Can the Rule of Law Survive Judicial Politics?

64 Pages Posted: 11 Jul 2013

See all articles by Charles G. Geyh

Charles G. Geyh

Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington

Date Written: 2012

Abstract

According to a Renaissance myth, the ermine would rather die than soil its pristine, white coat. English and later American judges would adopt the ermine as a symbol of the judiciary’s purity and commitment to the rule of law. This "ermine myth" remains central to the legal establishment’s conception of the judicial role: independent judges, the argument goes, disregard extralegal influences and instead follow the law strictly. In contrast, political scientists had long theorized that judicial independence liberates judges to disregard the law and substitute their extralegal policy preferences. A recent spate of interdisciplinary research, however, has led to an emerging consensus among law professors and political scientists that judges are subject to a complex array of legal and extralegal influences. This emerging scholarly consensus stands in stark contrast to the simplistic and dichotomous public policy debate, where court critics seek to control “activist” judges, whom they accuse of ignoring the law and legislating from the bench, while the legal establishment defends judges and their independence from attack, citing the ermine myth that independent judges are committed solely to upholding the law.

This article explores the future of the ermine myth that has guided the legal establishment for centuries. It argues that as the public gradually internalizes the view it shares with scholars that judges are subject to legal and extralegal influences, the legal establishment’s claims that independent judges are influenced by law alone will become increasingly unsustainable. That, in turn, will culminate in an erosion of rule of law values, a decline of public confidence in the courts, and the imposition of greater popular and political controls on judicial decision-making. This fate is not inevitable, however; the judiciary’s independence can and should be defended on less antiquated grounds than those embedded in the ermine myth. The solution is to reorient the myth itself to embrace more a contemporary and realistic conception of the judicial role. The judicial role, as reconceptualized, must justify public support for the independence of a judiciary that is subject to legal and extralegal influences. That can be done, the article concludes, if we begin from the premise that judges inevitably exercise discretion that is profitably informed by extralegal influences, and defend the independence of such judges on the grounds that it will promote due process, sound, pragmatic decision-making, and a more flexible conception of the rule of law.

Keywords: Judges, judicial independence, judicial accountability, rule of law, judicial politics, judicial decisionmaking

Suggested Citation

Geyh, Charles G., Can the Rule of Law Survive Judicial Politics? (2012). Cornell Law Review, Vol. 97, No. 191 (2011-2012), Indiana Legal Studies Research Paper No. 252, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2292063

Charles G. Geyh (Contact Author)

Indiana University School of Law-Bloomington ( email )

211 S. Indiana Avenue
Bloomington, IN 47405
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
149
Abstract Views
773
Rank
354,898
PlumX Metrics