Posted by Jonathan Adler:
Did the Court Move Right?
http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2009_06_28-2009_07_04.shtml#1246424922


   It's somewhat predictable. Another Supreme Court term ends, and
   commentators make sweeping generalizations based upon the result in a
   handful of cases. Thus, pundits proclaimed the arrival of a
   conservative revolution after the October 2006 Term, only to mount a
   hasty retreat after the October 2007 term failed to follow the script.

   Wednesday's Washington Post features a [1]story with a headline
   proclaiming this term saw a "move to the Right." Yet the most notable,
   and surprising, decisions this term were not sudden shifts to the
   Right, but the Court's failure to do so -- it's failure declare
   portions of the Voting Rights Act unconstitutional in NAMUDNO, its
   failure to find preemption in Wyeth v. Levine and Cuomo v. Clearing
   House, its failure to endorse broad executive power to disregard
   environmental laws in NRDC v. Winter. As the Post story acknowledges,
   this was more a Court "on the verge" than it was a Court clearing new
   ground.

   This court may be more-likely-than-not to decide any given case in a
   "rightward" direction, but it is not particularly likely to move the
   law to the Right. So, for example, in Osborne the Court rejected the
   invitation to create a constitutional right to post-conviction DNA
   testing. This is a "conservative" result, but it was not a change in
   the law. The failure to recognize new constitutional rights does not a
   conservative shift make. Four years in to the Roberts Court, it's hard
   to identify a meaningful rightward shift comparable to its continued
   leftward shifts in many areas (as in Boumediene, Kennedy v. Louisiana,
   Mass. v. EPA, Caperton, etc.).

   As I have [2]maintained for some time -- since pundits were rushing to
   proclaim that the Roberts Court had become radically conservative
   after the October 2006 term -- the dominant features of the Roberts
   Court are a) a conservative minimalism that favors narrow holdings and
   generally seeks to maintain precedent, and b) the idiosyncratic
   jurisprudence of Justice Kennedy, which controls the outcome (and the
   tenor) of so many decisions. The end result is a moderately
   conservative Court, but one that is almost as likely to lurch Left as
   it is to inch to the Right.

   Next term may well challenge my view, however. Indeed, it could turn
   out to be quite unpredictable (and revealing). The Court has accepted
   quite a number of cases that may force it to address big questions,
   including the Appointments Clause (Free Enterprise Fund v. PCAOB),
   regulatory takings (Stop the Beach Renourishment v. Florida DEP), and
   the Commerce Clause (Comstock), and that's not even counting the
   reargument in Citizens United or the prospect of another gun rights
   case. Throw a new justice into the mix, and we're going to have fun
   with this one. Given the substance of some of these cases, I suppose
   it's a no-lose proposition for me. Either the Court confirms the line
   I've been taking, or it shows some interest in curtailing federal
   power. Any bets which it will be?

References

   1. 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/06/30/AR2009063004170.html?hpid=topnews&sid=ST2009063004374
   2. 
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=Y2Y3NjNkM2ZkYTcxNzQwYTBhZWZkNzEyZGYyMWExMjE=

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