Souter's unwitting legacy
Welcome back, Deadline: Legal Newsletter readers. Ever wonder how we got to this extreme point in American life? Some of it has to do with David Souter. More specifically, it has to do with the fact that the late Supreme Court justice was a reasonable man. He was nominated by a Republican president in 1990 but eschewed the partisan push to overturn abortion rights and accomplish other GOP priorities from the bench. The retired justice's death on Thursday thus highlights today's radically different court — and country.
'No More Souters' was the Republican rallying cry against the George H.W. Bush appointee's moderate streak. If the party were to accomplish its goal of overturning Roe v. Wade, it could no longer afford to nominate squishy jurists. That quest for Supreme Court domination helped put Donald Trump in the White House for his first term, where the three justices he appointed helped make a majority in the Dobbs case.
The Dobbs dissenters lauded Souter as a judge 'of wisdom.' They noted that he and fellow GOP appointees Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony Kennedy had previously declined to overturn Roe. 'They would not have won any contests for the kind of ideological purity some court watchers want Justices to deliver,' Justices Stephen Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan wrote in that rare joint dissent in 2022. 'But if there were awards for Justices who left this Court better than they found it? And who for that reason left this country better? And the rule of law stronger? Sign those Justices up.'
Sotomayor replaced Souter, another sign of how different things are today. He retired in 2009, when Barack Obama was president. That cleared the way for the Democrat to put his stamp on the court. It's unthinkable today for a justice to willingly depart their powerful seat when the opposing party is in control. Kennedy didn't do that; he stepped down under Trump so Trump could nominate Brett Kavanaugh. That's a legacy of the 'No More Souters' ethos.
Trump's presidency and all it has wrought are a legacy of that ethos, too. Republicans who might've otherwise hesitated to back him in 2016 had their eye on the high court prize. They got it, and the country got that and more: The Jan. 6 insurrection; the attempts to crush dissent; the gutting of the federal government; the lawless renditions to El Salvador; the profiting off the presidency while toying with the economy. Without the GOP's fear of a wobbly justice on abortion, there'd be no Ed Martin running the U.S. attorney's office in D.C., and no Jeanine Pirro in his place when even he was deemed too extreme for the party of Dobbs — and even then, just barely so. The list goes on.
The court that the GOP built with Trump let the president start enforcing his transgender military ban this week. It did so on a straight party-line vote, a description that wouldn't have been possible in Souter's time, when the justices didn't strictly align with the presidents who nominated them. Next Thursday, the court will hold a rare hearing stemming from Trump's attempt to curb birthright citizenship — a move that judges around the country have deemed unlawful.
Technically, the appeal isn't about whether Trump's underlying move was legal, but whether judges can block it nationwide. Yet, the court chose this issue as a platform to scrutinize nationwide injunctions. I'll report back next week on where the Souter-less court seems headed on this issue.This article was originally published on MSNBC.com

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Rangers appoint former Southampton boss Martin as new head coach
Former Southampton boss Russell Martin is the new man in charge at Rangers (Glyn KIRK) Scottish Premiership club Rangers on Thursday confirmed the appointment of former Southampton boss Russell Martin as their new head coach on a three-year deal. The 39-year-old guided Southampton to promotion to the Premier League last year but was sacked in December following one win from their first 16 games. The club were subsequently relegated. Advertisement Rangers finished last season under the caretaker management of former captain Barry Ferguson, having dismissed Philippe Clement in February. Ex-Scotland defender Martin, who had a short loan spell as a player at Rangers in 2018, faces the daunting task of challenging Celtic, who have just won a 13th Scottish title in 14 seasons. "From my time here, I had a taste of how special this club is, the expectation, the passion and the history," he told the club's website. "Now, as I return, I'm determined to bring success back, for the supporters, the players, and everyone inside this club. Advertisement "There's a lot to be done, but the goal is clear -- win matches, win trophies and give Rangers fans a team that they can be proud of." Martin's arrival is the latest in a series of major changes at the club. An American consortium led by Andrew Cavenagh and 49ers Enterprises secured a majority shareholding on Friday, while new sporting director Kevin Thelwell officially began work on Monday. Rangers chief executive Patrick Stewart, who led the recruitment process alongside Thelwell, said: "Our criteria for our next coach were clear: we wanted a coach who will excel in terms of how we want to play, improve our culture, develop our squad, and ultimately win matches. Russell was the standout candidate." jw/lp

15 minutes ago
Judge blocks Texas tuition breaks for students without legal status after the state's GOP attorney general backs lawsuit
AUSTIN, Texas -- Judge blocks Texas tuition breaks for students without legal status after the state's GOP attorney general backs lawsuit.
Yahoo
17 minutes ago
- Yahoo
'You Wussed Out': David Mamet Reveals Trump's 20-Minute Call After He Committed A MAGA Sin
Pulitzer Prize-winning screenwriter David Mamet has recalled once receiving a lengthy phone call from Donald Trump after he dared not to go all in on the then-former president's 2020 election conspiracy theories. Trump loyalist Mamet, appearing on Bill Maher's 'Club Random Podcast' this week, remembered being 'kind of iffy' about whether the election had been stolen from Trump during an appearance on Maher's HBO show, 'Real Time.' At 8 a.m. the following day, the Hollywood veteran said he received a call from Trump who told him: 'I saw you on Bill Maher yesterday, you were great. But you wussed out on the question of the stolen election.' Trump then 'talked to me for like 20 minutes about how the election was stolen,' Mamet told Maher. 'But it wasn't,' Maher reminded him. Mamet, a yearslong vocal critic of progressive causes who has called former President Barack Obama a 'tyrant' and described diversity, equity and inclusion efforts as 'garbage,' responded: 'Well, I think it was.' Maher noted how the claim that the election was rigged for now-former President Joe Biden has fallen flat in dozens of court cases, been dismissed by Trump's own commissioners and analysts have described the 2020 vote as 'the most fair, honest election we've ever had.' Mamet argued Trump would have won by a majority had various issues not been suppressed. 'Oh, please. That's so ridiculous,' said Maher, who doubted they would have swung the result. Watch from the 5:30 point here: Critics Cackle Over Mike Johnson's Awkward Confession About Elon Musk Phone Call Cringe Karoline Leavitt Clip Perfectly Sums Up Trump's White House, Say Critics Critics Gasp At Trump Official's 'The Thing That Matters' Declaration