultaneous vacancies Her reason for leaving was that her husband suffering from Alzheimer s disease needed her care at home Ward Artemus 2003 Deciding to Leave The Politics of Retirement from the United States Supreme Court PDF SUNY Press p 9 ISBN 978 0 7914 5651 4 PDF from the original on February 17 2021 Retrieved January 31 2013 One byproduct of the increased retirement benefit provisions in 1954 however has been a dramatic rise in the number of justices engaging in succession politics by trying to time their departures to coincide with a compatible president The most recent departures have been partisan some more blatantly than others and have bolstered arguments to reform the process A second byproduct has been an increase in justices staying on the Court past their ability to adequately contribute Stolzenberg Ross M Lindgren James May 2010 Retirement and Death in Office of U S Supreme Court Justices Demography 47 2 269 298 doi 10 1353 dem 0 0100 PMC 3000028 PMID 20608097 If the incumbent president is of the same party as the president who nominated the justice to the Court and if the incumbent president is in the first two years of a four year presidential term then the justice has odds of resignation that are about 2 6 times higher than when these two conditions are not met Judicial Compensation United States Courts Retrieved February 25 2021 See for example Sandra Day O Connor How the first woman on the Supreme Court became its most influential justice by Joan Biskupic Harper Collins 2005 p 105 Also Rookie on the Bench The Role of the Junior Justice by Clare Cushman 2008 Journal of Supreme Court History 32 3 282 296 US Senator John McCain October 24 2009 Archived from the original on October 30 2009 Retrieved October 24 2009 Visiting the Court Supreme Court of the United States March 18 2010 from the original on March 22 2010 Retrieved March 19 2010 docstoc October 24 2009 Archived from the original on August 21 2016 Retrieved October 24 2009 The Supreme Court Historical Society October 24 2009 Archived from the original on February 3 2014 Retrieved January 31 2014 Calendar Info Key SupremeCourt gov from the original on June 24 2023 Retrieved July 6 2023 28 U S C 1251 a Liptak Adam March 21 2016 Supreme Court Declines to Hear Challenge to Colorado s Marijuana Laws The New York Times from the original on May 31 2017 Retrieved April 27 2017 28 U S C 1251 b United States v Shipp 203 U S 563 Supreme Court of the United States 1906, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library, article, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games, mobile, phone, android, ios, apple, mobile phone, samsung, iphone, xiomi, xiaomi, redmi, honor, oppo, nokia, sonya, mi, pc, web, computer
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