And here are the most startling statistics that emerge from the final list of the 
justices voting patterns:

Number of 5-4 opinions: 13.
Number of 5-4 opinions in which Justice O'Connor is in the majority: 13. N
umber of dissenting opinions by Justice O'Connor: 0.



Dahlia Lithwick comments:

I couldn't agree more that Justice O'Connor is the lynchpin as far as the current 
court is concerned, and the primary reason for the amazing turn of events this week. 
It's incredibly telling that she sided one way in each of the two Michigan cases, even 
where... it's ultimately very hard to reconcile the two, except in very cosmetic ways. 
While the statistics you cite are indeed intriguing, it's worth recalling that this is 
a pattern that's been holding fast for several years now: O'Connor as decisive fifth 
vote, O'Connor never being on the losing end of a case, O'Connor never authoring a 
dissent, O'Connor concurring in the holding but on narrower grounds. It's been said 
(and said, and said) that Sandra Day O'Connor is the most powerful woman in America. I 
think we're only just starting to see why.

O'Connor isn't merely the moderate fulcrum on a court that is otherwise pretty 
consistently polarized 4-4. She is also the justice willing to write the narrowest 
opinion, frequently confining her holding to the facts of the case. In this way she 
can almost always find 4 votes that share her viewpoint, if not her reasoning, without 
signing off on their broad principles of law. O'Connor is often criticized for this 
narrowness of scope: She wants to see fairness and justice done in each case, more 
than she worries about creating an elegant structure of precedent for future courts to 
follow. And because she is so extraordinarily placed right now, she is able to turn 
whole bodies of law into the law of "Sandy Says."

For instance, O'Connor changed the Roe v. Wade test for permissible abortions into her 
own "undue burden" test.  Now states can regulate abortion, so long as such 
regulations do not unduly burden the mother. Who's to say what's an undue burden? 
Sandy says. O'Connor's created the same unknowable test for affirmative action with 
her decision in the Michigan case: Now schools can use race to achieve a "critical 
mass" of diversity in a class. Who's to say what constitutes a critical mass? Or what 
is a permissible use of race to achieve it? Sandy says. Moreover, in the same case 
O'Connor announced that affirmative action programs should sunset away in the future. 
But who's to say when the world will be sufficiently diversified? Sandy says.

You have long contended, and I have always agreed, that the trick of the Rehnquist 
court is that they are not necessarily for states rights, or for Congress, or for the 
individual, per se. They are for their own power to pick and choose which of the above 
institutions they will privilege on any given day. It seems O'Connor does that both as 
a member of the court, but also on a micro-level: She picks and chooses which cases, 
which causes, and which plaintiffs will be bestowed with her unique brand of justice, 
and she chooses the yardstick by which justice will be measured. Then she yanks the 
rest of the court around to her position. My guess is that to her mind this is 
precisely what judging is all about. And in some large biblical sense she is correct. 
But you can't help but sympathize with a Scalia, who sees rigid precepts and 
principles first and individual justice second (if that). O'Connor's disproportionate 
power must drive him insane. 


From:
 http://slate.msn.com/id/2084657/entry/2084711/
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