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Packing the Court: The Rise of Judicial Power and the Coming Crisis of the Supreme Court
 
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Packing the Court: The Rise of Judicial Power and the Coming Crisis of the Supreme Court (Hardcover)

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Pulitzer-winning historian Burns gives a brisk, readable tour of the history of the appointment of Supreme Court justices since 1789. In this respect, the book is fresh and compelling. But Burns (Running Alone) has another aim. Particularly aggrieved by the Rehnquist and Roberts courts, he argues that every president since Washington has sought to fill the Court with justices who think as he does; that judicial review is unconstitutional; that the unelected Court has never been politically accountable to the American people;and that a courageous president (like Barack Obama, he suggests) should simply announce that, like Andrew Jackson, he won't abide by Supreme Court rulings that invalidate laws enacted by Congress and signed by him. Known for the liberal flags he flies, Burns runs up the radical pennant here. There's no evidence that the American people are as aggrieved over the Court as Burns is. And the term packing should be reserved, as until now it has been, for extreme manipulative efforts like FDR's. This is a terrific little book—save for its politics run amok. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


From The Washington Post

From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com Reviewed by Jeffrey Rosen The history of the Supreme Court is too important to be monopolized by lawyers. It's a welcome development, therefore, that James MacGregor Burns, one of America's most distinguished historians of presidential power and leadership, has turned his attention to the court. In many respects, "Packing the Court" is just what you would expect of Burns: a readable and accessible history, full of memorable details about the byzantine nominations and political peculiarities of famous and obscure justices during the past two centuries. But "Packing the Court" also turns out to be a polemic, although an elegant and interestingly radical one. Burns's thesis rests on a series of bold claims. "Most justices have been political activists -- party politicos," he insists, because "from George Washington to George W. Bush, the opportunity for presidents to pack the bench with loyalists . . . has been irresistible." From the beginning, Burns continues, the court has established its "supremacy" over the president and Congress because of Chief Justice John Marshall's "brilliant political coup" in Marbury v. Madison (1803): asserting a power to strike down unconstitutional laws. By aggressively wielding this power, which Burns controversially claims that the framers never intended, the court has become the "most unstable" branch of government, "as well as the most unrepresentative of all the people." What Burns calls "the unconstitutional obstacle of the judicial veto" can often "reduce Congress to helplessness and make bystanders of presidents." Each of these claims is open to vigorous debate. Burns is too quick to equate Marshall's assertions about judicial review -- namely, the claim that the court has the power to strike down unconstitutional laws -- with assertions about judicial supremacy -- namely, the far more controversial claim that the court alone has the power to interpret the Constitution. In fact, in Marbury, Marshall defended judicial review, not judicial supremacy, which weakens Burns's argument that he engineered a "political coup" that would have appalled the framers. (The more conventional view is that judicial review was widely accepted by the time of Marbury.) And it wasn't until 1959 that the court equated its own decision in Brown v. Board of Education with the "supreme law of the land." Although Burns provocatively calls the judicial power to veto laws "unconstitutional," he is an inconsistent champion of judicial deference. At times, he seems to defend complete judicial abstinence, criticizing Felix Frankfurter, one of the most restrained justices in the 20th century, for occasionally striking down laws. But he also seems to applaud recent court decisions that challenged President Bush in the war on terror. Then, just when you think Burns is attacking the court for striking down liberal but not conservative laws and policies, he convincingly warns liberals that "looking to the Supreme Court for continuing liberal leadership was always a bad bet," because the court over time has tended to be an enemy of progressive legislation. Burns is part of an honorable bipartisan tradition of judicial restraint, associated most prominently with Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. He criticizes what he calls the O'Connor court as an "imperious court" that "reigned supreme over the political and constitutional landscape." But although Justice Sandra Day O'Connor was indeed an activist, judged by her willingness to strike down state and federal laws, her record challenges Burns's thesis that the court has often "stood outside the mainstream of public opinion." It's arguable, for example, that O'Connor represented the views of the moderate majority of the American people -- fiscally conservative and socially moderate -- more accurately than the Gingrich Congress. More generally, Burns does not engage with the extensive legal and historical literature that suggests the Supreme Court has tended to reflect the views of the majority of Americans more often than to challenge them, and that on the rare occasions that it has produced anti-majoritarian rulings, the resulting backlashes usually produced a hasty judicial retreat. Burns predicts that "within a generation or two -- perhaps much sooner," a "conservative, obstructionist" Supreme Court will once again confront a liberal president and Congress. He imagines that the "coming crisis" of his subtitle may arise as a pro-business court composed of "formidable free-marketeers" strikes down progressive economic legislation. It's possible, but I wouldn't bet on it. The Roberts court is indeed pro-business, but not especially libertarian: For this reason, among the current justices, only Clarence Thomas might be instinctively inclined to challenge President Obama's economic recovery program at its core. I'm similarly skeptical of Burns's extreme prescription for taming the court: In a proposal he calls "momentous," "daring," "inspiring" and "risky," he suggests that the president should "announce flatly that he or she would not accept the Supreme Court's verdicts" unless the people pass a constitutional amendment explicitly authorizing the justices to strike down unconstitutional laws. Obama, a former constitutional law professor, seems to have a more measured view of the role the Supreme Court has tended to play in American democracy: ratifying social change that has emerged from political activism, rather than unilaterally causing or obstructing change on its own. But although I wasn't convinced by Burns's prescriptions for the very real problem of judicial supremacy, I was engaged, entertained and provoked by this surprising and energetic history of the court.
Copyright 2009, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin Press HC, The (June 25, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1594202192
  • ISBN-13: 978-1594202193
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #117,040 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #5 in  Books > Nonfiction > Social Sciences > Political Science > Constitutional History
    #28 in  Books > Nonfiction > Social Sciences > Political Science > United States > Judicial Branch

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Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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65 of 84 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars second-rate history and first-rate lunacy, June 30, 2009
By Peter Irons (greenville ca usa) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Several months ago, this book's publicist sent me a pre-publication copy, soliciting a "blurb" for the back-cover jacket and advertising, at the request (she said) of Professor Burns. Frankly, I didn't know (until I consulted Wikipedia) that Burns, at the age of ninety, was still alive and had written his twenty-somethingth book, his first on the Supreme Court. On reading the book, I was flattered to discover that Burns had cited and quoted from four of my own books on Supreme Court history.

However, I declined the request for a blurb, for two reasons. First, the twelve chapters on the history of presidential Supreme Court nominations, from George Washington to George W. Bush, were entirely derivative and added little, if anything, to what previous scholars (most notably, Henry Abraham of the University of Virginia, in his book, Justices and Presidents) had already written on this topic. Like Abraham and other scholars in this field, Burns notes that presidents most often nominate justices who (they hope) will reflect and follow their political ideologies (Sonia Sotomayor being the latest example). Burns also notes that presidents sometimes guess wrong: FDR with Felix Frankfurter, Eisenhower with Earl Warren and William Brennan ("my two biggest mistakes"), and George H. W. Bush with David Souter. There's nothing new in Burns's recounting of this history.

My second reason for declining the blurb request stems from the book's thirteen-page epilogue, entitled "The End of Judicial Supremacy?" I was actually not surprised by what Burns wrote in his epilogue, since his previous books (including biographies of FDR and JFK) championed presidential "leadership" of the liberal variety (I happen to share Burns's politics, but not his prescription in this book). Burns puts this prescription in two sentences: "Confronted by a hostile court repeatedly striking down progressive legislation, a president could declare that there is no place in a modern democracy for unelected judges to veto twenty-first-century laws. The president would announce flatly that he would not accept the Supreme Court's verdicts because the power of judicial emasculation of legislation was not--and never had been--in the Constitution." Burns proposes a constitutional amendment (whose wording he does not elucidate) that would allow presidents to invalidate Supreme Court decisions with which they disagree.

Think about this! Eisenhower could have struck down Brown v. Board of Education, Nixon could have struck down Roe v. Wade, and George W. Bush could have struck down the Court's "enemy combatant" rulings. Burns would probably reply that he doesn't mean to go this far, but that's my reading of his radical proposal for presidential autocracy. Of course, this won't happen, but Burns's proposal itself is grounds for dismissing his book as second-rate history and first-rate lunacy. If Burns had his way, the Constitution's checks and balances, and the separation of powers, would disappear.

Note: I am editing this review on July 6 to alert readers of other reviews that the one posted on July 5 by Stewart Burns was written by James Macgregor Burns's son, who did not disclose that fact in his review. I think it's unethical and inappropriate for family members to review each other's books, and to conceal that relationship. I don't know if JM Burns solicited his son's review, but even if he didn't, it's bad form. Does anyone else agree with me? And does Stewart want to explain why he didn't reveal his familial tie?
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Bad History, Bad Book, August 23, 2009
The only thing I learned is that there is still at least one historian who is stuck in a 1930s time warp, in which the history of the Court is a battle between evil reactionaries who oppose "Progressive" legislation and brave, goodhearted liberals who support such legislation. Every hoary Progressive/New Dealer myth about the Supreme Court and its Justices is trotted out, every liberal shibboleth of the past seventy years repeated.

Consider Burns's depiction of the Justices the early 20th century. Holmes, Brandeis, and Harlan were the liberal heroes, everyone else the reactionary villains.

Thus, Holmes was the "great dissenter" who pitted "pragmatism against conservative dogma." No mention of his hostility to African-American rights, support for eugenics, and so forth. John Marshall Harlan, who helped introduce the liberty of contract doctrine to the Supreme Court, and wrote one of the most important liberty of contract cases, Adair v. United States, is anachronistically described as a "liberal." Brandeis was "an exquisitely tolerant, compassionate and wordly man" with a "zeal for freedom ... in his blood."

The rest of the Court, however, adopted the late Justice Stephen Field's "laissez-faire absolutism." William Day (who dissented in Adair) was a "reliable ally of the court's conservative phalanx." All of the six Justices appointed by William Howard Taft were "stout conservatives." William Van Devanter was the "commander-in-chief of judicial reaction." George Sutherland was the leader of the Court's "extreme right-wing." Pierce Butler, who was perhaps the strongest opponent of the excesses of Prohibition enforcement and the only dissenter in Buck v. Bell (coerced sterilization), is reduced to a right-wing railroad lawyer who showed no "regard for dissidents, or for blacks or workers." And so on.

No serious modern historian of the Court would recognize these cartoon characters. But this book, I'm afraid, is not a serious history.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Pooe Excuse For a "Scholarly" Book, September 24, 2009
By AlwaysRight (Left Wing Madison Wisconsin) - See all my reviews
This author is just another shill for the left wing. I chose to read this book fully expecting to find a scholarly, unbiased analysis of the Supreme Court over the history of the republic...instead this book is just another liberal left wing diatribe...whenever the court structure is liberal and re-writing laws to match "contemporary" culture, or ruling against any kind of business, it is a great court, in the author's opinion. If it is conservative in structure, or ruling in favor of businesses, then of course someone has "packed" it. The Teddy Roosevelt appointees, because they ruled in the author's favored political direction, was not packed...the Warren court, politically correct rulings, of course was not packed...the Clinton appointees to the court, of course that was not packing... the Nixon appointees, well it was packed...the Bush appointees, well of course it was packed,the Reagan appointees, again it was packed. Readers should read the last chapter about the "Bush-Cheney" court and the author's true colors will come through, and not bother reading the rest of the book because you will not get anything scholarly out of his analysis. In fact,you are better off trying to find this book at your local library, read the last chapter, then return it...no cost and only a little of your time wasted. Wish I had done that...
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Sadly disappointing
The first part of the book was very informative...a well written history of the evolution of Supreme Court. Read more
Published 1 month ago by A. Colbert

5.0 out of 5 stars 233 years of Constitutional history in 261 pages
Burns is a meticulous historian who packs (pardon the pun) a wealth of historical narrative in a mere 261 pages of Packing the Court. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Alex J. Mili Jr.

5.0 out of 5 stars Packing the Court: The Rise of Judicial Power and the Coming crisis of the Supreme Court
James MacGregor Burns' history of the judicial system is brilliant. The writing indicates why he is considered one of America's premier historians. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Brian J. Mc Ginley

5.0 out of 5 stars YOUR HAVE WRITTEN A GREAT BOOK, MR BURNS



James MacGregor Burns, the 89- year old distinguished historian and Pulitizer winner, noted for his biographical works on Franklin D... Read more
Published 3 months ago by HAROLD J. REYNOLDS

1.0 out of 5 stars Good History Tainted by Ideology
The goal of this book is to convince the reader that the judicial supremecy of the Supreme Court must come to an end. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Neo Dawn

4.0 out of 5 stars A Somewhat Puzzling Effort by Burns
When I first began to study political science about 47 years ago, the textbook we used was by James MacGregor Burns (b. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Ronald H. Clark

3.0 out of 5 stars Pack the Court, don't ignore it
As a lay reader of history I found Professor Burns' recounting of Supreme Court history enlightening, but was disappointed with his suggestion of ignoring the Court's rulings... Read more
Published 3 months ago by S. Cotton

3.0 out of 5 stars Solid History Marred By Ideology
In "Packing the Court", James MacGregor Burns is absolutely successful in providing the reader with a linear and concise history of the Supreme Court. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Athanasius

5.0 out of 5 stars A completely engrossing history of the Supreme Court
This is a completely engrossing history of the Supreme Court and its
politicization over the course of American history. Read more
Published 4 months ago by D. Davidson

5.0 out of 5 stars Superb for book-group discussion
I was looking for a book that would be fresh and challenging for a book group and this is the ideal choice. Read more
Published 4 months ago by Harmony Seeker

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