Centrist and conservative commentators are saying the recent pro-abortion rights protests outside the houses of conservative Supreme Court justices have crossed a line. These are mobs of harassers who have breached the acceptable parameters of protest, critics contend. But such arguments rest in large part on the myth of an apolitical judiciary. Looked at another way, the protests are salutary rather than destructive, bringing something to bear upon the court that by design it has been always been shielded from: democratic energy.
The leaked draft Supreme Court opinion that would overturn Roe v. Wade has sparked protests across the nation. The rage is understandable: Nearly two-thirds of Americans want to keep Roe v. Wade in place, and a majority of the women of childbearing age in the U.S. live in states where their abortion rights would be imperiled if the draft opinion becomes final.
The judicial branch, just like the executive and legislative branches, is involved in the business of politics.
But demonstrations outside the houses of Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Chief Justice John Roberts in recent days have generated backlash this week from a number of talking heads.
“Don’t picket judges at home. It’s wrong,” tweeted David Frum, a writer at The Atlantic and a former George W. Bush official.
“This is wrong, stupid, potentially dangerous, and politically counterproductive,” tweeted Paul Begala, a former Bill Clinton strategist, regarding a video of the protests outside of Kavanaugh’s house.
This is wrong, stupid, potentially dangerous, and politically counterproductive. https://t.co/NhwemyNJe3
— Paul Begala (@PaulBegala) May 9, 2022
“Why did the WH [White House] refuse to denounce targeting of SCOTUS justices? Where are responsible Dem voices condemning this?” tweeted Stephen Hayes, editor of The Dispatch, in response to the same video.
Frum, Begala, Hayes and co. seem to believe the impropriety of the protests is self-evident. Protesting outside a justice’s home is seen as inherently inappropriate because it is seen as a breach of the tradition of public deference toward the justices, and a kind of harassment.
But what exactly are the alternatives for the citizenry?
The very nature of being a Supreme Court justice involves insulation from any kind of engagement with regular citizens. These people make enormously influential decisions about the lives and liberty of all Americans, yet they are unelected, appointed based on often arbitrary procedural rules, operate in near-total secrecy, and serve for life. Save the extremely unlikely possibility of impeachment for misconduct, they face little in the way of accountability for their actions.
While certainly vexing for officials, it’s normal in this day and age for protesters to peacefully question and challenge government officials outside the workplace, including outside their homes, in response to a specific policy. Senators such as Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., engage with these challenges from citizens because they understand this is part of what it means to be involved in crafting policies that reshape the lives of hundreds of millions of people in a democracy. If one does not wish to put up with this kind of pressure, one has the option to not accept a position of extreme power as a public official who makes life-and-death decisions about other people.








