Forget the Supremes. The real threat to Justice ts the hundreds of conservative appointees to the lower federal courts
In the final desperate hours before California inmate Robert Alton Harris was put to death in April, 10 federal judges tried to have off the executioner. Working separately and in tandem, the judges of the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals issued four distinct stays of execution--including one that came after Harris had been strapped into the gas chamber chair at 4 a.m. Each time, the weary justices of the Supreme Court rejected the stay until, at last, the court issued the unprecedented order to the Ninth Circuit to grant no more stays. Harris was executed.
What with the media attention heaped on the Supreme Court as a result of its decision, you'd be forgiven for forgetting that the Brethren were only the last in a long line of state and federal courts to decide that Robert Alton Harris should die. But that fact is worth keeping in mind. For while the Supreme Court serves as a lightning rod for liberal fear and loathing, an examination of the federal courts--and the verdicts and interpretations they hand down-- shows them to be more conservative than the Supreme Court.
That should come, in fact, as no surprise. Twelve years of Bush and Reagan have given us only a handful of conservative Supreme Court justices. But they've given us hundreds of federal court judges, and they're quietly but radically changing the law of the land.
In the Harris case, all but two of the ten judges who sided with Harris were appointed to the court by President Jimmy Carter. These days, when a federal judge bucks the conservative tide, chances are good that the judge is a Carter appointee. Carter judges have declared panhandling an activity protected by the First Amendment and ordered pay equity for males and females in jobs of comparable worth. And in June of this year, when a panel of Sixth Circuit judges ordered a reheating of the case of alleged Nazi executioner John Demjanjuk-- whose identification as Ivan the Terrible is now officially in doubt--again it was the work of Carter appointees.
Even so, decisions like these often turn out to be short-lived victories; many liberal rnlings are eventually overturned as they slowly work their way up through the courts. The rightward shift has, of course, been most visible on the Supreme Court. Our nation's attention-if not its conscience--was aroused by the feisty public battles waged at the confirmation heatings of Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas. And the high court's recent decisions on abortion, employment discrimination, and prisoners' rights, to name a few, have served to highlight the starboard list. But the decisions at the next tier of the judiciary-the circuit courts of appeals--and the tier below that--the district courts--are, ideologically, the Supreme Court again and again. Only worse.
The numbers paint a vivid picture: By the end of this summer, assuming that the Senate confirms a batch of pending judicial nominations, Reagan-Bush appointees …