Posted by Jim Lindgren:
Justice Stevens Still Going Strong.--
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2007_07_15-2007_07_21.shtml#1184655325


   In a follow-up to the work I've co-authored on [1]Term Limits for
   Supreme Court Justices, I've been looking at the effects of any US
   Supreme Court retirements on the overall age and tenure distribution
   on the Supreme Court.

   Many people assume that, if a Democrat wins the White House in 2008,
   there might be one or more resignations from the more liberal half of
   the Court in 2009 or 2010. Although it might seem that the oldest
   member of the Court, Justice John Paul Stevens (age 87), would be the
   likeliest to step down, those with better sources of information than
   I have say that Justice Stevens is still extremely bright and funny
   and appears to outsiders to be in excellent health. Since physically
   and mentally he appears to be going very strong, some observers have
   told me that Justice Stevens may well stay on the Court at least until
   he breaks Justice Douglas�s record as the longest serving Justice in
   the summer of 2012.

   (I confess that I am happy to hear how well Justice Stevens is doing
   since, partly for personal reasons, Stevens is my favorite sitting
   Justice. Beyond his general brilliance, he has written by far the best
   opinions in an area of my scholarly interest, extortion law, and he
   has personally been the kindest Justice to me both privately and (from
   what I�ve been told) in public comments. By the way, my next favorite
   would come from the conservative wing of the Court.)

   Among the other Justices roughly on the liberal side on the Court,
   Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and David Souter are being talked about
   as possibly retiring or taking senior status if a Democrat wins the
   White House. Justice Ginsburg, who is 74, strikes some observers as
   somewhat frail in comparison with other members of the Court. As to
   Justice Souter, there would be no particular reason for Souter to
   consider leaving the Court anytime soon, but his natural modesty may
   lead him to find retirement attractive in a few years, having already
   exceeded both the mean (16.2 years) and median (15.3 years) terms on
   the Court.

   In 2005, political scientist Kevin McGuire had [2]falsely claimed in
   print that if Justices O'Connor and Rehnquist left the Court (as they
   soon did), the median current tenure on the Supreme Court would drop
   to normal levels. Since in any given year the median justice would
   tend to be just past the mid-point of his judicial tenure on the
   Court, the median years of service in any given year has historically
   been about 9.2 years. (The median years of eventual service on the
   bench has been 15.3 years.)

   The median tenure on the 2005 Court just before Chief Justice
   Rehnquist died was 17.5 years. After Justice Alito joined the Court at
   the end of January 2006, the median did not drop to the historical
   norm of around 9 years, but rather only to 14.3 years. Except for a
   few months in 1937 (when the median tenure of the then-sitting
   justices reached 14.4 years), these few months in early 2006 were
   still the highest median years of service on a current Court from the
   1870s through the 1970s.

   Now, a year and a half later, the median tenure on the Court has
   increased to 15.7 years. If there are no retirements until the summer
   of 2009, the median tenure will grow to 17.7 years, above the level
   when C.J. Rehnquist died.

   As for other measures, the last nine Justices to leave the Court were
   (on average) [3]79 years old when they left the Court and had spent 25
   years on the bench, both well above historical norms and slightly
   higher than at any time in history before the 1980s.

References

   1. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1001154
   2. http://www.unc.edu/~kmcguire/papers/tenure.pdf
   3. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1001154

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