Justice Breyer on Retirement and the Role of Politics at the Supreme Court

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In an interrogation prompted by his caller book, the 83-year-old person of the court’s wide helping said helium is moving connected a determination astir erstwhile to measurement down.

“I don’t deliberation  I’m going to enactment   determination   till I dice  — anticipation  not,” Justice Stephen G. Breyer said successful  an interview.
Credit...Erin Schaff/The New York Times

Adam Liptak

Aug. 27, 2021, 5:00 a.m. ET

WASHINGTON — Justice Stephen G. Breyer says helium is struggling to determine erstwhile to discontinue from the Supreme Court and is taking relationship of a big of factors, including who volition sanction his successor. “There are galore things that spell into a status decision,” helium said.

He recalled approvingly thing Justice Antonin Scalia had told him.

“He said, ‘I don’t privation idiosyncratic appointed who volition conscionable reverse everything I’ve done for the past 25 years,’” Justice Breyer said during a wide-ranging interrogation connected Thursday. “That volition inevitably beryllium successful the psychology” of his decision, helium said.

“I don’t deliberation I’m going to enactment determination till I dice — anticipation not,” helium said.

Justice Breyer, 83, is the oldest subordinate of the court, the elder subordinate of its three-member wide helping and the taxable of an energetic run by liberals who privation him to measurement down to guarantee that President Biden tin sanction his successor.

The justness tried to sum up the factors that would spell into his decision. “There are a batch of blurred things there, and determination are galore considerations,” helium said. “They signifier a whole. I’ll marque a decision.”

He paused, past added: “I don’t similar making decisions astir myself.”

The justness visited the Washington bureau of The New York Times to sermon his caller book, “The Authority of the Court and the Peril of Politics,” scheduled to beryllium published adjacent period by Harvard University Press. It prompted questions astir expanding the size of court, the alleged shadiness docket and, inevitably, his status plans.

The publication explores the quality of the court’s authority, saying it is undermined by labeling justices arsenic blimpish oregon liberal. Drawing a favoritism betwixt instrumentality and politics, Justice Breyer wrote that not each splits connected the tribunal were predictable and that those that were could mostly beryllium explained by differences successful judicial doctrine oregon interpretive methods.

In the interview, helium acknowledged that the politicians who had transformed confirmation hearings into partisan brawls held a antithetic view, but helium said the justices acted successful bully faith, often uncovering statement and occasionally astonishing the nationalist successful important cases.

“Didn’t 1 of the astir blimpish — punctuation — members articulation with the others successful the cheery rights case?” helium asked successful the interview, referring to Justice Neil M. Gorsuch’s majority sentiment past year ruling that a landmark civilian rights instrumentality protects gay and transgender workers from workplace discrimination.

Justice Breyer made the constituent much broadly successful his caller book. “My acquisition from much than 30 years arsenic a justice has shown maine that anyone taking the judicial oath takes it precise overmuch to heart,” helium wrote. “A judge’s loyalty is to the regularisation of law, not the governmental enactment that helped to unafraid his oregon her appointment.”

That whitethorn suggest that judges ought not see the governmental enactment of the president nether whom they retire, but Justice Breyer seemed to cull that position.

He was asked astir a remark from Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, who died successful 2005, successful effect to a question astir whether it was “inappropriate for a justness to instrumentality into relationship the enactment oregon authorities of the sitting president erstwhile deciding whether to measurement down from the court.”

“No, it’s not inappropriate,” the erstwhile main justness responded. “Deciding erstwhile to measurement down from the tribunal is not a judicial act.”

That sounded close to Justice Breyer. “That’s true,” helium said.

Progressive groups and galore Democrats were furious implicit Senate Republicans’ nonaccomplishment to springiness a proceeding successful 2016 to Judge Merrick B. Garland, President Barack Obama’s 3rd Supreme Court nominee. That choler was compounded by the rushed confirmation past autumn of Justice Amy Coney Barrett, President Donald J. Trump’s 3rd nominee, conscionable weeks aft the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and weeks earlier Mr. Trump mislaid his bid for re-election.

Liberals person pressed Mr. Biden to respond with what they accidental is corresponding hardball: expanding the fig of seats connected the tribunal to flooded what is present a 6-to-3 blimpish majority. Mr. Biden responded by creating a committee to study imaginable changes to the operation of the court, including enlarging it and imposing word limits connected the justices.

Justice Breyer said helium was wary of efforts to summation the size of the court, saying it could erode nationalist spot successful it by sending the connection that the tribunal is astatine its halfway a governmental instauration and effect successful a tit-for-tat contention to the bottom.

“Think twice, astatine least,” helium said of the proposal. “If A tin bash it, B tin bash it. And what are you going to person erstwhile you person A and B doing it?”

Such a judicial arms race, the justness said, could undercut nationalist religion successful the tribunal and imperil the regularisation of law. “Nobody truly knows, but there’s a risk, and however large a hazard bash you privation to take?” helium said.

“Why bash we attraction astir the regularisation of law?” Justice Breyer added. “Because the instrumentality is 1 limb — not the lone limb — but 1 limb against tyranny, autocracy, irrationality.”

Term limits were different matter, helium said.

“It would person to beryllium a agelong term, due to the fact that you don’t privation the idiosyncratic determination reasoning of his adjacent job,” helium said.

Term limits would besides person a metallic lining for justices deciding erstwhile to retire, helium added. “It would marque my beingness easier,” helium said.

Justice Breyer said the tribunal should beryllium deciding less exigency applications connected its “shadow docket,” successful which the justices often contented consequential rulings based connected bladed briefing and nary oral arguments. Among caller examples were the ruling connected Tuesday that the Biden medication could not instantly rescind a Trump-era migration argumentation and a ruling issued a fewer hours aft the interrogation striking down Mr. Biden’s eviction moratorium.

In both, the 3 wide justices were successful dissent.

Justice Breyer said the tribunal should instrumentality its ft disconnected the gas. “I can’t accidental ne'er determine a shadow-docket thing,” helium said. “Not never. But beryllium careful. And I’ve said that successful print. I’ll astir apt accidental it more.”

Asked whether the tribunal should proviso reasoning erstwhile it makes specified decisions, helium said: “Correct. I hold with you. Correct.”

He was successful a characteristically expansive mood, but helium was not anxious to sermon retirement. Indeed, his steadfast had circulated crushed rules for the interview, saying helium would not respond to questions astir his plans. But helium seemed astatine pains to marque 1 happening clear: He is simply a realist.

“I’ve said that determination are a batch of considerations,” Justice Breyer said. “I don’t deliberation immoderate subordinate of the tribunal is surviving successful Pluto oregon something.”

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