Public approval of Supreme Court has plummeted; term limits may be the solution
WASHINGTON — There was a time, not so long ago, when the U.S. Supreme Court was among the most esteemed institutions in the country.
The court’s sharp move to the right, combined with disclosures of egregious ethical problems involving Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr., have rapidly and dramatically changed that picture. That, in turn, has focused new attention on an idea that has attracted support from constitutional scholars on both the left and the right: term limits.
The current Republican leadership in Congress has little interest in changing the status quo — they’ve finally gotten the deeply conservative majority on the high court that the GOP has sought for decades. So there’s no likelihood of a term-limit measure passing this year or next. But as the court’s standing continues to slide, the term-limit proposal — which attracts backing from opinion elites as well as the broader public — could be an idea whose time has come.
Get our L.A. Times Politics newsletter
The latest news, analysis and insights from our politics team.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.
There should be no question about the urgency of the problem.
As recently as three years ago, two-thirds of Americans said they approved of the way the court was handling its job, polling by Marquette University Law School found. Today, as the justices move into their annual end-of-session rush of major decisions, the share approving of their work has tumbled to 41%, according to Marquette’s most recent poll. It’s even lower in some other surveys — a Quinnipiac University survey released Wednesday showed only 30% approving of the court’s work.
Views of the court have soured in both parties, although the steepest drop has come among Democrats, especially since last year’s decision in Dobbs vs. Jackson Women’s Health, which ended the nationwide guarantee of abortion rights that had stood for nearly half a century.
Justices no longer seen as impartial
The reasons for the plunge aren’t hard to see: The Supreme Court’s standing has always relied on a bit of a conjurer’s trick, and in recent years, the magic has worn very thin.
In a democratic society, letting nine unelected officials decide critical public policy questions is a tough sell. The court’s power has depended on convincing Americans to see the justices as impartial decision makers handing down rulings based not on politics, but on law.
The number of Americans willing to believe that has dwindled.
Sixty-eight percent of Americans now say the court is mainly motivated by politics, compared to 25% who say the motivation is mostly law, according to the new Quinnipiac poll. In 2018, Quinnipiac found a near-even split on that question; the share who believe the court’s motivations are political has risen every year since.
Several events have shifted the public’s view:
Start with a series of bitterly contentious confirmation battles. In 2016, Republicans led by Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky staged a 293-day blockade of President Obama‘s effort to put then-Judge Merrick Garland on the court. Then, in 2018, came the televised battle over President Trump‘s nomination of Brett M. Kavanaugh. Two years later, McConnell led the rushed effort to confirm Justice Amy Coney Barrett just days before the 2020 election.
Those highly publicized fights cemented the public’s view of the court as Republican-dominated.
Since then, the court’s conservative majority has reinforced that view by aggressively asserting their power. At the close of last year’s term, they issued hugely consequential decisions moving the law sharply to the conservative side on abortion, guns and the nation’s effort to battle climate change.
“They crammed a decade of social change into three days,†said Michael Waldman, president of the New York-based Brennan Center for Justice and author of “The Supermajority,†a new book on the high court.
The decisions, especially on abortion, got the attention of the public, which normally does not focus much on the high court. The abortion ruling, in particular, has proven to be deeply unpopular.
The share of Americans who see the court as too conservative has doubled since 2016, polls by Gallup and other organizations have found. Last year, Gallup found 42% of Americans viewed the court as too conservative, compared with 18% who saw it as too liberal — reversing a view that had prevailed for most of the preceding two decades. The share seeing the court’s ideology as “about right,†38%, was the lowest Gallup had found in three decades.
Finally, reports that Thomas and Alito, the court’s most conservative members, did not disclose sumptuous gifts from wealthy benefactors with interests before the court have further damaged the institution’s reputation.
Term limits as a solution
The increasing length of time that justices serve makes their problems worse, isolating the court from public accountability.
From the founding of the country through 1970, Supreme Court justices served for an average of just under 15 years, but the average tenure began to balloon in the 1970s and has roughly doubled, law professors Steven G. Calabresi and James Lindgren of Northwestern University wrote in a 2006 law review article which advocated term limits for the court.
The last four justices to leave the court — two by retirement, two by death — served an average of 29 years.
Longer terms are no accident. Presidents of both parties, seeking to maximize their impact on the court, have been seeking younger nominees. In the past half century, 17 people have joined the court. Only one was older than 55 when confirmed — Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who went on to serve 27 years before dying in office. In addition, justices often try to time their retirements to ensure that a president of their own party can replace them, stretching their tenure as a result. And, of course, people live longer now than when the Constitution was written.
All that, as Calabresi and Lindgren wrote, has reduced the number of vacancies, limiting the one process — the appointment of new justices — that the Constitution provided as a democratic check on the court’s power.
They proposed a constitutional amendment setting an 18-year limit, with terms ending every two years, guaranteeing that each president would have two vacancies to fill in every four-year term.
The Brennan Center advocates a similar plan along with an enforceable ethics code for the justices. They argue term limits could be put in place by statute, rather than requiring an amendment. Under their plan, justices could continue on the federal bench for life, but would only serve as active members of the Supreme Court for the first 18 years.
Calabresi is one of the country’s leading legal conservatives, and a co-founder of the Federalist Society, which has played a leading role in placing conservatives on the federal bench. Waldman is a prominent liberal, and the Brennan Center is a leading source of policy ideas and advocacy on the left. The fact that both have advocated for term limits illustrates the broad support the idea has among legal experts.
The public agrees: Term limits routinely get approval of two-thirds or more in polls.
“There’s a broad sense that the court is unaccountable and political, and that’s sort of a toxic combination,†Waldman said in an interview.
For the good of the court — and the role that it can play as a stabilizing force in a deeply polarized society — it’s time to try to fix that toxicity before it gets worse.
Enjoying this newsletter? Consider subscribing to the Los Angeles Times
Your support helps us deliver the news that matters most. Become a subscriber.
The high court’s ethics problems
Supreme Court controversy over Alito, Thomas free trips began with Justice Scalia
The late Justice Antonin Scalia left a long legacy on the Supreme Court, from his devotion to originalism to his sharp-tongued rhetoric. But the enthusiastic hunter and fisherman also set a precedent of sorts on how to take free trips without disclosing them — one that is now causing headaches for some justices, David Savage reported.
The latest from the states
‘Just the beginning.’ An uncertain future for abortion a year after Roe’s overturn
A year after the Supreme Court struck down Roe vs. Wade — upending half a century of precedent on the constitutional right to an abortion — more than a quarter of U.S. women of reproductive age live in a state where the procedure is banned, severely limited or unavailable, Jenny Jarvie reported.
The latest from Washington
House Republicans censured Adam Schiff. He couldn’t be happier
The House of Representatives censured Rep. Adam B. Schiff in a party-line, 213-209 vote Wednesday, and the Burbank Democrat seems delighted. The censure was a victory for Donald Trump, who had called for primary challenges to any Republicans who voted against it, and an indication of the former president’s continued hold on the GOP. But Schiff, a candidate for the U.S. Senate seat held by Dianne Feinstein, who is retiring, didn’t fight particularly hard against the effort to formally chastise him. He told The Times he initiated no conversations with Republicans in the last week to sway their votes; he’s called the censure a “badge of honor†and has already begun using the free publicity to fuel his Senate campaign, Owen Tucker-Smith reported.
Supreme Court rejects Navajo suit seeking more water for their reservation
The Supreme Court on Thursday dashed the hopes of the Navajo Nation for more running water. The justices threw out a 9th Circuit Court ruling that held an 1868 treaty confining Navajos to their reservation came with an implied promise that they would have access to water, Savage reported.
U.S. is rejecting asylum seekers at much higher rates under new Biden policy
A new Biden administration policy has dramatically lowered the percentage of migrants at the southern border who enter the United States and are allowed to apply for asylum, according to numbers revealed in legal documents obtained by The Times, Hamed Aleaziz reported. Without these new limits to asylum, border crossings could overwhelm local towns and resources, a Department of Homeland Security official warned a federal court in a filing this month.
The latest from California
4 in 10 California residents are considering packing up and leaving, new poll finds
With its unmatched natural splendor and cultural attractions, California is a beacon that attracts people from around the world who put down roots and call it home. About 70% of residents said they are happy living here, a new statewide poll shows, crediting the state’s diversity, economic opportunities and an enjoyable lifestyle as reasons to stick around. Yet large swaths of residents are also considering packing up and leaving. Many also believe that the state is headed in the wrong direction, and are anxious about the direction of the economy and their ability to pay their bills, Benjamin Oreskes reported.
California doubles down on inclusive education as red states ban books in classrooms
As books tackling racial and LGBTQ+ themes have been banned across the country, California’s Department of Education and Democratic lawmakers are doubling down on offering diverse and inclusive lessons in schools. Supt. of Public Instruction Tony Thurmond and legislators, meeting for the first time Wednesday as part of a new task force, called on textbook publishers to commit to producing materials that are “free from discrimination and inclusive of the diverse narratives that reflect the student body of California,†Mackenzie Mays reported.
Column: On delta tunnel, Newsom should heed Dirty Harry’s sound advice
To paraphrase Clint Eastwood’s Dirty Harry in the 1973 movie classic “Magnum Force,†a governor’s got to know his limitations, George Skelton writes in his column. There are limits to the power even of a governor with no major political opposition and a very friendly, normally cooperative Legislature. This time, Gov. Gavin Newsom may have found his limitations. Key lawmakers are pushing back against his late-entry legislation to expedite construction of a highly controversial water tunnel under the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta.
After police photo release, L.A. city attorney tries to weaken public records law
Prompted by the release of information about thousands of Los Angeles police officers that activists posted to a public online database, City Atty. Hydee Feldstein Soto is trying to convince California lawmakers to weaken the state’s public records law. While Feldstein Soto describes her proposal as a minor tweak to the California Public Records Act, civil rights advocates say it would severely diminish the power of the bedrock state law that allows access to information held by local governments and state agencies, Laurel Rosenhall reported.
L.A. Councilmember Curren Price says he is innocent and should not be suspended
Los Angeles City Councilmember Curren Price called on his colleagues Wednesday to reject a proposal to suspend him from the council, saying he is innocent and deserves the chance to respond to “misguided charges†filed by the district attorney’s office, David Zahniser reported.
L.A. City Council District 6 election voter guide: Marisa Alcaraz vs. Imelda Padilla
Tuesday is election day in the Los Angeles City Council District 6 race in the central and eastern San Fernando Valley. District 6 takes in all or part of the neighborhoods of Lake Balboa, Van Nuys, Panorama City, Arleta, North Hills, North Hollywood and Sun Valley. The special election was prompted by City Council President Nury Martinez’s resignation last year. Times staff looked at the positions that the two candidates for the council have taken on major issues.
Sign up for our California Politics newsletter to get the best of The Times’ state politics reporting.
Stay in touch
Keep up with breaking news on our Politics page. And are you following us on Twitter at @latimespolitics?
Did someone forward you this? Sign up here to get Essential Politics in your inbox.
Until next time, send your comments, suggestions and news tips to [email protected].
Get the L.A. Times Politics newsletter
Deeply reported insights into legislation, politics and policy from Sacramento, Washington and beyond. In your inbox three times per week.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.