One, how quickly we forget: recall it was Souter who (in the words of Jeffrey Toobin) "was shattered" by Bush v. Gore:
His whole life was being a judge. He came from a tradition where the independence of the judiciary was the foundation of the rule of law. And Souter believed Bush v. Gore mocked that tradition. His colleagues' actions were so transparently, so crudely partisan that Souter thought he might not be able to serve with them any more.And it wasn't just his adversaries; as Toobin makes clear, Souter found himself estranged even from his friends:
He was, fundamentally, a very different person from his colleagues. It wasn't just that they had immediate families; their lives off the bench were entirely unlike his. They went to parties and conferences; they gave speeches; they mingled in Washington, where cynicism about everything, including the work of the Supreme Court, was universal. Toughened, or coarsened, by their worldly lives, the other dissenters could shrug and move on, but Souter couldn't.So, Bush v. Gore. That's one reason. The second reason is that Souter doesn't need to leave the Court to go back to New Hampshire. Justice John Paul Stevens has been living in Florida for years. True, his physical absence may have something to do with the fact that Stevens has never been much of an intellectual influence on any of his colleagues--contrast Souter who made his biggest impact in alliance with Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony Kennedy. (Apparently) true also that Souter doesn't like the internet. But that's why God created law clerks. If aversion to Washington was his problem, there was any easy way out, and he didn't take it. I'd say he is embittered with the Court.--Jeffrey Toobin, The Nine 207-8 (2007)
1 comment:
My NPR listenings tell me you are correct, but that after Bush v. Gore, he was determined not to let GW appoint his successor so he stuck it out for eight more years. I call that integrity.
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