Few public events reach the intensity of political
interest and personal emotion of the 1992 Supreme Court
case on abortion rights legislation (Planned Parenthood
of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey) or the 1991
Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on the nomination of
Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court. For many, what
made the 1992 presidential election so critical was that
the new president will likely replace a minimum of one,
and possibly as many as three, Supreme Court justices in
1993 alone! Once observers of primarily the other two
branches of government, the presidency and Congress, we
have now become a nation of Court watchers as well. The
reason is simple; the Supreme Court, the cases it
decides to hear, its inner workings, and the
confirmation process have become highly politicized -
their impact on American society felt heavily. In this
fully updated version of his 1986 American Bar
Association Silver Gavel Award-winning book, noted
constitutional law scholar David M. O'Brien again brings
the Supreme Court into open view. We meet the current
nine justices and their sometimes eccentric
predecessors. We hear the surprising backstage stories
of their appointments and the presidential efforts to
shape the Court. Based on thorough interviews with
current and past justices, and continual and exhaustive
research into the private working papers of justices as
well as their presidents, the book reveals the
negotiations and compromises behind the landmark and the
early 1990 decisions on abortion, school desegregation,
legislative apportionment, free speech, and the rights
of the accused. In the midst of the ongoing debate over
the Supreme Court, we see, above all, "the
leastdangerous branch" of government where personality,
politics, law, and justice come together in a "storm
center" to shape and often change drastically the
society in which we live.
|
|