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Generational Makeup of the Supreme Court
#1
There was a lot of buzz recently around the confirmation of Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court of the United States. She is the first black woman to serve on the court, and for the first time there will be four women serving as Justices. 

But there's another trend that her confirmation reflects - Generation X is taking over SCOTUS! Jackson becomes not just the fourth woman, but also the fourth Gen Xer on the Court. And the Justice she is replacing, Stephen Breyer, is the last one from the Silent Generation left. Once he officially retires, the generational makeup of the Supreme Court will be entirely Boomer and Gen Xer.

I blogged about it recently, reproduced below:
http://stevebarrera.com/the-generational...eme-court/

The Generational Shift in the Supreme Court
by Steve

The confirmation of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson as the 116th Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court is being hailed as an historic event. From reactions on social media it is plain that partisan blue zoners are relieved that the latest replacement on the Court has occurred during a Democratic Presidency, and succeeded despite the partisan split in the Senate. No one could forget the Republican controlled Senate's political tactics in 2016 that handed the nomination of Justice Antonin Scalia's replacement to a Republican President. That Jackson is the first black woman to serve on the Court is also rightfully being hailed as an important historic milestone. It reflects the long secular trend of the elevation of women and minorities as equals in our civil society. It is meaningful, in my opinion, that this historic moment occurred during the Presidency of Joseph Biden, who is from the generation of the civil rights movement - the Silent Generation. This moment is a fitting capstone to his generation's legacy of fairness and inclusion in American life.

There has even been some notice of the fact that with Jackson's appointment, the Supreme Court will, for the first time, have four women Justices serving on it. This reflects another secular trend of increasing gender equality on the Court. The first woman Justice was appointed in 1981 (O'Connor); this increased to two women Justices in 1993 (Ginsburg) and then to three in 2010 (Kagan following Sotomayor's replacement of O'Connor). Ginsburg was also replaced by a woman (Barrett), suggesting that not even President Trump could bring himself to interrupt this historic progression.

[Image: SCOTUS.jpg]
When Justice Stephen Breyer (circled) vacates the Supreme Court, there will be no more Justices from the Silent Generation serving on it.

There's another story that seems to have been lost in the shuffle. Take a look at the birth years of the current members of the Court. The Justice who is retiring and being replaced by Jackson is Stephen Breyer, born in 1938. He is the last remaining member of the Silent Generation to serve on the Court (the first was actually O'Connor; only six members of his generation have served on the Court). After Breyer's retirement, all of the Justices will be either Boomers or Gen Xers. Jackson won't just be the fourth woman on the Court, she will also be the fourth Gen Xer. This is another historic moment for the Supreme Court: the replacement of the Silent Generation by Generation X.

The other three Gen Xers on the Supreme Court were all appointed by President Trump. It is not surprising that Trump was able to find suitable red zone aligned jurists among this generation, which leans conservative and Republican. These three appointees may well be his administration's most lasting legacy. They will steer the Court in a conservative direction for a long time to come. Even if, by some twist of fate, Biden should get the opportunity to replace another Justice, the Court will still be majority conservative (5-4 instead of 6-3). What does this new alignment, both generational and ideological, mean for the future of the Supreme Court?

I am not a legal scholar, so I can only speculate from the perspective of an educated layman. One thing I think is certain is that we will see breaks from precedent. This is already evident in the uncertain fate of Roe v. Wade - the dreaded (by blue zoners) overturning of that decision may be coming. One of the Gen X Justices, Gorsuch, reputedly disdains precedence and would prefer to craft his own conservative judicial philosophy. This sort of independence of thought is just what you would expect from Generation X.

Another trend I see is the continued success of the conservative mission to roll back the administrative state (a Silent Generation legacy) in favor of individual freedoms (a Generation X legacy). Case in point: the recent Court ruling that struck down the Biden administration's vaccination mandate. Given her background as a public defender (the first to be appointed to the Supreme Court), Jackson herself might be inclined to rule in that direction.

Once Breyer has retired this summer, only one Justice will remain on the Supreme Court who was appointed in the twentieth century: Clarence Thomas, who will be the oldest, in his mid-70s. No serving Justice will remain from a generation older than the Boomers, and there will be four from my generation, Generation X, all appointed in the past five years. It's actually quite remarkable that all of the Supreme Court Justices will be younger than both the President and the Speaker of the House, and that their average age will be slightly lower than the average age of U.S. Senators.

You would think that the Judicial branch would be where the old wisdom of the country resided, but a move to pack the Supreme Court with conservative thinkers has put my generation there instead. This historic generational shift in the makeup of the Court will have repercussions for years to come. Long-standing legal precedents and regimes that have been taken for granted are clearly in for a significant upheaval.
Steve Barrera

[A]lthough one would like to change today's world back to the spirit of one hundred years or more ago, it cannot be done. Thus it is important to make the best out of every generation. - Hagakure

Saecular Pages
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#2
Generational change doesn't mean much in politics. Only Party, and ideological shifts. Brown-Jackson's appointment does not change the Supreme Court's ideological makeup.

Interesting though, the complaint against FDR's Court when he threatened to pack it was that the justices were too old. Now the complaint you are making against Biden's Court, as threats to pack it are made again, is that the justices are too young.

The same problem applies, regardless. The conservative majority is stuck in the past. The "legal precedents" that may be overturned are liberal ones, which are oriented toward justice and solutions for the future. The new trend, already under way for a number of years, will be not just to keep the law as it is, but to reverse it and bring it back to the past when it favored the rich, the powerful and the prejudiced.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
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#3
(04-13-2022, 03:27 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: Generational change doesn't mean much in politics. Only Party, and ideological shifts. Brown-Jackson's appointment does not change the Supreme Court's ideological makeup.

Interesting though, the complaint against FDR's Court when he threatened to pack it was that the justices were too old. Now the complaint you are making against Biden's Court, as threats to pack it are made again, is that the justices are too young.

The same problem applies, regardless. The conservative majority is stuck in the past. The "legal precedents" that may be overturned are liberal ones, which are oriented toward justice and solutions for the future. The new trend, already under way for a number of years, will be not just to keep the law as it is, but to reverse it and bring it back to the past when it favored the rich, the powerful and the prejudiced.

I think the generational change does make a difference. The Silents leaving and Gen X becoming nearly half the court - all of which happened over just the past 5 years - means that long-standing precedents are going to be upended.
Steve Barrera

[A]lthough one would like to change today's world back to the spirit of one hundred years or more ago, it cannot be done. Thus it is important to make the best out of every generation. - Hagakure

Saecular Pages
Reply
#4
(04-13-2022, 04:12 PM)sbarrera Wrote:
(04-13-2022, 03:27 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: Generational change doesn't mean much in politics. Only Party, and ideological shifts. Brown-Jackson's appointment does not change the Supreme Court's ideological makeup.

Interesting though, the complaint against FDR's Court when he threatened to pack it was that the justices were too old. Now the complaint you are making against Biden's Court, as threats to pack it are made again, is that the justices are too young.

The same problem applies, regardless. The conservative majority is stuck in the past. The "legal precedents" that may be overturned are liberal ones, which are oriented toward justice and solutions for the future. The new trend, already under way for a number of years, will be not just to keep the law as it is, but to reverse it and bring it back to the past when it favored the rich, the powerful and the prejudiced.

I think the generational change does make a difference. The Silents leaving and Gen X becoming nearly half the court - all of which happened over just the past 5 years - means that long-standing precedents are going to be upended.

I agree with both posters.  No, the Xers are not go-along-to-get-along Silents, and that's certainly a difference in demeanor that's only amplified by their typical imprinting as Reaganites.  The real question that needs asking: how does this get resolved?  The most obvious options are a hardening of the rightward leaning court into a truly reactionary one (see the late 19th century court as a prime example), or a case of court packing (no precedents for this, really).  It's impossible to fathom which might occur, because we are on a political knife-edge, and how we fall will tell the tale.

The current thinking: a strong recession begins just prior to the 2024 election and/or the court overturns Roe v Wade.  I suspect the correct guess is both happen -- Roe first.  Puzzle-out how that plays.  I think the pocketbook issue will outweigh the end of legal abortion, but the women will be the deciders on that.  We know how the majority of the men will fall.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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#5
(04-13-2022, 04:12 PM)sbarrera Wrote:
(04-13-2022, 03:27 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: Generational change doesn't mean much in politics. Only Party, and ideological shifts. Brown-Jackson's appointment does not change the Supreme Court's ideological makeup.

Interesting though, the complaint against FDR's Court when he threatened to pack it was that the justices were too old. Now the complaint you are making against Biden's Court, as threats to pack it are made again, is that the justices are too young.

The same problem applies, regardless. The conservative majority is stuck in the past. The "legal precedents" that may be overturned are liberal ones, which are oriented toward justice and solutions for the future. The new trend, already under way for a number of years, will be not just to keep the law as it is, but to reverse it and bring it back to the past when it favored the rich, the powerful and the prejudiced.

I think the generational change does make a difference. The Silents leaving and Gen X becoming nearly half the court - all of which happened over just the past 5 years - means that long-standing precedents are going to be upended.

It could happen, although they would be liberal "precedents" most likely, because of the ideological make--up. If the Gen Xers on the Court were liberals, then those precedents would not be upended. So it seems ideology and political party is the factor involved, if they overturn such precedents. What counts is how many justices were appointed by Democrats. That's only three now. Six were appointed by Republicans. Old-cohort Boomer Trump appointed three of them.

Most folks today discount the importance of political parties at the very time when they are the most polarized and powerful. Another fact: five of the Republican justices today were appointed, in effect, by the electoral college, a system created in part to placate southern slave-holding states. It still placates them.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
#6
(04-15-2022, 11:52 AM)Eric the Green Wrote:
(04-13-2022, 04:12 PM)sbarrera Wrote:
(04-13-2022, 03:27 PM)Eric the Green Wrote: Generational change doesn't mean much in politics. Only Party, and ideological shifts. Brown-Jackson's appointment does not change the Supreme Court's ideological makeup.

Interesting though, the complaint against FDR's Court when he threatened to pack it was that the justices were too old. Now the complaint you are making against Biden's Court, as threats to pack it are made again, is that the justices are too young.

The same problem applies, regardless. The conservative majority is stuck in the past. The "legal precedents" that may be overturned are liberal ones, which are oriented toward justice and solutions for the future. The new trend, already under way for a number of years, will be not just to keep the law as it is, but to reverse it and bring it back to the past when it favored the rich, the powerful and the prejudiced.

I think the generational change does make a difference. The Silents leaving and Gen X becoming nearly half the court - all of which happened over just the past 5 years - means that long-standing precedents are going to be upended.

It could happen, although they would be liberal "precedents" most likely, because of the ideological make--up. If the Gen Xers on the Court were liberals, then those precedents would not be upended. So it seems ideology and political party is the factor involved, if they overturn such precedents. What counts is how many justices were appointed by Democrats. That's only three now. Six were appointed by Republicans. Old-cohort Boomer Trump appointed three of them.

Most folks today discount the importance of political parties at the very time when they are the most polarized and powerful. Another fact: five of the Republican justices today were appointed, in effect, by the electoral college, a system created in part to placate southern slave-holding states. It still placates them.

What do Gen Xers favor as a generation?  They certainly abhor conflict that affects them and their families, so liberal advances they see as threatening are going to trigger a response.  Will democracy itself fall into that bucket of unacceptables?  Perhaps, if it feels too threatening.  Classic-Xer is a perfect foil in this instance.  His complaints have little to do with legalities and everything to do with grievance.  I doubt he's atypical of his generation -- not entirely, at least.  If the white-middle-class bias in our system gets a serious challenge, assume the worst.
Intelligence is not knowledge and knowledge is not wisdom, but they all play well together.
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