It wasn’t enough for the Republican-appointed Supreme Court majority to close the term with a rash of cruel decisions. No, Chief Justice John Roberts and his GOP colleagues also had to whine about how their dissenting Democratic colleagues disagreed.
In addition to the right-wing decisions themselves, this toxic mixture of arrogance and victimhood will carry through to next term and beyond.
Roberts displayed his noble tone-policing in the student loan case, Biden v. Nebraska, in which the majority concocted standing for supposedly aggrieved red states and used an invented doctrine to strike down debt relief for millions of people. Justice Elena Kagan pointed out the erroneous rationale on both fronts in her dissent.
“From the first page to the last, today’s opinion departs from the demands of judicial restraint,” Kagan wrote.
“The majority’s opinion begins by distorting standing doctrine to create a case fit for judicial resolution,” she added, explaining that Roberts’ ruling “ends by applying the Court’s made-up major-questions doctrine to jettison the Secretary’s loan forgiveness plan.”
So in a case that, as Kagan noted, was “not a case,” the majority overrode “the combined judgment of the Legislative and Executive Branches, with the consequence of eliminating loan forgiveness for 43 million Americans.”
Roberts, for his part, wasn’t content to merely wield power when it came to the decision itself.
Roberts, for his part, wasn’t content to merely wield power when it came to the decision itself. He also felt the need to use the pages of a Supreme Court majority opinion to complain about how the powerful majority was being criticized.
“It has become a disturbing feature of some recent opinions to criticize the decisions with which they disagree as going beyond the proper role of the judiciary,” the chief justice whined.
Yet, as voting rights lawyer Marc Elias observed Thursday on “Deadline: White House,” what’s “disturbing” about Roberts’ critique is the chief justice laying blame with dissenters questioning the court, instead of the majority doing the work of convincing the public that it’s right.
"What I found distressing about the [Chief Justice's] critique is…he blamed it on the dissents…if the Supreme Court has dismal approval ratings…that's the fault of the majority's inability… to persuade the American public" @marceelias w/ @NicolleDWallace pic.twitter.com/HVSXjV3Fw9








