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William Rehnquist

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia:

William Hubbs Rehnquist


William H. Rehnquist
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(born Oct. 1, 1924, Milwaukee, Wis., U.S.died Sept. 3, 2005, Arlington, Va.) U.S. jurist who served as chief justice of the United States (19862005). He received his law degree from Stanford University and served as clerk to Supreme Court justice Robert Jackson. He later practiced law in Phoenix, Ariz. (195369), where he became active in the conservative wing of the Republican Party. At the U.S. Justice Department (196971), he opposed civil rights legislation and advocated greatly enlarged police powers. He was nominated for the Supreme Court by Pres. Richard Nixon in 1972. During the 1970s and into the '80s, Rehnquist formed the anchor of the court's conservative minority bloc. His polished legal opinions and consistently conservative stance on almost all legal issues led Pres. Ronald Reagan to appoint him chief justice in 1986. Rehnquist dramatically reduced the court's caseload and improved its efficiency. With the support of other conservatives, he led the court in curbing the ability of Congress to expand federal authority and in curtailing affirmative action programs. He presided over the U.S. Senate during the impeachment trial of Pres. Bill Clinton (1999).

For more information on William Hubbs Rehnquist, visit Britannica.com.

Oxford Companion to the US Supreme Court:

William Hubbs Rehnquist

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(b. Milwaukee, Wis., 1 Oct. 1924), associate justice, 1972–1986; chief justice, 1986–. Appointed by President Richard Nixon for his views on criminal justice and his endorsement of a more modest role for the Court, William H. Rehnquist was the most conservative member of the Burger Court; he was also often identified as the justice with the most impressive intellectual ability. When Chief Justice Warren Burger announced his retirement in 1986 President Ronald Reagan, pleased with Rehnquist's conservative views, elevated him to the position of chief justice. By the end of the 1980s a conservative bloc of justices had emerged with views that coincided with Rehnquist's. Thus, he led the Court through the last decade of the twentieth century and into the twenty‐first.

Rehnquist's background sheds some light on his later work as a justice. After earning two masters' degrees in political science—one from Stanford in 1949 and one from Harvard in 1950—he graduated from Stanford Law School in December 1951. He served as clerk to Justice Robert H. Jackson in 1952 and 1953, and it was in that capacity that he wrote a memorandum to help the justice prepare for the Court's discussion of the constitutional challenge to officially segregated schools. Rehnquist's memorandum argued in favor of upholding the separate but equal doctrine of Plessy v. Ferguson (1896). After completing his clerkship with Jackson, he moved to Phoenix, Arizona, where for sixteen years he practiced law and participated in a variety of local political activities. During those years he appeared as a witness before the Phoenix City Council in opposition to a public accommodations ordinance and took part in a program of challenging voters at the polls. From 1969 until 1971 Rehnquist served as assistant attorney general for the Office of Legal Counsel. In that position, he supported executive authority to order wiretapping and surveillance without a court order, no‐knock entry by the police, preventive detention, and abolishing the exclusionary rule.

The influence that Rehnquist has had on the decisions of the Supreme Court during the last third of the twentieth and the early years of the twenty‐first centuries revolves around his efforts to shift the balance of power away from the federal government back to the states, and in so doing to limit the powers of the federal judiciary. His conception of the appropriate distribution of powers between the national government and the states has had a major influence as well on the extent to which the Constitution protects individual rights.

Rehnquist played a leading role during the 1970s in reviving the debate—generally considered to have been settled since the late 1930s—concerning the powers of Congress under the Commerce Clause. In his opinion for a five‐member majority in 1976 he asserted that Congress's commerce power is limited by the fact that it may not legislate in such a way as to infringe on fundamental aspects of state sovereignty that are essential to the states' ability to function in the federal system (National League of Cities v. Usery). When an equally narrow majority overruled that decision in 1985, Rehnquist expressed his confidence that the principles of state sovereignty would “in time again command the support of a majority of this Court” (Garcia v. San Antonio Metropolitan Transit Authority, p. 580). In 1995 his view prevailed once more when, for the first time in sixty years, a majority invalidated a federal law—the Gun‐Free School Zones Act—on the grounds that Congress had exceeded its constitutional authority to regulate interstate commerce (United States v. Lopez). His position dominated the Court into the twenty‐first century, albeit by a narrow majority. Indeed, the chief justice appeared to have successfully brought an end to the Court's deferential attitude toward Congress's exercise of its commerce power and revived the pre‐1937 requirement that Congress must demonstrate that activity it seeks to regulate has a substantial effect on interstate commerce.

In 2000 Rehnquist wrote for the majority to invalidate the Violence Against Women Act, which authorized civil actions against individuals who commit crimes of violence motivated by gender (United States v. Morrison). Noting that gender‐motivated crimes of violence are not economic activity, the chief justice suggested that even though Congress had tried to provide support for the statute with findings that gender‐motivated violence has a serious impact on interstate commerce, such findings were not sufficient to demonstrate the requisite substantial impact on interstate commercial transactions or products. Rehnquist, in short, has been instrumental in reversing the Court's long‐standing tradition of deferring to Congress's use of its power under the Commerce Clause. Moreover, he has played an active role in limiting the power of the federal courts by construing the Eleventh Amendment as a bar to federal suits brought by individuals against state agencies (see, for example, Edelman v. Jordan, 1974; Seminole Tribe of Florida v. Florida 1996; Board of Trustees of Alabama v. Garrett, 2001).

Rehnquist has also had a major impact on the Court's decisions in the area of the rights of individuals accused of crimes. His support for law enforcement has been consistent. He has referred to the process by which the Court incorporated the Bill of Rights in the 1960s as a “mysterious process of transmogrification” (p. 309) and has endorsed the earlier approach whereby the states were not required to comply with the Bill of Rights but only to treat individuals with fundamental fairness (see Carter v. Kentucky, 1981). He wrote opinions for the majority restricting defendants' ability to challenge police searches (Rakas v. Illinois, 1978; Rawlings v. Kentucky, 1980). He endorsed limiting the exclusionary rule with an exception based on the “good faith” of the police (United States v. Leon, 1984) and wrote the opinion for the majority upholding pretrial detention (United States v. Salerno, 1987).

Rehnquist has also played an active role in the Court's efforts to limit the Miranda rules. In 1984 he wrote an opinion for the majority endorsing a “public safety” exception to Miranda's requirement that the police advise suspects in custody of their rights before questioning them (New York v. Quarles). A pivotal issue in the controversy regarding the continuing viability of the Miranda standards is that of whether the rule is itself a constitutional requirement or a “prophylactic” rule to help protect Fifth Amendment rights. If the Miranda warnings are not required by the Constitution, then Congress could legislate to guarantee the protection against self‐incrimination through other means and, in effect, could overrule Miranda. Rehnquist made his position on this issue clear in 1974 when he stated that the Miranda rights are “prophylactic rules” (p. 439), “procedural safeguards,” intended “to provide practical reinforcement for the privilege against self‐incrimination” that are “not themselves rights protected by the Constitution” (Michigan v. Tucker, p. 444). When the issue came squarely before the Court in 2000 it was widely expected that a majority, including the chief justice, would take the opportunity to overrule Miranda. Surprisingly, however, Rehnquist wrote an opinion for the majority declining to do so, emphasizing that there was no justification for casting aside a rule that had become embedded in routine police practice (Dickerson v. United States).

Throughout his career on the Court, Rehnquist has consistently opposed efforts to limit the death penalty. He urged the Court to retain the death penalty against the charge that it violates the Eighth Amendment (Furman v. Georgia, 1972). Subsequently, he joined the majority when it held that the death penalty may be used in cases of “felony murder” (Tison v. Arizona, 1987). He also voted with the majority to hold that statistical evidence of racial discrimination in capital sentencing cannot, without more, establish a violation of the Eighth Amendment (McCleskey v. Kemp, 1987). Additionally, Rehnquist supported the Court when it upheld the imposition of the death penalty on individuals who were sixteen or seventeen years old at the time they committed murder and dissented when a majority held that a fifteen‐year‐old could not be executed (Stanford v. Kentucky, 1989; Thompson v. Oklahoma, 1988). He dissented when the Court held that the Eighth Amendment prohibits the execution of the mentally retarded (Atkins v. Virginia, 2002).

As a member of the Burger Court, Rehnquist was outspoken in his opposition to the expansive use of habeas corpus as a vehicle for reform. He campaigned to limit the use of federal habeas corpus to challenge death sentences. In 1981 he complained that in spite of the Court's determination that capital punishment does not violate the Constitution, there had been only one execution of a defendant who had persisted in challenging his sentence. He blamed the Court for allowing the death penalty to become “virtually an illusion” (p. 958), making a mockery of the criminal justice system (Coleman v. Balkcom). Although he stood alone in 1981 his position came to prevail in the 1990s.

In 1989, in his capacity as head of the Judicial Conference of the United States, Rehnquist appointed a committee to recommend limits on the availability of habeas corpus for death‐row appeals. The result was the Powell Report, which recommended that condemned prisoners be allowed only one appeal to the state courts, and if that failed, that one appeal to the federal courts would be allowed but only if filed within six months. Although the Conference postponed consideration of those recommendations, the chief justice sent the proposals directly to the House and Senate judiciary committees. Fourteen of the conference's twenty‐six other members asked the committees to delay action until they had heard from the senior federal judges. Undeterred, Rehnquist asked Congress to act on the proposals as soon as possible. Although Congress did not act, the Court did. In 1991, the justices held that petitioners would be required to show cause in second or subsequent habeas petitions for failing to raise a claim in an initial petition (McCleskey v. Zant). Two years later Rehnquist wrote for the majority, holding that a state prisoner's claim of actual innocence based on newly discovered evidence does not constitute grounds for federal habeas corpus relief (Herrera v. Collins, 1993). In 1996, when Congress moved to restrict habeas corpus in the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act by providing that second or subsequent habeas petitions cannot be filed unless a federal appeals court grants a motion giving the prisoner permission to file a petition, the Court unanimously and quickly upheld the legislation (Felker v. Turpin, 1996).

Two additional areas of individual rights in which Rehnquist has been outspoken but in which he has not been as successful in getting his views into the law concern privacy and equal protection. He has made clear his disagreement with the principle that a woman's right to choose to terminate a pregnancy is constitutionally protected. In his view, laws regulating abortion should be upheld so long as they are reasonably related to a legitimate state interest, including an interest in preserving human life (see Roe v. Wade 1973; Webster v. Reproductive Health Services, 1989; Planned Parenthood v. Casey, 1992). He has taken a similar position with regard to the right to refuse medical treatment, the right to assisted suicide (Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health, 1990; Washington v. Glucksberg, 1997), and the right of same‐sex couples to engage in consensual sex (Bowers v. Hardwick, 1986; Lawrence v. Texas, 2003).

Rehnquist's construction of the Fourteenth Amendment's mandate to the states not to deny any person the “equal protection of the laws ” is similarly narrow. He has contended that all that the framers of the Fourteenth Amendment hoped to achieve with the Equal Protection Clause was to prevent the states from treating black and white citizens differently. Consequently, according to Rehnquist, that clause should not apply when the state has not intentionally discriminated (Columbus v. Penick, 1979) nor when the state has not participated in discrimination (Moose Lodge v. Irvis, 1972); nor should the Equal Protection Clause be construed to prohibit disparate treatment based on gender (Craig v. Boren, 1976; Michael M. v. Superior Court of Sonoma County, 1981). He has also consistently held that race may not be considered in employment and university admissions programs (Regents of University of California v. Bakke, 1978; United Steelworkers of America v. Weber, 1979; Grutter v. Bollinger, 2003; Gratz v. Bollinger, 2003).

Rehnquist's decision making in the area of property rights has been noteworthy for the limits he would set on the extent to which the states may regulate property under the Fifth Amendment's Takings Clause. As a general rule, governmental regulation of property amounts to a compensable taking when it physically invades the property or prevents its use in such a way that its value is destroyed. Nevertheless, the mere fact that an exercise of the police power to protect the health, safety, and morals of the community causes some economic loss does not establish a taking of property. In 1978 Rehnquist dissented from the Court's determination that application of New York City's preservation law to prohibit construction of a fifty‐three‐story office building on top of Grand Central Terminal was not a taking (Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City, 1978). The landmarks law, he argued, imposed a multimillion‐dollar loss on the owners—an unfair burden that was not offset with any benefit to the city of landmark preservation—even though the law did not interfere with the use of the building as a railroad terminal. In several cases decided in the 1970s and early 1980s Rehnquist voted to uphold restrictions on property usage imposed by state and local governments, suggesting that his state‐centered federalism was more important to him than protecting property rights (Village of Belle Terre v. Boraas, 1973; Moore v. City of East Cleveland, 1977; Prune Yard Shopping Center v. Robbins, 1980). When Antonin Scalia joined the Court in 1986 and played a leading role in the Court's reinvigoration of the Takings Clause to protect the interests of property owners, Rehnquist was his ally (Nollan v. California Coastal Commission, 1987; Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council, 1992). The chief justice wrote for a five‐member majority in 1994 to hold that a local agency's decision to condition permission for the enlargement of a business site on the owner leaving a portion of the property open for a bicycle/pedestrian path and devoting some of it to a public green space constituted a taking. Rehnquist explained that if such exactions on development are to survive takings challenges, there must be some “sort of individualized determination” (p. 391) that there is a relationship between the conditions on the proposed development and the burdens anticipated from the building project. Stressing that the Takings Clause was an integral part of the Bill of Rights, Rehnquist intimated that regulations on land use might be held to a higher level of judicial scrutiny (Dolan v. City of Tigard, 1994).

Chief Justice Rehnquist has had an impact not only on the substance of the decisions of the Court but also on the way that the Court does its work. As the workload of the Court increased during the Warren and Burger years it became imperative for the chief justice to run the Court efficiently. Chief Justice Burger instituted a variety of reforms that were geared to improving the efficiency of the judiciary, and when Rehnquist became chief justice he adopted the same goal. The result is that the Court has become more bureaucratic (see Bureaucratization of the Court). Moreover, his efforts to streamline the conference have reputedly led to a decline in intellectual debate among the justices. He has also tried to promote efficiency by reducing the share of majority opinions assigned to justices who fail to complete their dissents within four weeks after the majority opinion circulates. While rushing through the cases with a minimum of intellectual exchange among the justices is consistent with the goal of increasing efficiency, it also may enhance Rehnquist's ability to control the decisions of the Court. Moreover, the Court's failure to address national controversies serves to promote Rehnquist's goal of reducing the role of the federal judiciary. The chief justice is also commonly credited with the shrinking docket of the Court—during the 2003 term the Court decided fewer than 90 cases, considerably fewer than the 175 decided in the 1985 term. The sharp decline in the number of cases the Court accepts for review may make the Court operate more efficiently, while it also may be part of Rehnquist's strategy to reduce the role of the Court and to let conservative decisions of the lower federal courts stand.

Scholars have explained Rehnquist's record in a variety of ways. Early assessments identified judicial self‐restraint as the driving force behind his decision making. By his own account, Rehnquist favored judicial deference to legislative decisions. In cases in which the Court was called on to resolve a conflict between the power of government and an individual, Rehnquist favored restraint, but when the conflict was between the federal government and a state, he was willing to use judicial power to invalidate federal laws in favor of state autonomy. Moreover, when the Court was called upon to resolve the disputed election of 2000 the chief justice voted to reverse the decision of the Florida supreme court (Bush v. Gore, 2000).

Such inconsistencies promote the perception of Rehnquist as unprincipled and result‐oriented. Yet his decision making might be understood as the product of a judicial philosophy with legal positivism at its core and a particular ordering of judicial values. In this view the most important value for Rehnquist is state‐centered federalism. Thus, federalism may be so central to his decision making that it abrogates any prescription for a minimal role for the Court. Such an analysis helps to account for his failure to support judicial restraint faithfully. Moreover, the consequences of state autonomy are usually consistent with such political objectives as facilitating the punishment of criminals.

Over the years Chief Justice Rehnquist has had an increasingly important impact on the Supreme Court. As chief justice he has been particularly successful in shaping the law in the areas that are central to his agenda of curtailing federal power, thereby limiting the constitutional protection of individual rights. He will surely be remembered as a justice whose conservative views began to capture a majority, as the make‐up of the Court grew increasingly conservative during the final years of the twentieth century. He has had a major influence on some of the most important decisions of the Court and has been particularly successful in shaping the law in the areas that are most important to him.

Bibliography

  • Sue Davis, Justice Rehnquist and the Constitution (1989).
  • Sue Davis, The Chief Justice and Judicial Decision‐Making: The Institutional Basis for Leadership on the Supreme Court, in Supreme Court Decision‐Making: New Institutionalist Approaches, edited by Cornell W. Clayton and Howard Gillman (1999), pp. 135–154.
  • Jeff Powell, The Compleat Jeffersonian: Justice Rehnquist and Federalism, Yale Law Journal 91 (1982): 1317–1370.
  • Jeffrey Rosen, Court Marshall, The New Republic, 21 June 1993.
  • John R. Rydell. Mr. Justice Rehnquist and Judicial Self‐Restraint, Hastings Law Journal 26 (1975): 875–915

— Sue Davis

Gale Encyclopedia of Biography:

William Hubbs Rehnquist

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William Hubbs Rehnquist, (born 1924) one of the most Conservative members of the Supreme Court, became the court's Chief Justice when he succeeded Justice Warren Burger in 1986.

William Hubbs Rehnquist was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on October 1, 1924. He grew up in the well-to-do Milwaukee suburb of Shorewood where his father, a first generation American of Swedish parentage, was a wholesale paper salesman. His mother, a graduate of the University of Wisconsin, was a housewife and a civic activist and, fluent in five foreign languages, worked as a freelance translator for local companies. At an early age he embraced his family's respect for such leaders of the Republican Party as Alf Landon, Wendell Wilkie, Herbert Hoover, and Robert A. Taft. As a child, he once told a teacher that his career plans were to "change the world."

Rehnquist attended public schools and as feature editor of the paper of the all-white Shorewood high school was critical of such news commentators as Walter Winchell whom he believed interpreted rather than reported the news. At 17 during World War II the young Rehnquist volunteered as a neighborhood civil defense officer. After attending one year of college on scholarship, he joined the Army Air Corps as a weather observer, serving principally in North Africa from 1943 to 1946. When he returned from Africa he first used his G.I. Bill benefits, then worked various part-time jobs to attend Stanford University in California. Rehnquist was an excellent student; majoring in political science he graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1948. He received Master's degrees from Stanford and Harvard universities before completing a law degree at Stanford, where he was editor of the law review and graduated first in his class in 1952. His conservative views were solidly established by this time and he was a willing and able debater on any political issues of the day. Such impressive accomplishments earned Rehnquist a prestigious 18-month clerkship in 1952-1953 with Associate Justice Robert H. Jackson of the U.S. Supreme Court. In 1953 he married Natalie Cornell, a fellow Stanford student.

Republican Activist and Assistant U.S. Attorney General

After completing his clerkship, the Rehnquists moved to Phoenix, Arizona, a city noted for its conservative bent. Once there, Rehnquist established a private practice and became increasingly involved in Republican politics. He soon achieved prominence and in 1958 was chosen as a special Arizona state prosecutor involved in bringing charges against several state officials accused of state highway frauds. He publicly opposed a number of legislative initiatives over the years, including one that would institute busing to achieve racial integration of the schools.

Rehnquist associated with conservative Senator Barry Goldwater and Richard G. Kleindienst, and who served as chairman of the state party and as national field director for the presidential campaigns of Goldwater in 1964 and Richard M. Nixon in 1968. Among the liberals he targeted for criticism during this period were Justices Earl Warren, William O. Douglas, and Hugo L. Black, whom he termed "left-wing philosophers" of the Supreme Court, accusing them of "making the Constitution say what they wanted it to say."

Following his election in 1968, Nixon appointed Kleindienst as deputy attorney general. Kleindienst then chose Rehnquist as assistant attorney general responsible for the Office of Legal Counsel. During his two and a half years at the Justice Department Rehnquist turned what had been an obscure position into a focus of publicity and a target for criticism from liberals and Democrats. Among other controversial positions, Rehnquist defended the constitutionality of the president's policies in Indochina, Nixon's orders barring disclosure of certain government documents, and the mass arrest of peaceful demonstrators. He strongly supported the administration's stringent law-and-order program, including "no-knock" entries, pretrial detention, wire tapping, and electronic surveillance, and repeatedly stated the view that the Supreme Court had been too vigilant in defending the rights of the accused. Such positions were consistent with Nixon's desire to appoint "judicial conservatives" to the Supreme Court, and the president nominated Rehnquist and Lewis F. Powell, Jr., a noted Virginia lawyer, to be associate justices on October 21, 1971.

A Conservative on the Supreme Court

A few liberal senators opposed Rehnquist, but after he softened his law-and-order image and admitted having acquired a more sympathetic attitude toward civil rights, he was confirmed. Rehnquist and Powell then filled the seats on the Court vacated by Justices Hugo L. Black and John M. Harlan.

Rehnquist was easily the most conservative member of the Warren Court. He joined a tribunal that was just beginning to reconcile years of judicial activism maintained under the leadership of Chief Justice Earl Warren with a more restrained approach to decisions symbolized by the new chief, Warren Burger. Even though Nixon had tried to fill the Court with "judicial conservatives," no radical shift to the right immediately occurred. Instead, the Court pursued an uneven course, sometimes adhering to a conservative position, at other times to a liberal one. There was, however, never a doubt about where Rehnquist stood. When the Court in Roe v. Wade (1973) overturned state laws against abortions, he dissented, arguing in favor of state power. Similarly, when the majority upheld bussing as a means to bring about desegregation in Keyes v. School District No. 1, Denver, Colorado (1973), Rehnquist wrote a stinging dissent. Often the only dissenter, he opposed school desegregation, women's rights, civil-service jobs for aliens, and health care for the poor, among others. Especially during the early years on the Court, his one-man dissents occurred so often that Rehnquist's law clerks presented him a Lone Ranger doll, referring to their boss as the "lone dissenter." He remained unpopular with liberals who argued that his unwavering support on such issues as states rights served to endorse blatant discrimination against minorities and women. Nevertheless, he was also recognized as an extremely intelligent and well organized addition to the Court, and some note that his lone dissents became important in later shaping majority decisions.

No decision illustrated better Justice Rehnquist's orientation than his remarkable decision in National League of Cities v. Usery (1976). The issue was whether the federal minimum-wage law applied to all state and local government employees. In an earlier case the majority of the Court had decided in favor of the federal government. Rehnquist alone had dissented, arguing against decades of opinions decided since the New Deal that the wage law violated state sovereignty. But in National League of Cities four justices accepted the reasoning of his previous dissent and Rehnquist wrote for a 5-4 majority that "this Court has never doubted that there are limits upon the power of Congress to override state sovereignty."

By the early 1980s Justice Rehnquist found himself more often in the majority. This occurred not because he changed, but because the Court did. With President Ronald Reagan's appointment of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor in 1981 Rehnquist and Chief Justice Burger gained a reliable third vote, which made it much easier to put together a majority whose views favored Rehnquist's views. Of 28 cases decided during the October 1984 term by a 5-4 vote, for example, the former "lone dissenter" was in the majority in 17. Slowly, the Court seemed to be shifting toward a discernibly conservative position more consistent with Rehnquist's views. Yet even so, the future was cloudy. Early in 1985 the Court overturned Rehnquist's National League of Cities opinion in Garcia v. San Antonio by a 5-4 vote.

When Chief Justice Burger resigned in 1986, President Reagan impressed with Rehnquist's intellect and conservative stances nominated him to be the nation's 16th chief justice, with Antonin Scalia named to the open associate justice slot. Liberals, and members of Congress who had long been at odds with Rehnquist were alarmed at the nomination. Allegations of past misdeeds (including a charge that he had harassed minority voters in Phoenix) were raised to try and thwart the confirmation, but nothing could stick in view of his years on the Supreme Court. The Senate confirmed both nominations.

Rehnquist proved an excellent administrator, lessening the Court's burgeoning case workload. Although he remained one of the most conservative justices, he also maintained a strong sense of independence. He had to endure charges that his opinions reflected his own personal politics more than actual judicial philosophy. However, when examined, it was noted that he often stood with the majority even if it crossed the established Republican line. In Morrison v Olson (1988) he upheld Congress' right to appoint independent counsel to investigate and prosecute government officials, over the strenuous objects of the Reagan administration, who had been responsible for his appointment to the Supreme Court. In 1996, he clashed openly with Republicans over their criticism of President Clinton's judicial appointments. As Chief Justice, Rehnquist brought order to the court and won striking support for judicial restraint from his colleagues. His belief that any move to weaken judicial independence would only serve to undermine the effectiveness of the federal courts was the cornerstone of his tenure at the Court. In a 1996 speech he said "Change is the law of life, and judiciary will have to change to meet the challenges which will face it in the future. But the independence of the federal judiciary is essential to its proper functioning and must be retained." Rehnquist was a pillar of conservative judicial thought on the nation's highest court.

Further Reading

The best treatment of Justice Rehnquist's role on the Supreme Court can be found in The Burger Court: The Counter-Revolution That Wasn't, Vincent Blasi, editor (1983). For Rehnquist's own views see his The Supreme Court: How It Was, How It Is (1987). An excellent article that covered both the course of Rehnquist's career and his ideas was "The Partisan: A Talk With Justice Rehnquist," by John A. Jenkins in New York Times Magazine (March 3, 1985). A specialized but nonetheless very good piece was Jeff Powell's "The Complete Jeffersonian: Justice Rehnquist and Federalism," The Yale Law Journal 91 (June 1982), which dealt especially with judicial theory and the National League of Cities opinion. Peter Iron's Brennan vs. Rehnquist: The Battle for the Constitution (1994) compared the conservative and liberal interpretations of the constitution and the courts. David Savage examined the rightward swing of the court in Turning Right: The Making of the Rehnquist Supreme Court Rehnquist's own views of the role of the federal judiciary can be found in a speech given May 1, 1996 in Vital Speeches May 1, 1996, p 418 The Future of the Federal Courts.

Oxford Guide to the US Government:

William H. Rehnquist, Associate Justice, 1972–86 Chief Justice, 1986—

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Born: Oct. 1, 1924, Milwaukee, Wis.
Education: Stanford University, B.A., 1948, M.A., 1949; Harvard University, M.A., 1950; Stanford University Law School, LL.B., 1951
Previous government service: law clerk to Justice Robert H. Jackson of the Supreme Court, 1952–3; assistant U.S. attorney general, 1969–71
Appointed by President Richard Nixon to the position of associate justice Oct. 21, 1971; replaced John Marshall Harlan II, who retired; appointed chief justice by President Ronald Reagan June 20, 1986; replaced Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, who retired
Supreme Court term: confirmed by the Senate as associate justice Dec. 10, 1971, by a 68–26 vote; confirmed by the Senate as chief justice Sept. 17, 1986, by a 65–33 vote
Died: Sept 3, 2005

William H. Rehnquist ranked first in his class at Stanford Law School, which also included Justice Sandra Day O'Connor. And he was a distinctive member of the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Warren Burger. Justice Rehnquist dissented more than any other member of that Court. In 1986, President Ronald Reagan named Rehnquist the Chief Justice of the United States.

Rehnquist has tended to support the rights and powers of state governments within the federal system. He strongly believes that the Constitution limits the federal government so that the state governments have substantial powers in many areas. He has favored state law enforcement powers over the rights of accused persons, as in New York v. Quarles (1984) and United States v. Leon (1984). He also has upheld state rules that restrict abortion rights but has stopped short of total opposition to Roe v. Wade (1973), the landmark case restricting states from taking away the abortion rights of women.

Rehnquist emphasizes limitations of judicial power and tries to avoid judicial infringement of the legitimate powers of the legislative and executive branches of government. The judicial branch, according to Rehnquist, should scrupulously avoid political questions and restrict itself to exercising judgment according to the words of the Constitution and the intentions of the framers.

In 1999 Chief Justice Rehnquist presided at the Senate's impeachment trial of President Bill Clinton, as required by the Constitution. The Senate voted against conviction of the President.

Sources

  • Sue Davis, Justice Rehnquist and the Constitution (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1989).
  • Sue Davis, “Justice William H. Rehnquist: Right-Wing Ideologue or Majoritarian Democrat?” in The Burger Court: Political and Judicial Profiles, edited by Charles M. Lamb and Stephen C. Halpern (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1991).
  • William H. Rehnquist, The Supreme Court: How It Was, How It Is (New York: Morrow, 1987).
  • David G. Savage, Turning Right: The Making of the Rehnquist Supreme Court (New York: Wiley, 1992).
  • Tinsley E. Yarbrough, The Rehnquist Court and the Constitution (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000)

(1924- ), chief justice, U.S. Supreme Court. Rehnquist was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He received M.A. degrees in political science from both Stanford and Harvard and graduated from the Stanford Law School, where he was first in his class, in 1951. He was serving as law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson when the Court first heard arguments in Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, the school segregation case. Rehnquist wrote a memorandum suggesting that "separate but equal" schools were constitutional. The Court, of course, unanimously ruled otherwise in 1954. Rehnquist later insisted that the memorandum was written simply to test a line of reasoning and was not an indication of his personal views.

Following his clerkship, Rehnquist practiced law in Phoenix, Arizona, and became active in local Republican politics. Upon Richard Nixon's becoming president in 1969, Rehnquist returned to Washington to join the Justice Department as assistant attorney general for the Office of Legal Counsel. In 1971 Nixon unexpectedly nominated him, together with Lewis Powell, to the Supreme Court. Largely because of his "schools" memorandum, the nomination was extremely controversial, but the Senate confirmed him on December 10, 1971.

Rehnquist quickly became the most conservative member of the Court presided over by Chief Justice Warren Burger. One thread of his philosophy was skepticism about claims of individual rights against state regulation. Thus, he dissented in Roe v. Wade, the 1973 case that ruled unconstitutional the criminalization of abortion. Another was sympathy for claims of states objecting to what they deemed overregulation by the national government. Perhaps his most important opinion during his first five years on the Court was in National League of Cities v. Usery, in which the Court, by a 5-4 vote, struck down a congressional statute that applied minimum wage laws to state and city employees. (This decision was overruled by the Court in 1985, with Rehnquist writing a dissent indicating his hope for a return in the future to his views in Usery.) Finally, Rehnquist rarely expressed sympathy for criminal defendants challenging the validity of the procedures used against them, nor was he supportive of the legal claims of prisoners objecting to the conditions of their incarceration.

During Ronald Reagan's presidency the Court moved substantially toward Rehnquist's views. In 1986, upon Chief Justice Burger's resignation, Reagan nominated Rehnquist as his successor. Once again Rehnquist proved an unusually controversial nominee, and he was confirmed over the opposition of thirty-three senators. In contrast, the equally conservative Antonin Scalia, nominated at the same time, was confirmed unanimously by the Senate.

The Rehnquist Court became markedly more conservative in regard to the rights of criminal defendants and the administration of the death penalty as well as far more skeptical about so-called affirmative action programs based on race, but there were few explicit reversals of major Warren and Burger Court precedents.

Bibliography:

Sue Davis, Justice Rehnquist and the Constitution (1989).

Author:

Sanford Levinson

See also Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka; Roe v. Wade ; Supreme Court.


Columbia Encyclopedia:

William Hubbs Rehnquist

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Rehnquist, William Hubbs (rĕn'kwĭst), 1924-2005, American public official, 16th chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1986-2005), b. Milwaukee, Wis., as William Donald Rehnquist. After receiving his law degree from Stanford Univ. in 1952, he served (1952-53) as law clerk to Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson. The following year he went to Phoenix, where he practiced law and became involved in conservative Republican politics. He was (1968-71) an assistant U.S. attorney general, heading the office of legal counsel in the Dept. of Justice before being named (1971) an associate justice of the Supreme Court by President Nixon. Generally regarded as one of the more conservative members of the late 20th cent. Supreme Court, Rehnquist became known as an advocate of law and order, writing several opinions reversing the liberal trend of the Earl Warren court in criminal cases. He was named chief justice in 1986 by President Reagan, succeeding Warren Burger. The Rehnquist court was generally conservative, but the conservatism of the chief justice and the more ideological Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas was tempered beginning in the late 1990s by the emergence of a judicially restrained bloc of justices including Sandra Day O'Connor, David Souter, and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
West's Encyclopedia of American Law:

Rehnquist, William Hubbs

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William Hubbs Rehnquist was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1972 and was elevated to the position of chief justice in 1986. A political and judicial conservative, Rehnquist has consistently sought to limit the power of the federal government to intervene in matters traditionally left to the states.

Rehnquist was born on October 1, 1924, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. In 1943 he joined the U.S. Army Air Corps and served until 1946. He then took advantage of the GI Bill to attend college at Stanford University. After graduating in 1948 with both a bachelor's and a master's degree, Rehnquist earned a second master's degree in political science from Harvard University in 1949. He then attended Stanford University Law School, where he finished first in his 1952 graduating class.

Rehnquist then served as a law clerk for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson. It was during the 1952 term that the Court first heard arguments on the constitutionality of state-segregated public education. In a memorandum to Jackson that would come back to haunt him at his judicial confirmation hearings, Rehnquist argued for upholding the separate-but-equal doctrine contained in Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U.S. 537, 16 S. Ct. 1138, 41 L. Ed. 256 (1896).

Leaving his judicial clerkship in 1953, Rehnquist relocated to Phoenix, where he joined the state bar and entered private practice. In 1958 he served as a special state prosecutor, bringing charges against several state highway officials who were accused of fraud. During his years of practice, he specialized in civil litigation.

Rehnquist's path to the Supreme Court began in Arizona Republican party politics of the 1950s. Under the leadership of U.S. Senator Barry M. Goldwater, the party became the dominant force in Arizona government, espousing a political view that was more rigid and doctrinaire than that of the national Republican party. Rehnquist became active in the party and made the acquaintance of Richard G. Kleindienst, an attorney who chaired the state Republican party and who was a close adviser to Goldwater. Kleindienst served as Rehnquist's political mentor and involved him in the 1964 presidential election that Goldwater lost to President Lyndon B. Johnson.

In 1968 Kleindienst worked on Richard M. Nixon's presidential campaign. After Nixon was elected, he appointed Kleindienst deputy attorney general. Kleindienst in turn recommended Rehnquist for the position of assistant attorney general in charge of the Office of Legal Counsel in the U.S. Justice Department. Attorney General John N. Mitchell was initially reluctant to hire Rehnquist, but after interviewing Rehnquist, Mitchell became convinced that he was the right person for the job.

As head of the Office of Legal Counsel, Rehnquist supplied legal advice to all the departments of the federal government. He also became one of the most stalwart defenders of the Nixon administration's policies. He supported preventive detention and the administration's authority to order wiretapping and surveillance without a court order. He also agreed that the exclusionary rule in criminal cases should be abolished. This rule excludes evidence that the police have illegally seized.

In 1971 President Nixon nominated Rehnquist to the U.S. Supreme Court. Senate Democrats, concerned about Rehnquist's conservative philosophy and his actions as a member of the Nixon administration, sought to defeat the nomination. They used Rehnquist's memorandum supporting the upholding of Plessy as evidence that he was hostile to civil rights. Despite these efforts, Rehnquist was easily confirmed.

Rehnquist joined a Court headed by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger. At the time of his appointment, the Court still had a liberal majority. Rehnquist immediately became the most conservative member of the Court. When the Court ruled in Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 93 S. Ct. 705, 35 L. Ed. 2d 147 (1973), that a woman had the right to an abortion, Rehnquist dissented. He has remained consistently opposed to abortion but has never found enough votes to overturn the decision.

As justices retired or died during the 1970s and early 1980s, more conservative justices were appointed to the Court. Rehnquist's views on federalism began to be adopted by his colleagues. The concept of federalism concerns the distribution of power to the states and the federal government. Until the coming of Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal in the 1930s, states had much more power over regulating day-to-day life than the federal government did. The liberal Warren Court of the 1960s greatly expanded the right of Congress to regulate economic and other societal activities.

By the late 1970s, Rehnquist convinced a majority of the Court to begin to pull back from the idea that the federal government, which included the federal courts, could intrude into areas traditionally left to the states. In National League of Cities v. Usery, 426 U.S. 833, 96 S. Ct. 2465, 49 L. Ed. 2d 245 (1976), Rehnquist held that the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution did not give Congress the power to extend federal minimum wage and overtime standards to state and local governments.

Rehnquist wrote decisions that restricted the power of a federal court to oversee the reform of a police department (Rizzo v. Goode, 423 U.S. 362, 96 S. Ct. 598, 46 L. Ed. 2d 561 [1976]), prohibited construing nineteenth-century federal civil rights laws to allow affirmative action (General Building Contractors v. Pennsylvania, 458 U.S. 375, 102 S. Ct. 3141, 73 L. Ed. 2d 835 [1982]), and prevented plaintiffs from collecting government benefits wrongfully withheld by state governments (Edelman v. Jordan, 415 U.S. 651, 94 S. Ct. 1347, 39 L. Ed. 2d 662 [1974]).

In cases involving criminal law and procedure, Rehnquist has consistently sided with law enforcement. In Illinois v. Gates, 462 U.S. 213, 103 S. Ct. 2317, 76 L. Ed. 2d 527 (1983), he crafted a new rule that made it easier for police to obtain a warrant on the basis of an informant's tip. He supported the creation of a "good faith" exception to the exclusionary rule (United States v. Leon, 468 U.S. 897, 104 S. Ct. 3405, 82 L. Ed. 2d 677 [1984]) and has upheld the constitutionality of pretrial detention (United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 107 S. Ct. 2095, 95 L. Ed. 2d 697 [1987]). Rehnquist has also been a consistent defender of the constitutionality of the death penalty and a consistent critic of lengthy and repetitive death penalty appeals based on the writ of habeas corpus.

In civil rights cases, Rehnquist has sought to tie affirmative action to specific discriminatory conduct against the plaintiffs rather than to past societal wrongs. He did, however, write the majority opinion in Meritor Savings Bank, Federal Savings Bank v. Vinson, 477 U.S. 57, 106 S. Ct. 2399, 91 L. Ed. 2d 49 (1986), which applied title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (42 U.S.C.A. §2000a et seq.) to sexual harassment on the job. An employer may be held liable if a "hostile work environment" is created where sexual harassment takes place.

In recognition of Rehnquist's record on the Court, President Ronald Reagan nominated him in 1986 to succeed Chief Justice Burger. Again there was opposition to his nomination, but he was easily confirmed.

Though President Reagan and President George Bush appointed conservatives to the Court after Rehnquist became chief justice, the Rehnquist Court has maintained a moderate course. Justices Sandra Day O'Connor, David H. Souter, and Anthony M. Kennedy, who have moderately conservative views, have resisted calls from Rehnquist and Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas to overturn Court precedents, including Roe v. Wade.


Wikipedia on Answers.com:

William Rehnquist

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William Rehnquist
16th Chief Justice of the United States
In office
September 26, 1986 – September 3, 2005
Appointed by Ronald Reagan
Preceded by Warren Burger
Succeeded by John Roberts
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
In office
January 7, 1972 – September 26, 1986[1]
Appointed by Richard Nixon
Preceded by John Marshall Harlan II
Succeeded by Antonin Scalia
United States Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel
In office
1969–1971
President Richard Nixon
Preceded by Frank Wozencraft
Succeeded by Ralph Erickson
Personal details
Born October 1, 1924(1924-10-01)
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.
Died September 3, 2005(2005-09-03) (aged 80)
Arlington, Virginia, U.S.
Alma mater Stanford University
Harvard University
Signature

William Hubbs Rehnquist (October 1, 1924 – September 3, 2005) was an American lawyer, jurist, and political figure who served as an Associate Justice on the Supreme Court of the United States and later as the 16th Chief Justice of the United States. Considered a conservative, Rehnquist favored a conception of federalism that emphasized the Tenth Amendment's reservation of powers to the states. Under this view of federalism, the Supreme Court of the United States, for the first time since the 1930s, struck down an Act of Congress as exceeding federal power under the Commerce Clause.

Rehnquist presided as Chief Justice for nearly 19 years, making him the fourth-longest-serving Chief Justice after John Marshall, Roger Taney, and Melville Fuller, and the longest-serving Chief Justice who had previously served as an Associate Justice. The last 11 years of Rehnquist's term as Chief Justice (1994–2005) marked the second-longest tenure of a single unchanging roster of the Supreme Court.

Contents

Early life

Rehnquist was born William Donald Rehnquist[2] in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on October 1, 1924. He grew up in the suburb of Shorewood. His father, William Benjamin Rehnquist, was a paper salesman; his mother, Margery Peck Rehnquist, was a translator and homemaker. Rehnquist changed his middle name to Hubbs, a family name, because a numerologist told his mother he would be successful with a middle initial of H.[3] His paternal grandparents immigrated from Sweden.[4][5]

Rehnquist graduated from Shorewood High School in 1942.[6] He attended Kenyon College, in Gambier, Ohio, for one quarter in the fall of 1942, before entering the U.S. Army Air Forces. He served from March 1943–1946, mostly in assignments in the United States. He was put into a pre-meteorology program and was assigned to Denison University until February 1944, when the program was shut down. He served three months at Will Rogers Field in Oklahoma City, three months in Carlsbad, New Mexico, and then went to Hondo, Texas for a few months. He was then chosen for another training program, which began at Chanute Field, Illinois, and ended at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. The program was designed to teach the maintenance and repair of weather instruments. In the summer of 1945, he went overseas and served as a weather observer in North Africa.

After the war ended, Rehnquist attended Stanford University with assistance under the provisions of the G.I. Bill.[7] In 1948, he received both a Bachelor of Arts and a Master of Arts degree in political science. In 1950, he went to Harvard University, where he received another Master of Arts in government. He later returned to Stanford, where he graduated from the Stanford Law School in the same class as Sandra Day O'Connor, with whom he would later serve on the Supreme Court. They briefly dated at Stanford.[8] It has been said that Rehnquist graduated first in his class,[7] probably based on the fact that he was class valedictorian during graduation ceremonies, but Stanford's official position is that the law school did not rank students in 1952.[9]

Law clerk at the Supreme Court

Rehnquist went to Washington, D.C. to work as a law clerk for Justice Robert H. Jackson during the court's 1952–1953 term.[10] There, he wrote a memorandum arguing against federal-court-ordered school desegregation while the court was considering the landmark case of Brown v. Board of Education, which was later decided in 1954. Rehnquist's 1952 memo, entitled "A Random Thought on the Segregation Cases", defended the separate-but-equal doctrine. In that memo, Rehnquist said:

I realize that it is an unpopular and unhumanitarian position, for which I have been excoriated by "liberal" colleagues, but I think Plessy v. Ferguson was right and should be reaffirmed.... To the argument ... that a majority may not deprive a minority of its constitutional right, the answer must be made that while this is sound in theory, in the long run it is the majority who will determine what the constitutional rights of the minority are.[11]

In both his 1971 hearing for Associate Justice and his 1986 hearing for Chief Justice of the United States, Rehnquist alleged that the memorandum reflected the views of Justice Jackson rather than his own views. Rehnquist said, "I believe that the memorandum was prepared by me as a statement of Justice Jackson's tentative views for his own use."[12] Elsie Douglas, long-time secretary and confidante of Justice Jackson, stated during Rehnquist's 1986 hearings that Rehnquist's allegation "is a smear of a great man, for whom I served as secretary for many years. Justice Jackson did not ask law clerks to express his views. He expressed his own and they expressed theirs. That is what happened in this instance."[13] However, the papers of Justices Douglas and Frankfurter indicate that Justice Jackson voted for Brown in 1954 only after changing his mind.[14] At his 1986 hearings for the slot of Chief Justice, Rehnquist tried to put further distance between himself and the 1952 memo: "The bald statement that 'Plessy was right and should be reaffirmed', was not an accurate reflection of my own views at the time."[15] However, Rehnquist acknowledged defending Plessy in arguments with fellow law clerks.[16] Some commentators have concluded that the memo reflected Rehnquist's own views rather than those of Justice Jackson.[17][18] A biography on Jackson corroborates this explanation—Jackson instructed his clerks to express their own views, not his.[19] In any event, while later serving on the Supreme Court, Rehnquist made no effort to reverse or undermine the Brown decision, and frequently relied upon it as precedent.[20][21] Rehnquist stated in 1985 that there was a "perfectly reasonable" argument against Brown v. Board and in favor of Plessy, even though he now saw the Court's decision in Brown as correct.[19]

In a memorandum to Justice Jackson about Terry v. Adams,[22] which involved the right of African-Americans to vote in an allegedly private Texas election, Rehnquist wrote:

The Constitution does not prevent the majority from banding together, nor does it attaint success in the effort. It is about time the Court faced the fact that the white people of the south do not like the colored people: the constitution restrains them from effecting this dislike through state action but it most assuredly did not appoint the Court as a sociological watchdog to rear up every time private discrimination raises its admittedly ugly head.[6]

In another memorandum to Justice Jackson regarding the same case (Terry), Rehnquist wrote:

Clerks began screaming as soon as they saw this that 'Now we can show those damn southerners, etc' ... I take a dim view of this pathological search for discrimination ... and as a result I now have something of a mental block against the case.[23]

Nevertheless, Rehnquist recommended to Justice Jackson that the Supreme Court should agree to hear the Terry case.

After leaving Jackson's employ, Rehnquist wrote an article in the December 13, 1957 U.S. News & World Report arguing that justices' votes are influenced by their law clerks' ideologies.[24] An empirical assessment conducted by Peppers and Zorn in 2008 supported Rehnquist's view.[25]

Private practice

Rehnquist moved to Phoenix, Arizona, where he was in private law practice from 1953 to 1969. During these years, he was active in the Republican Party and served as a legal advisor to Barry Goldwater's 1964 presidential campaign, including collaborating with Harry Jaffa on Goldwater's speeches.[26]

Many years later, during the 1971 hearing for Associate Justice and later during the 1986 Senate hearings on his chief justice nomination, several people came forward to complain about what they viewed as Rehnquist's attempts to discourage minority voters in Arizona elections when Rehnquist served as a "poll watcher" in the early 1960s.[27] Rehnquist denied the charges, and "Vincent Maggiore, then chairman of the Phoenix-area Democratic Party, said he had never heard any negative reports about Rehnquist's Election Day activities. 'All of these things', he said, 'would have come through me.'"[28]

Justice Department

When President Richard Nixon was elected in 1968, Rehnquist returned to work in Washington. He served as Assistant Attorney General of the Office of Legal Counsel, from 1969 to 1971.[29] In this role, he served as the chief lawyer to Attorney General John Mitchell. President Nixon mistakenly referred to him as "Renchburg" in several of the tapes of Oval Office conversations revealed during the Watergate investigations.[30]

Because he was well-placed in the Justice Department, Rehnquist was mentioned for many years as a possibility for the source known as Deep Throat during the Watergate scandal.[31] Once Bob Woodward revealed on May 31, 2005, that W. Mark Felt was Deep Throat, this speculation ended. It was William Rehnquist who determined that Government National Mortgage Association guarantees constituted a full faith and credit promise of the United States.[32]

In fall 1971, Nixon received the resignations of two Supreme Court justices, Hugo Black and John Marshall Harlan II. After compiling an initial list of possible appointees that ran afoul of Chief Justice Burger and the American Bar Association, Nixon considered Rehnquist for one of the slots. Henry Kissinger discussed the possible pick with presidential advisor H.R. Haldeman and asked. "Rehnquist is pretty far right, isn't he?" Haldeman responded, "Oh, Christ! He's way to the right of Buchanan",[33] referring to then-presidential advisor Patrick Buchanan.

Associate Justice

Rehnquist portrait as an Associate Justice in 1972

Nixon nominated Rehnquist to replace John Marshall Harlan II on the Supreme Court upon Harlan's retirement, and after being confirmed by the Senate by a 68–26 vote on December 10, 1971, Rehnquist took his seat as an Associate Justice on January 7, 1972.[34] There were two vacancies on the court at the time; Nixon nominated Lewis Franklin Powell, Jr. to fill the other, left by the retirement of Hugo Black. Black died September 25, 1971, and Harlan died on December 29 of that year.

On the Burger Court, Rehnquist promptly established himself as the most conservative of Nixon's appointees, taking a narrow view of the Fourteenth Amendment and a broad view of state power. Rehnquist almost always voted "with the prosecution in criminal cases, with business in antitrust cases, with employers in labor cases, and with the government in speech cases".[35] Although Rehnquist was often a lone dissenter in cases early on, his views would later often become the majority view of the Court.[7]

Professor David Shapiro of Harvard Law School suggested that Rehnquist's votes were guided by three basic propositions:[36]

  1. Conflicts between an individual and the government should, whenever possible, be resolved against the individual (this also holds for conflicts between an individual and an employer, including civil rights litigation).
  2. Conflicts between state and federal authority should, whenever possible, be resolved in favor of the states.
  3. Questions of the exercise of federal jurisdiction should, whenever possible, be resolved against such exercise.

Federalism

For years, Rehnquist was determined to keep cases involving individual rights in state courts away from federal reach.[35][37]

In 1977s National League of Cities v. Usery, Rehnquist's majority opinion invalidated a federal law extending minimum wage and maximum hours provisions to state and local government employees.[38] Rehnquist wrote that "this exercise of congressional authority does not comport with the federal system of government embodied in the Constitution."[38]

As Chief Justice, Rehnquist presided over what law professor Erwin Chemerinsky has called a "federalist revolution,"[39] during which the Court limited federal power in cases such as New York v. United States, United States v. Lopez, Printz v. United States, and United States v. Morrison. Similarly, Cato Institute scholar Roger Pilon has said that "[t]he Rehnquist court has revived the doctrine of federalism . . . only at the edges and in very easy cases."[40]

Equal protection, civil rights, and abortion

Rehnquist rejected a broad view of the Fourteenth Amendment; he believed that it was meant only as a solution to the problems of slavery, and was misapplied when applied towards abortion rights or prisoner's rights.[35][41] Rehnquist believed that the Court "had no business reflecting society's changing and expanding values" and argued that this was the domain of the Congress.[35] Rehnquist tried to weave his view of the Amendment into his opinion for Fitzpatrick v. Bitzer, but it was rejected by the other justices.[41] Rehnquist later extended what he said he saw as the scope of the Amendment, writing in Trimble v. Gordon: "except in the area of the law in which the Framers obviously meant it to apply – classifications based on race or on national origin".[42]

Also, during the Burger Court's deliberations over Roe v. Wade, Rehnquist promoted his view that court's jurisdiction does not apply over abortion.[43]

He voted against the expansion of school desegregation plans and the establishment of legalized abortions, dissenting in Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973). Rehnquist expressed his views about the Equal Protection Clause in cases like Trimble v. Gordon:[42]

Unfortunately, more than a century of decisions under this Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment have produced .... a syndrome wherein this Court seems to regard the Equal Protection Clause as a cat-o'-nine-tails to be kept in the judicial closet as a threat to legislatures which may, in the view of the judiciary, get out of hand and pass 'arbitrary', 'illogical,' or 'unreasonable' laws. Except in the area of the law in which the Framers obviously meant it to apply—classifications based on race or on national origin, the first cousin of race—the Court's decisions can fairly be described as an endless tinkering with legislative judgments, a series of conclusions unsupported by any central guiding principle.

Other issues

Rehnquist consistently defended state-sanctioned prayer in public schools.[19]

Rehnquist held a restrictive view of criminals' and prisoners' rights, and held the view that capital punishment is constitutionally permissible.[44] He supported the view that the Fourth Amendment permitted a warrantless search incident to a valid arrest.[45]

In 1977s Nixon v. Administrator of General Services, Rehnquist dissented from a decision upholding the constitutionality of an act that gave a federal agency administrator certain authority over former President Nixon's presidential papers and tape recordings.[46] He dissented solely on the ground that the law was "a clear violation of the constitutional principle of separation of powers."[38][46]

During oral argument in Duren v. Missouri (1978), the court faced a challenge to laws and practices that made jury duty voluntary for women in that state. At the end of Ruth Ginsburg's oral presentation Rehnquist asked her, "You will not settle for putting Susan B. Anthony on the new dollar, then?"[47]

Rehnquist wrote the majority opinion in Diamond v. Diehr, 450 U.S. 175 (1981), which began a gradual trend toward overturning the ban on software patents in the United States first established in Parker v. Flook, 437 U.S. 584 (1978). In Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc., pertaining to video cassette recorders such as the Betamax system, Justice Stevens again wrote an opinion providing a broad fair use doctrine while Rehnquist joined the dissent, which supported stronger copyrights. Years later, in Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U.S. 186 (2003), Rehnquist was in the majority favoring the copyright holders, with Justices Stevens and Breyer dissenting in favor of a narrower construction of copyright law.

Rehnquist's view of the rational basis test

David Shapiro, professor of law at Harvard University, wrote that while Rehnquist was an Associate Justice he disliked even minimal inquiries into legislative objectives except in the areas of race, national origin, and infringement of specific constitutional guarantees.[48] For Rehnquist, the rational basis test, which is an important part of equal protection jurisprudence, was not a standard for weighing the interests of the government against the individual; rather, it was a label to describe a preordained result.[48] Shapiro in 1978 pointed out that Rehnquist had avoided joining rational basis determinations for years, except in one case, Weinberger v. Wiesenfeld.[48] Rehnquist eschewed the Court majority's approach to equal protection, writing in dissent in Trimble v. Gordon that the state's distinction should be sustained because it was not "mindless and patently irrational".[48] (The court struck down an Illinois law allowing illegitimate children to inherit by intestate succession only from their mothers.)

Shapiro pointed out that Rehnquist seemed content to find a sufficient relationship between a challenged classification and perceived governmental interests "no matter how tenuous or speculative that relationship might be".[48][49]

A practical result of Rehnquist's view of rational basis can be seen in Cleveland Board of Education v. LaFleur, wherein the Court's majority struck down a school board rule that required every pregnant teacher to take unpaid maternity leave beginning five months before the expected birth of her child.[49] Justice Powell wrote an opinion rested on the ground that the school board rule was too overinclusive to survive equal protection analysis.[49] In dissent, Rehnquist attacked Powell's opinion, saying:

If legislative bodies are to be permitted to draw a line anywhere short of the delivery room, I can find no judicial standard of measurement which says the ones drawn here were invalid.[49]

Shapiro writes that Rehnquist's opinion implied:

That there is no constitutionally significant difference between a classification that encompasses virtually no one outside the scope of its purpose and a classification so overinclusive that the vast majority of those falling within are beyond its intended scope.[49]

Rehnquist's dissent in United States Department of Agriculture v. Murry illuminates his view that a classification should pass muster under the rational basis test so long as that classification is not entirely counter-productive with respect to the purposes of the legislation in which it is contained.[50] Shapiro alleges that Rehnquist's stance "makes rational basis a virtual nullity."[49]

Relations on the Court

Rehnquist built warm personal relations with his colleagues, even with ideological opposites. Justice William Brennan, Jr. "startled one acquaintance by informing him that 'Bill Rehnquist is my best friend up here.'"[51] Rehnquist and Justice William O. Douglas bonded over a shared iconoclasm and love of the west.[52] The Brethren claims that the court's "liberals found it hard not to like the good-natured, thoughtful Rehnquist", despite finding his legal philosophy "extreme",[53] and that Justice Stewart regarded Rehnquist as "excellent" and "a "team player, a part of the group in the center of the court, even though he usually ended up in the conservative bloc".[54]

Since Rehnquist's first years on the Supreme Court, other justices criticized what they saw as his "willingness to cut corners to reach a conservative result", "gloss[ing] over inconsistencies of logic or fact" or distinguishing indistinct cases to reach their destination.[55][56] In Jefferson v. Hackney, for example, Douglas and Justice Thurgood Marshall charged that Rehnquist's opinion "misrepresented the legislative history"[57] of a federal welfare program.[58] Rehnquist did not correct what The Brethren characterizes as an "outright misstatement, ... [and thus] publish[ed] an opinion that twisted the facts".[57] Rehnquist's "misuse" of precedents in another case "shocked" Justice John Paul Stevens.[59] For his part, Rehnquist was often "contemptuous of Brennan's opinions", seeing them as "bending the facts or law to suit his purposes".[60]

Reluctant to compromise, Rehnquist was the most frequent sole dissenter during the Burger years, garnering the nickname "the Lone Ranger".[19] He usually voted with Chief Justice Burger,[61] and – recognizing "the importance of his relationship with Burger" – often went along to get along, joining Burger's majority opinions even when he disagreed with them, and, in important cases, "tr[ying] to straighten him out".[60]

Chief Justice

William Rehnquist (left) takes the oath as Chief Justice from retiring Warren Burger at the White House in 1986, as his wife, Natalie, holds a Bible, President Ronald Reagan and Justice Antonin Scalia look on

When Chief Justice Warren Burger retired in 1986, President Ronald Reagan nominated Rehnquist to fill the position. Although Rehnquist was to the right of Burger,[62] "his colleagues were unanimously pleased and supportive," even his "ideological opposites."[51] The nomination "was met with 'genuine enthusiasm on the part of not only his colleagues on the Court but others who served the Court in a staff capacity and some of the relatively lowly paid individuals at the Court. There was almost a unanimous feeling of joy.'"[51] Justice Thurgood Marshall would later call him "a great Chief Justice."[21]

During confirmation hearings, Senator Edward Kennedy challenged Rehnquist on his unwitting ownership of property that had a restrictive covenant against sale to Jews[63] (such covenants were held to be unenforceable under the 1948 Supreme Court case Shelley v. Kraemer). Despite this and other controversies, including a concern over his membership in the Alfalfa Club (which at the time did not allow women to join[64]), the Senate confirmed his appointment by a 65–33 vote, and he assumed the office on September 26. Rehnquist's seat as an associate justice was filled by newly appointed Antonin Scalia.

In 1999, Rehnquist became the second Chief Justice (after Salmon P. Chase) to preside over a presidential impeachment trial, during the proceedings against President Bill Clinton. In 2000, Rehnquist wrote a concurring opinion in Bush v. Gore, the case that effectively ended the presidential election controversy in Florida. He concurred with four other justices in that case that the Equal Protection Clause barred a "standardless" manual recount of the votes as ordered by the Florida Supreme Court.

In his capacity as Chief Justice, Rehnquist administered the Oath of Office to the following Presidents of the United States:

Leadership of the Court

Rehnquist's predecessor as Chief Justice, Warren Burger, had foundered as a leader, alienating his colleagues with his overbearing manner, his inability to effectively manage the justices' conference sessions, and abuse of his seniority – in particular, his tendency to change his vote on important cases so that he could maintain control over opinion assignments.[65] Rehnquist, in sharp contrast, won over his fellow justices with his easygoing, humorous, and unpretentious personality. He also tightened up the justices' conferences, keeping the justices from going too long or off track and not allowing any justice to speak twice before all had spoken once, and gained a reputation for scrupulous fairness in assigning opinions: Rehnquist assigned no Justice (including himself) two opinions before everyone had been assigned one, and made no attempts to interfere with assignments for cases in which he was in the minority. Most significantly, Rehnquist successfully lobbied Congress in 1988 to give the Court control of its own docket, cutting back on mandatory appeals and certiorari grants in general.[66]

Rehnquist added four yellow stripes to the sleeves of his robe in 1995. He was a lifelong fan of Gilbert and Sullivan operas, and after appreciating the Lord Chancellor's costume in a community theater production of Iolanthe he thereafter appeared in court with the same striped sleeves. (The Lord Chancellor was traditionally the senior member of the British judiciary.)[67] His successor, Chief Justice John Roberts, chose not to continue the practice.[68]

Federalism doctrine

Rehnquist was expected[by whom?] to push the Supreme Court in a more conservative direction during his tenure. One area many commentators expected to see changes was in limiting the power of the federal government and in increasing the power of state governments.[69] However, legal reporter Jan Crawford Greenburg says some of Rehnquist's victories towards the federalist goal of scaling back congressional power over the states had little practical impact.[70]

Chief Justice Rehnquist voted with the majority in City of Boerne v. Flores (1997) and would later refer to that decision as precedent for requiring Congress to defer to the Court as regards interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment (including the Equal Protection Clause) in a number of cases. Boerne held that any statute that Congress enacted to enforce the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment (including the Equal Protection Clause) had to show "a congruence and proportionality between the injury to be prevented or remedied and the means adopted to that end". The Rehnquist Court's congruence and proportionality theory replaced the "ratchet" theory that had arguably been advanced in Katzenbach v. Morgan (1966).[citation needed] According to the "ratchet" theory, Congress could "ratchet up" civil rights beyond what the Court had recognized, but Congress could not "ratchet down" judicially recognized rights. According to the majority opinion of Justice Anthony Kennedy, which Chief Justice Rehnquist joined in Boerne:

There is language in our opinion in Katzenbach v. Morgan, 384 U.S. 641 (1966), which could be interpreted as acknowledging a power in Congress to enact legislation that expands the rights contained in §1 of the Fourteenth Amendment. This is not a necessary interpretation, however, or even the best one.... If Congress could define its own powers by altering the Fourteenth Amendment's meaning, no longer would the Constitution be 'superior paramount law, unchangeable by ordinary means.'

The Rehnquist Court's congruence and proportionality standard made it easier to revive older precedents preventing Congress from going too far[clarification needed] in enforcing equal protection of the laws.[71]

One of the Rehnquist Court's major developments involved reinforcing and extending the doctrine of sovereign immunity,[citation needed] which limits the ability of Congress to subject non-consenting states to lawsuits by individual citizens seeking money damages.

In both Kimel v. Florida Board of Regents (2000) and Board of Trustees of the University of Alabama v. Garrett (2001), the Court held that Congress had exceeded its power to enforce the Equal Protection Clause. In both those cases, Chief Justice Rehnquist was in the majority that held discrimination by states based upon age or disability (as opposed to race or gender) need satisfy only rational basis review as opposed to strict scrutiny.

Though the Eleventh Amendment by its terms applies only to suits against a state by citizens of another state, the Rehnquist Court often extended this principle to suits by citizens against their own states. One such case was Alden v. Maine (1999), in which the Court explained that the authority to subject states to private suits does not follow from any of the express enumerated powers in Article One of the Constitution, and therefore the Alden Court looked to the Necessary and Proper Clause to see if that Clause authorized Congress to subject the states to lawsuits by the state's own citizens. Chief Justice Rehnquist agreed with Justice Kennedy's statement that such lawsuits were not "necessary and proper":

Nor can we conclude that the specific Article I powers delegated to Congress necessarily include, by virtue of the Necessary and Proper Clause or otherwise, the incidental authority to subject the States to private suits as a means of achieving objectives otherwise within the scope of the enumerated powers.

However, the Court acknowledged that various amendments to the Constitution were intended to give Congress power to abrogate sovereign immunity, one of those amendments being the Fourteenth, and thus Congress may authorize suits for money damages pursuant to (for example) its power to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment, which includes the Equal Protection Clause.[citation needed]

Chief Justice Rehnquist also led the Court toward a more limited view of Congressional power under the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution. For example, he wrote for a 5-to-4 majority in United States v. Lopez, 514 U.S. 549 (1995), striking down a federal law as exceeding congressional power under the Clause.

Lopez was followed by United States v. Morrison, 529 U.S. 598 (2000), in which Rehnquist wrote the Court's opinion striking down the civil damages portion of the Violence Against Women Act of 1994 as regulating conduct that does not have a significant direct effect on interstate commerce. Rehnquist's majority opinion in Morrison also rejected an Equal Protection argument on behalf of the Act. All four dissenters disagreed with the Court's interpretation of the Commerce Clause, and two dissenters (Stevens and Stephen Breyer) also took issue with the Court's Equal Protection analysis. Regarding the Commerce Clause, Justice David Souter asserted that the Court was improperly seeking to convert the judiciary into a "shield against the commerce power".

Regarding the Equal Protection Clause, Chief Justice Rehnquist's majority opinion in Morrison cited precedents limiting the Clause's scope, such as United States v. Cruikshank (1876), which held that the Fourteenth Amendment applied only to state actions, not private acts of violence. Dissenting Justice Breyer, joined by Justice Stevens, agreed with the majority that it "is certainly so" that Congress may not "use the Fourteenth Amendment as a source of power to remedy the conduct of private persons". However, Breyer and Stevens took issue with another aspect of the Morrison Court's Equal Protection analysis: they argued that cases that the majority had cited (including United States v. Harris and the Civil Rights Cases regarding lynching and segregation respectively) did not consider "this kind of claim" in which state actors "failed to provide adequate (or any) state remedies". In response, the Morrison majority asserted that the Violence Against Women Act was "directed not at any State or state actor, but at individuals who have committed criminal acts motivated by gender bias".

The federalist trend set by Lopez and Morrison was seemingly halted by Gonzales v. Raich (2005), in which the court broadly interpreted the Commerce Clause to allow Congress to prohibit the intrastate cultivation of medicinal cannabis. Rehnquist, along with O'Connor and Thomas, dissented in Raich.

Rehnquist authored the majority opinion in South Dakota v. Dole (1987), upholding Congress's reduction of funds to states not complying with the national 21-year-old drinking age. Rehnquist's broad reading of Congress's spending power was also seen as a major limitation on the Rehnquist Court's push towards redistribution of power from the federal government to the states.

Stare decisis

Some commentators expected the Rehnquist Court to overrule several controversial decisions broadly interpreting the Bill of Rights.[19] The Rehnquist Court, however, expressly declined to overrule Miranda v. Arizona in its decision in Dickerson v. United States. Rehnquist believed that federal judges should not impose their personal views on the law or stray beyond the intent of the framers by reading broad meaning into the Constitution; he saw himself as an "apostle of judicial restraint".[19] TIME Magazine suggested, however, that Rehnquist violated this belief by overruling many cases, particularly from the Warren Court era.[19] Columbia Law School Professor Vincent Blasi said of Rehnquist in 1986 that "nobody since the 1930s has been so niggardly in interpreting the Bill of Rights, so blatant in simply ignoring years and years of precedent".[19] (In the same article, Rehnquist was quoted as retorting that "such attacks come from liberal academics and that 'on occasion, they write somewhat disingenuously about me'".)

Chief Justice Rehnquist was a foe of the Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade decision. In 1992, that decision survived by a 5–4 vote, in Planned Parenthood v. Casey, which relied heavily on the doctrine of stare decisis. Dissenting in Casey, Rehnquist criticized the Court's "newly minted variation on stare decisis", and asserted his belief "that Roe was wrongly decided, and that it can and should be overruled consistently with our traditional approach to stare decisis in constitutional cases".[72]

Rehnquist was not reluctant to apply stare decisis in the fashion he believed appropriate. For example, in Dickerson v. United States (2000), Rehnquist voted to reaffirm the Court's famous decision in Miranda v. Arizona (1966) based not only on the notion of adhering to precedent but also on his belief that "the totality-of-the-circumstances test ... is more difficult than Miranda for law enforcement officers to conform to, and for courts to apply in a consistent manner". Shortly after Dickerson was decided, the Court dealt with another abortion case, this time dealing with partial birth abortion in Stenberg v. Carhart (2000). Again, a 5–4 decision, and again a dissent from Rehnquist urged that stare decisis should not be the sole consideration: "I did not join the joint opinion in Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pa. v. Casey, 505 U. S. 833 (1992), and continue to believe that case is wrongly decided."

Gay rights

Among the many closely watched decisions during Chief Justice Rehnquist's tenure was Romer v. Evans (1996). Colorado had adopted an amendment to the state constitution ("Amendment 2") that the Court majority said would have prevented any city, town, or county in the state from taking any legislative, executive, or judicial action to protect homosexual citizens from discrimination on the basis of their sexual orientation. Rehnquist joined the dissent, which argued that the Constitution of the United States says nothing about this subject, so "it is left to be resolved by normal democratic means". The dissent, written by Justice Scalia, argued as follows (some punctuation omitted):

General laws and policies that prohibit arbitrary discrimination would continue to prohibit discrimination on the basis of homosexual conduct as well. This ... lays to rest such horribles, raised in the course of oral argument, as the prospect that assaults upon homosexuals could not be prosecuted. The amendment prohibits special treatment of homosexuals, and nothing more. It would not affect, for example, a requirement of state law that pensions be paid to all retiring state employees with a certain length of service; homosexual employees, as well as others, would be entitled to that benefit.

The dissent mentioned the Court's then-existing precedent in Bowers v. Hardwick (1986), that "the Constitution does not prohibit what virtually all States had done from the founding of the Republic until very recent years—making homosexual conduct a crime". By analogy, the Romer dissent reasoned that:

If it is rational to criminalize the conduct, surely it is rational to deny special favor and protection to those with a self avowed tendency or desire to engage in the conduct.

The dissent listed murder, polygamy, and cruelty to animals as behaviors that the federal Constitution allows states to be very hostile toward, and in contrast the dissent stated: "the degree of hostility reflected by Amendment 2 is the smallest conceivable." The Romer dissent added:

I would not myself indulge in ... official praise for heterosexual monogamy, because I think it no business of the courts (as opposed to the political branches) to take sides in this culture war. But the Court today has done so, not only by inventing a novel and extravagant constitutional doctrine to take the victory away from traditional forces, but even by verbally disparaging as bigotry adherence to traditional attitudes.

With the case of Lawrence v. Texas in 2003, the Supreme Court under Rehnquist went on to overrule Bowers. Rehnquist again dissented along with Scalia and Clarence Thomas. The Court's result in Romer had described the struck-down statute as "a status-based enactment divorced from any factual context from which we could discern a relationship to legitimate state interests".[73] The sentiment behind that statute had led to the court evaluating it with a "more searching" form of review.[74] Similarly, in Lawrence, "moral disapproval" was found to be an unconstitutional basis for condemning a group of people.[74] The Court protected homosexual behavior in the name of liberty and autonomy.[74]

Rehnquist sometimes reached results favorable to homosexuals, for example voting to allow a gay CIA employee to sue for improper personnel practices,[75] voting to allow same-sex sexual harassment claims to be adjudicated,[76] and voting to allow the University of Wisconsin–Madison to require students to pay a mandatory fee that subsidized gay groups along with all other student organizations.[77]

Civil Rights Act

Rehnquist voted with the majority in denying a private right to sue for discrimination based on race or national origin involving a disparate impact under title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, in Alexander v. Sandoval (2001), which involved the issue of whether a citizen could sue a state for not providing driver's license exams in languages other than English. Sandoval cited Cannon v. University of Chicago (1979) as a precedent. The Court voted 5–4 that various facts (regarding disparate impact) mentioned in a footnote of Cannon were not part of the holding of Cannon. The majority also viewed it as significant that §602 of Title VI did not repeat the rights-creating language (race, color, or national origin) in §601.

Religion clauses

Rehnquist wrote in a 1985 opinion that he believed the separation of church and state clause provided for in the Constitution applied only to the government showing preference for one religion over another.[78] Justice Souter wrote a dissent specifically addressed to Rehnquist on this issue in 1992.[78]

Chief Justice Rehnquist also led the way in allowing greater state assistance to religious schools, writing for another 5-to-4 majority in Zelman v. Simmons-Harris. In Zelman, the Court approved a school voucher program that aided church schools along with other private schools.

In June 2005, Rehnquist wrote the plurality opinion upholding the constitutionality of a display of the Ten Commandments at the Texas state capitol in Austin. The case was Van Orden v. Perry. Rehnquist wrote:

Our cases, Janus like, point in two directions in applying the Establishment Clause. One face looks toward the strong role played by religion and religious traditions throughout our Nation's history.... The other face looks toward the principle that governmental intervention in religious matters can itself endanger religious freedom.

This decision was joined by Justices Scalia, Thomas, Breyer, and Kennedy.

First Amendment

University of Chicago Law School Professor Geoffrey Stone explains that Rehnquist was by an impressive margin the member of the Supreme Court least likely to invalidate a law as violating "the freedom of speech, or of the press".[79] Justice Burger, who was Chief Justice when Rehnquist started as an Associate Justice, was 1.8 times more likely to vote in favor of the First Amendment; Scalia, 1.6 times; Thomas, 1.5 times.[79] Excluding unanimous Court decisions, Rehnquist voted to reject First Amendment claims 92% of the time.[79] In issues involving freedom of the press, Rehnquist rejected First Amendment claims 100% of the time.[79] Stone says:

There were only three areas in which Rehnquist showed any interest in enforcing the constitutional guarantee of free expression: in cases involving advertising, religious expression, and campaign finance regulation.[79]

However, as he did in Bigelow v. Commonwealth of Virginia, Rehnquist voted against freedom of advertising if an advertisement involved birth control or abortion.

Fourteenth Amendment

Rehnquist wrote a concurrence agreeing to strike down the male-only admissions policy of the Virginia Military Institute, as violative of the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.[80][81] However, he declined to join the majority opinion's basis for using the Fourteenth Amendment, writing:

Had Virginia made a genuine effort to devote comparable public resources to a facility for women, and followed through on such a plan, it might well have avoided an equal protection violation.[81]

This rationale supported facilities separated on the basis of gender:

It is not the 'exclusion of women' that violates the Equal Protection Clause, but the maintenance of an all-men school without providing any—much less a comparable—institution for women.... It would be a sufficient remedy, I think, if the two institutions offered the same quality of education and were of the same overall caliber.[81]

Rehnquist remained skeptical about the Court's Equal Protection Clause jurisprudence; some of his opinions most favorable to equality resulted from statutory rather than constitutional interpretation. For example, in Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson (1986), Rehnquist established a hostile-environment sexual harassment cause of action under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, including protection against psychological aspects of harassment in the workplace.

Analysis of tenure as Chief Justice

Professor Charles Fried has described the Rehnquist Court's "project" as being "to reverse not the course of history but the course of constitutional doctrine's abdication to politics."[82] According to legal reporter Jan Crawford Greenburg, the Rehnquist Court's conservatives failed to dig up the foundation cemented by the more left-leaning justices and lower courts.[70] However, in 2005 law professor John Yoo wrote: "It is telling to see how many of Rehnquist's views, considered outside the mainstream at the time by professors and commentators, the court has now adopted."[83] Greenburg says conservative critics noted that the Rehnquist court did little to overturn the left's successes in the lower courts, and in many cases actively furthered them.[70] Rehnquist was unable to build consensus and forge coalitions on key cases, and in his later years often came to care more about case outcomes than legal reasoning, disappointing Justice Scalia.[84] More often than not, on volatile social issues, the Court did not take the conservative path.[85]

Personal health

After Rehnquist's death in 2005, the FBI honored a Freedom of Information Act request detailing the Bureau's background investigation prior to Rehnquist's nomination as Chief Justice. The files reveal that for a period, Rehnquist had been addicted to Placidyl, a drug widely prescribed for insomnia. Placidyl can be addictive and it was not until he was hospitalized that doctors learned of the depth of his dependency.

Rehnquist was prescribed Placidyl by Dr. Freeman Cary, a physician at the U.S. Capitol, for insomnia and back pain from 1972 through 1981 in doses exceeding the recommended limits. The FBI report concluded, however, that Rehnquist was already taking the drug as early as 1970.[86] By the time he sought treatment, Rehnquist was taking three times the prescribed dose of the drug nightly.[87] On December 27, 1981, Rehnquist entered George Washington University Hospital for treatment of back pain and dependency on Placidyl. There, he underwent a month-long detoxification process.[87] While hospitalized, he had typical withdrawal symptoms, including hallucinations and paranoia. For example, "One doctor said Rehnquist thought he heard voices outside his hospital room plotting against him and had 'bizarre ideas and outrageous thoughts', including imagining 'a CIA plot against him' and seeming to see the design patterns on the hospital curtains change configuration."[88]

For several weeks prior to hospitalization, Rehnquist had slurred his words, but there were no indications he was otherwise impaired.[86][89] Law professor Michael Dorf has observed that "none of the Justices, law clerks or others who served with Rehnquist have so much as hinted that his Placidyl addiction affected his work, beyond its impact on his speech".[90]

Declining health and death

An ailing Chief Justice Rehnquist administers the presidential oath of office to President George W. Bush at his inauguration in 2005, First Lady Laura Bush, looks on. Note: Rehnquist's addition of the gold stripes on his robes

On October 26, 2004, the Supreme Court press office announced that Rehnquist had recently been diagnosed with anaplastic thyroid cancer. In the summer of 2004, Rehnquist traveled to England to teach a constitutional law class at Tulane University Law School's program abroad. After several months out of the public eye, Rehnquist administered the oath of office to President George W. Bush at his second inauguration on January 20, 2005, despite doubts over whether his health would permit his participation. He arrived using a cane, walked very slowly, and left immediately after the oath itself was administered.[91]

After missing 44 oral arguments before the Court in late 2004 and early 2005, Rehnquist appeared on the bench again on March 21, 2005.[92] During his absence, however, he remained involved in the business of the Court, participating in many of the decisions and deliberations.[93]

On July 1, 2005, Rehnquist's colleague Sandra Day O'Connor announced her impending retirement from her position of Associate Justice, after consulting with Rehnquist and learning that he intended to remain on the Court. Commenting on the frenzy of speculation over his retirement, Rehnquist joked with a reporter who asked if he would be retiring, "That's for me to know and you to find out."[94]

Rehnquist died at his Arlington, Virginia, home on September 3, 2005, just four weeks before his 81st birthday. Rehnquist was the first member of the Supreme Court to die in office since Justice Robert H. Jackson in 1954, and the first Chief Justice to die in office since Fred M. Vinson, in 1953.[citation needed]

On September 6, 2005, eight of Rehnquist's former law clerks, including Judge John Glover Roberts, Jr., his eventual successor, served as his pallbearers as his casket was placed on the same catafalque that bore Abraham Lincoln's casket as he lay in state in 1865.[95] Rehnquist's body remained in the Great Hall of the Supreme Court until his funeral on September 7, 2005, a Lutheran service conducted at the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle in Washington, D.C. Rehnquist was eulogized by President George W. Bush and Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, as well as by members of his family.[96] The Rehnquist funeral was the largest gathering of political dignitaries at the cathedral since the funeral of President John F. Kennedy in 1963. Rehnquist's funeral was followed by a private burial service, in which he was interred next to his wife, Nan, at Arlington National Cemetery.[97][98][99]

Replacement as Chief Justice

Rehnquist's death, just over two months after O'Connor announced her impending retirement, left two vacancies to be filled by President George W. Bush. On September 5, 2005, Bush withdrew the nomination of Judge John Glover Roberts, Jr. of the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals to replace O'Connor as Associate Justice, and instead nominated him to replace Rehnquist as Chief Justice. Roberts was confirmed by the U.S. Senate and sworn in as the new Chief Justice on September 29, 2005. Roberts had clerked for Rehnquist in 1980–1981.[100] O'Connor, who had made the effective date of her resignation the confirmation of her successor, continued to serve on the Supreme Court until the confirmation and swearing in of Samuel Alito in January 2006.

Eulogizing his predecessor in the Harvard Law Review, Roberts wrote that Rehnquist was "direct, straightforward, utterly without pretense – and a patriot who loved and served his country. He was completely unaffected in manner."[101]

Family life

Rehnquist's paternal grandparents immigrated separately from Sweden in 1880. His grandfather Olof Andersson, who changed his surname from the patronymic Andersson to the family name Rehnquist, was born in the province of Värmland and his grandmother was born Adolfina Ternberg in Vreta Kloster (parish) in Östergötland. Rehnquist is one of two Chief Justices of Swedish descent, the other being Earl Warren, who had Norwegian-Swedish ancestry.[102]

Rehnquist married Natalie "Nan" Cornell on August 29, 1953. She died on October 17, 1991, after suffering from ovarian cancer.[103] The couple had three children: James, a lawyer and former college basketball star, Janet, a lawyer, and Nancy, who worked as an editor on many of her father's books.[104] At the time of his death Rehnquist was survived by nine grandchildren,[105] one of whom, Natalie Lynch, delivered one of the eulogies at his funeral.[106]

Rehnquist purchased a home in Greensboro, Vermont, where he spent the summer court recess with his family.[107]

Books authored

  • Rehnquist, William H. (2004). The Centennial Crisis: The Disputed Election of 1876. New York: Knopf Publishing Group. ISBN 0-375-41387-1. 
  • Rehnquist, William H. (1998). All the Laws but One: Civil Liberties in Wartime. New York: William Morrow & Co. ISBN 0-688-05142-1. 
  • Rehnquist, William H. (1992). Grand Inquests: The Historic Impeachments of Justice Samuel Chase and President Andrew Johnson. New York: Knopf Publishing Group. ISBN 0-679-44661-3. 
  • Rehnquist, William H. (1987). The Supreme Court: How It Was, How It Is. New York: William Morrow & Co. ISBN 0-688-05714-4. 
  • Revised edition: Rehnquist, William H. (2001). The Supreme Court: A new edition of the Chief Justice's classic history. New York: Knopf Publishing Group. ISBN 0-375-40943-2. 

See also

References

  1. ^ Members of the Supreme Court of the United States. Supreme Court of the United States. http://www.supremecourt.gov/about/members.aspx. Retrieved April 11, 2010. "The date a Member of the Court took his/her Judicial oath (the Judiciary Act provided “That the Justices of the Supreme Court, and the district judges, before they proceed to execute the duties of their respective offices, shall take the following oath . . . ”) is here used as the date of the beginning of his/her service, for until that oath is taken he/she is not vested with the prerogatives of the office." 
  2. ^ Greenhouse, Linda. Becoming Justice Blackmun. 235–236. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 2005.
  3. ^ Roberts, Jr., John G. (October 24, 2006). "William H. Rehnquist: A Remembrance". Vermont Law Review. http://lawreview.vermontlaw.edu/articles/v31/3/roberts.pdf. Retrieved August 8, 2011. 
  4. ^ Rosen, Jeffrey (2005). "Rehnquist the Great?". The Atlantic. http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2005/04/rehnquist-the-great/3820. Retrieved May 30, 2010. 
  5. ^ It means, in direct translation to English: reindeer twig.
  6. ^ a b Lane, Charles. "Head of the Class: Fresh from service in World War II, William Rehnquist went west unsure of his future. What he found on the Farm changed his life, and the future of the country.", Stanford Magazine, July / August 2005. Accessed September 17, 2007. "So, for the brainy kid they had called "Bugs" back home at suburban Shorewood High School, just outside Milwaukee, weather was a key criterion in selecting a college."
  7. ^ a b c Christopher L. Tomlins (2005). The United States Supreme Court. Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-618-32969-4. http://books.google.com/?id=Fy8DjOIxDm0C. Retrieved October 21, 2008. 
  8. ^ Biskupic, Joan. Sandra Day O'Connor: How the First Woman on the Supreme Court became its most influential justice. New York: Harper Collins, 2005
  9. ^ Debbie Kornmiller, "O'Connor's class rank an error that will not die", Arizona Daily Star (July 10, 2005).
  10. ^ Biskupic, Joan. "Rehnquist left Supreme Court with conservative legacy". USA Today. September 4, 2005.
  11. ^ William Rehnquist, "A Random Thought on the Segregation Cases", S. Hrg. 99-1067, Hearings Before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary on the Nomination of Justice William Hubbs Rehnquist to be Chief Justice of the United States (July 29–31, and August 1, 1986).
  12. ^ 1971 confirmation hearings.[citation needed]
  13. ^ "132 Cong. Rec. 23548 (Speech of Senator Paul Sarbanes)". 1986. http://www.loc.gov/rr/law/nominations/rehnquist-cj/statements.pdf. 
  14. ^ Justice William O. Douglas wrote: "In the original conference there were only four who voted that segregation in the public schools was unconstitutional. Those four were Black, Burton, Minton, and myself." See Bernard Schwartz, Decision: How the Supreme Court Decides Cases, page 96 (Oxford 1996). Likewise, Justice Felix Frankfurter wrote: "I have no doubt that if the segregation cases had reached decision last term, there would have been four dissenters—Vinson, Reed, Jackson, and Clark." Ibid.
  15. ^ Adam Liptak, "The Memo That Rehnquist Wrote and Had to Disown", NY Times (September 11, 2005)
  16. ^ "Memos may not hold Roberts's opinions", The Boston Globe, Peter S. Canellos, August 23, 2005 Here is what Rehnquist said in 1986 about his conversations with other clerks about Plessy:
    I thought Plessy had been wrongly decided at the time, that it was not a good interpretation of the equal protection clause to say that when you segregate people by race, there is no denial of equal protection. But Plessy had been on the books for 60 years; Congress had never acted, and the same Congress that had promulgated the 14th Amendment had required segregation in the District schools.... I saw factors on both sides.... I did not agree then, and I certainly do not agree now, with the statement that Plessy against Ferguson is right and should be reaffirmed. I had ideas on both sides, and I do not think I ever really finally settled in my own mind on that .... Around the lunch table I am sure I defended it.... I thought there were good arguments to be made in support of it.

    S. Hrg. 99–1067, Hearings Before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary on the Nomination of Justice William Hubbs Rehnquist to be Chief Justice of the United States (July 29, 30, 31, and August 1, 1986).

  17. ^ Schwartz, Bernard (1988). "Chief Justice Rehnquist, Justice Jackson, and the "Brown" Case". Supreme Court Review 1988 (1988): 245–267.. ISSN 0081-9557. JSTOR 3109626. 
  18. ^ Kluger, Richard (1976). Simple Justice: The History of Brown v. Board of Education and Black America's Struggle for Equality. note 4. pp. 606 n. 
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h "Reagan's Mr. Right". TIME. June 30, 1986. http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,961645-5,00.html. Retrieved March 6, 2009. 
  20. ^ "Cases where Justice Rehnquist has cited Brown v. Board of Education in support of a proposition", S. Hrg. 99-1067, Hearings Before the Senate Committee on the Judiciary on the Nomination of Justice William Hubbs Rehnquist to be Chief Justice of the United States (July 29, 30, 31, and August 1, 1986).
  21. ^ a b Rosen, Jeffery (April 2005). "Rehnquist the Great?". Atlantic Monthly. http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200504/rosen/2.  ("Rehnquist ultimately embraced the Warren Court's Brown decision, and after he joined the Court he made no attempt to dismantle the civil-rights revolution, as political opponents feared he would").
  22. ^ Terry v. Adams, 345 U.S. 461 (1953)
  23. ^ Tinsley E. Yarbrough, The Rehnquist Court and the Constitution, pages 2–3 (2000).
  24. ^ http://www.usnews.com/articles/opinion/2008/12/09/william-rehnquist-writes-in-1957-on-supreme-court-law-clerks-influence.html
  25. ^ Peppers, Todd C.; Zorn, Christopher (2008). "Law Clerk Influence on Supreme Court Decision Making: An Empirical Assessment". DePaul Law Review 58: 51.  See also Liptak, Adam (December 8, 2008). "Influence on the Supreme Court Bench Could Be an Inside Job". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/09/washington/09bar.html. 
  26. ^ Gordon, David, Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus, Mises Review (Fall 2001)
  27. ^ Dennis Roddy, "Just Our Bill", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (December 2, 2000).
  28. ^ Amy Wilentz, "Through the Wringer", Time (August 11, 1986).
  29. ^ "LII: US Supreme Court: Justice Rehnquist". Supct.law.cornell.edu. http://supct.law.cornell.edu/supct/justices/rehnquist.bio.html. Retrieved September 19, 2008. 
  30. ^ Jeffrey Rosen (Published: November 4, 2001). "Renchburg's the One! – New York Times". Query.nytimes.com. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9500E1DF1331F937A35752C1A9679C8B63. Retrieved September 19, 2008. 
  31. ^ "TheHill.com – Was Rehnquist 'Deep Throat'?". Thehill.com. http://thehill.com/under-the-dome/was-rehnquist-deep-throat-2005-02-23.html. Retrieved September 19, 2008. [dead link]
  32. ^ "SEC Info – Dean Witter Select Government Trust GNMA Portfolio Series 17 – 485BPOS – On 8/6/98". Secinfo.com. http://www.secinfo.com/dPKSa.7n.htm. Retrieved September 19, 2008. 
  33. ^ Perlstein, Rick (2008), p. 605
  34. ^ Hughes, Ken, "Nixon and the Supreme Court: The Appointment of William H. Rehnquist", Presidential Recordings Program, Miller Center of Public Affairs
  35. ^ a b c d Bob Woodward & Scott Armstrong, The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court. 1979. Simon and Schuster. Page 221.
  36. ^ Friedman, Leon. The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions, Volume V. Chelsea House Publishers. 1978. Page 111.
  37. ^ Bob Woodward & Scott Armstrong, The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court. 1979. Simon and Schuster. Page 222.
  38. ^ a b c Friedman, Leon. The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions, Volume V. Chelsea House Publishers. 1978. Page 114.
  39. ^ Chemerinsky, Erwin (March 11, 2005) Keynote Address: Rehnquist Court's Federalism Revolution, 41 Willamette Law Review 827
  40. ^ Roh, Jane (June 14, 2005) Rehnquist's Legacy: A Balanced Court, Fox News
  41. ^ a b Bob Woodward & Scott Armstrong, The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court. 1979. Simon and Schuster. Page 411.
  42. ^ a b Trimble v. Gordon, 430 U.S. 762 (1977)
  43. ^ Bob Woodward & Scott Armstrong, The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court. 1979. Simon and Schuster. Page 235.
  44. ^ Friedman, Leon. The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions, Volume V. Chelsea House Publishers. 1978. Page 124.
  45. ^ Friedman, Leon. The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions, Volume V. Chelsea House Publishers. 1978. Page 122.
  46. ^ a b Friedman, Leon. The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions, Volume V. Chelsea House Publishers. 1978. Page 113.
  47. ^ Von Drehle, David (July 19, 1993). "Redefining Fair With a Simple Careful Assault. Step-by-Step Strategy Produced Strides for Equal Protection". The Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/23/AR2007082300903_pf.html. 
  48. ^ a b c d e Friedman, Leon. The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions, Volume V. Chelsea House Publishers. 1978. Page 115.
  49. ^ a b c d e f Friedman, Leon. The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions, Volume V. Chelsea House Publishers. 1978. Page 116.
  50. ^ Friedman, Leon. The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions, Volume V. Chelsea House Publishers. 1978. Pages 116–117.
  51. ^ a b c David Garrow, "The Rehnquist Reins", New York Times, October 6, 1996.
  52. ^ Undated 2003–04 Charlie Rose Show interview with Rehnquist.
  53. ^ Woodward & Armstrong, The Brethren 267 (2005) (1979 ed. at __).
  54. ^ The Brethren, 2005 ed. at 498 (1979 ed. at ___).
  55. ^ The Bretheren, 2005 ed. at 268, 499 (1979 ed. at 407–8, __)
  56. ^ Leon Friedman, The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions (1978), page 121.
  57. ^ a b The Brethren, 2005 ed. at 268 (1979 ed. at 222).
  58. ^ See Jefferson v. Hackney, 406 U.S. 535, 554 (1972) (Douglas, J., dissenting).
  59. ^ The Brethren, 2005 ed. at __ (1979 ed. at 222, 408.
  60. ^ a b The Brethren, 2005 ed. at 499.
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  63. ^ Alan S. Oser, "Unenforceable Covenants are in Many Deeds", New York Times (August 1, 1986).

    Mr. Rehnquist has said he was unaware of discriminatory restrictions on properties he bought in Arizona and Vermont, and officials in those states said today that he had never even been required to sign the deeds that contained the restrictions.... He told the committee he would act quickly to get rid of the covenants. The restriction on the Vermont property prohibits the lease or sale of the property to "members of the Hebrew race".... The discriminatory language appears on the first page of the single-spaced document in the middle of a long paragraph filled with unrelated language regarding sewers and the construction of a mailbox.

  64. ^ "President Asserts He Will Withhold Rehnquist Memos", New York Times, August 1, 1986.
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  75. ^ Webster v. Doe, 486 U.S. 592 (1988).
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  77. ^ Board of Regents v. Southworth, 529 U.S. 217 (2000).
  78. ^ a b Greenhouse, Linda (July 3, 1992). "Souter Anchoring the Court's New Center". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E0CE2DE1F3AF930A35754C0A964958260. Retrieved June 27, 2008. 
  79. ^ a b c d e "University of Chicago Law School > News 09.06.2005: Stone Says Rehnquist's Legacy Does not Measure Up". Law.uchicago.edu. http://www.law.uchicago.edu/news/Stonerehnquist.html. Retrieved September 19, 2008. 
  80. ^ United States v. Virginia, 518 U.S. 515 (1996)
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  86. ^ a b "Rehnquist FBI File Sheds New Light on Drug Dependence, Confirmation Battles". Tony Mauro. Legal Times. January 4, 2007. Accessed January 4, 2007.
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  89. ^ Jack Shafer, "Rehnquist's Drug Habit", Slate, September 9, 2005.
  90. ^ Michael C. Dorf, "The Big News in the Rehnquist FBI File: There Is None", Findlaw's Writ,_January_15,_2007.
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  92. ^ "Online NewsHour: Rehnquist Returns to Bench as Supreme Court Reviews Restraining Order Case – March 21, 2005". Pbs.org. http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/law/jan-june05/scotus_3-21.html. Retrieved September 19, 2008. 
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  107. ^ United Church of Christ

Further reading

  • Abraham, Henry J. (1992). Justices and Presidents: A Political History of Appointments to the Supreme Court (3rd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-506557-3. 
  • Cushman, Clare (2001). The Supreme Court Justices: Illustrated Biographies, 1789–1995 (2nd ed.). (Supreme Court Historical Society, Congressional Quarterly Books). ISBN 1-56802-126-7. 
  • Frank, John P. (1995). Friedman, Leon; Israel, Fred L.. eds. The Justices of the United States Supreme Court: Their Lives and Major Opinions. Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 0-7910-1377-4. 
  • Hudson,, David L. (2006). The Rehnquist Court: Understanding Its Impact and Legacy. New York: raeger Publishers. ISBN 0-275-98971-2.. 
  • Hall, Kermit L., ed. (1992). The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-505835-6. 
  • Martin, Fenton S.; Goehlert, Robert U. (1990). The U.S. Supreme Court: A Bibliography. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Books. ISBN 0-87187-554-3. 
  • Obermayer, Herman (2009). Rehnquist: A Personal Portrait of the Distinguished Chief Justice of the United States. New York, NY.: Threshold Editions. ISBN 978-1-4391-4082-6. 
  • Perlstein, Rick (2009). Nixonland: The Rise of a President and the Fracturing of America. Scribner. ISBN 978-0-7432-4303-2. 
  • Schwartz, Herman (2003). The Rehnquist Court: Judicial Activism on the Right. New Hork: Hill and Wang. ISBN 0-8090-8074-5. 
  • Tushnet, Mark (2005). A Court Divided: The Rehnquist Court and the Future of Constitutional Law,. New York: W.W. Norton Co.. ISBN 0-393-05868-9. 
  • Urofsky, Melvin I. (1994). The Supreme Court Justices: A Biographical Dictionary. New York: Garland Publishing. p. 590. ISBN 0-8153-1176-1. 
  • Woodward, Robert; Armstrong, Scott (1979). The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court. New York: Avon Books. ISBN 0-671-24110-9. 

External links

Opinions

Legal offices
Preceded by
John Marshall Harlan II
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
1972–1986
Succeeded by
Antonin Scalia
Preceded by
Warren Burger
Chief Justice of the United States
1986–2005
Succeeded by
John Roberts

 
 
Related topics:
clerks of the Justices
Antonin Scalia (American jurist & statesman)
Jr. John Glover Roberts (American statesman & jurist)

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