Quote:
Originally Posted by California Tanker
I find it interesting that any part of the court is described as 'liberal' or 'conservative.'
|
I think it's extremely simplistic as well, and I only used the expression facetiously; in fact the entire OP is a bit facetious. 'Liberal' and 'conservative' are shorthand, of course, but shorthand for what it's not always entirely clear.
It's possible to categorize certain Justices as consistently over time voting one way or another on certain issues, that is, if you break down the issues and then analyze their votes, and then designate the result with one label or the other.
But I think the overriding point is that it's a bit of a fool's game to try and predict how a Justice is going to rule. You often read newspaper reports about the oral arguments, and intimations from the reporter that a Justice is leaning one way or the other. It can't be done, because sometimes the Justice is using the argument as something of an intellectual exercise, or even in some cases simply torturing the lawyer for amusement.
And there are exceptions to this as well. Scalia, for example, can often be observed helping along a lawyer that isn't making a particularly good argument, asking the lawyer leading questions to remind the lawyer where he's going.
It's easier to predict lower court rulings because they're bound by the authority of not only higher courts, but their own.
Stare decisis tends to be more powerfully persuasive among the lower courts. As for the Supremes, the history is littered with unpredictable results, and especially Justices that have entirely shifted gears over the course of their careers, not only on individual issues, but in their entire approach to the Constitution.