For a better browsing experience, please upgrade your browser.

FiveThirtyEight

Politics

The Supreme Court convened for its December sitting this week, and it may deliver its first opinions of the term as soon as Tuesday. But while it goes about business as usual, some worry that the famously cloistered institution is becoming too cloistered, its ranks filled more and more with blindered Ivy League elite.

In November, Dahlia Lithwick, Slate’s Supreme Court writer, wrote an article for the New Republic titled “Yale, Harvard, Yale, Harvard, Yale, Harvard, Harvard, Harvard, Columbia,” a reference to the law school alma maters of the current justices.

Lithwick, a Yale alumna, wrote that “the Court as a whole has gotten too smart for our own good.” She makes interesting observations — no current justice has served in elected office, or in the Cabinet, or in the military. None is from “the heartland.” (Although, as an Iowa native, I take issue with putting the heartland and “too smart” in contrast.)

But it’s not just the justices’ curricula vitae under scrutiny — it’s Supreme Court clerks’ as well. “Elite schools beget elite judicial clerkships beget elite federal judgeships. Rinse, repeat,” Lithwick wrote. She argues that a court set up like this favors conservatives and their “mechanical umpires.”

Even if that’s true, one meaningful fact is overlooked in Lithwick’s piece: Not all elite law schools are created equal. And, of course, neither are all elite lawyers. Prestige comes in many political flavors. Using two data sets — a long list of current and former clerks and a measure of justice ideology — we can paint a picture of the widely varying political ideologies of top law schools.

First, there is a list on Wikipedia of nearly 2,000 law clerks, their law schools, whom they clerked for, and the years they began and ended their clerkships. The usual caveats apply to information on Wikipedia, but I searched for corroborating sources for many random entries on the list and found them in every case.

The clerks are incredibly important judicial players. A given justice typically employs four clerks. They cull the thousands of petitions for certiorari, and are largely responsible for researching and drafting opinions.1 The positions are obviously prestigious, and they pay well. While clerks make a respectable $75,000 working for the court, former clerks’ signing bonuses at big law firms flirt with the $300,000 mark.

roeder-lawschools-tableThis table of the top 11 clerk-producing schools shows that clerkships are highly concentrated in a few elite law schools. There are 204 American Bar Association-approved law schools in the United States. The top six schools account for more than two-thirds of all Supreme Court clerkships. (The table also includes the number of justices who attended the given law school.)

As Lithwick’s headline may have betrayed, Harvard and Yale are the runaway leaders — they account for more than 42 percent of all clerkships. The University of Chicago2 is an interesting outlier. Its law school has produced well over 100 clerks but never a justice.

The second source of data comes from political scientists Andrew Martin at the University of Michigan and Kevin Quinn at the University of California, Berkeley. Their Martin-Quinn scores quantify justices’ ideologies on a left-right political spectrum, based on their judicial opinions. These are similar to DW-Nominate scores, used to quantify ideologies of legislators.3 The scores as estimated range from about -6 (William O. Douglas) to +4 (William Rehnquist). They can also account for justices’ ideologies varying over time, which they certainly do.

I matched up these two data sets by justice and by year. So now we know the ideology of every clerk’s justice in every year back to 1937 — the first year for which the Martin-Quinn scores are calculated. We can now calculate that Columbia grads tend to clerk for justices of this ideological type, and Stanford grads for that type, and so on. And while we’re not measuring clerk ideology directly, there is strong evidence that, for better or worse, justices prefer clerks with ideologies similar to their own. Clarence Thomas has said: “I won’t hire clerks who have profound disagreements with me. It’s like trying to train a pig. It wastes your time, and it aggravates the pig.”

These are the estimated distributions of justice ideology for clerks from elite law schools, by school. Dotted lines mark the distributions’ medians.4

roeder-feature-lawschools

Living up to its reputation, Berkeley is the most liberal of the elite law schools. The median Berkeley clerk works for a justice with a Martin-Quinn score of -1.3 — about the equivalent of Stephen Breyer. On the other side of the spectrum, the median University of Virginia clerk works for a justice with a Martin-Quinn score of 1.3 — roughly Anthony Kennedy in his more conservative years.

The median clerks from Harvard and Yale — Lithwick’s main culprits — fall very near the ideological center. But, interestingly, those distributions are strongly bimodal, with peaks left and right of center. This points to both a strong left and a strong right contingent of clerks from these schools. The same is true of other schools — Stanford and Chicago, for example — but those are more right-leaning in general.

Lithwick stops short of proposing solutions to the “too smart problem,” other than urging progressives to identify candidates who might otherwise fly under the radar. But one can rest easy in the fact that elite schools are producing lawyers and clerks of all ideological stripes. It may well be, though, that not enough pigs are being aggravated.

Footnotes

  1. The current, and evolving, role of clerks is laid out in detail in Todd Peppers’s “Courtiers of the Marble Palace,” and Artemus Ward and David L. Weiden’s “Sorcerers’ Apprentices.” ^
  2. My alma mater. ^
  3. For the gory details, see this paper: Andrew D. Martin and Kevin M. Quinn. 2002. “Dynamic Ideal Point Estimation via Markov Chain Monte Carlo for the U.S. Supreme Court, 1953-1999.” Political Analysis. 10:134-153. ^
  4. The densities shown are smoothed in R using a Gaussian kernel. ^

Filed under , , , , , , , ,

Comments Add Comment

Never miss the best of FiveThirtyEight.

Subscribe to the FiveThirtyEight Newsletter
×

Sign up for our newsletters to keep up with our favorite articles, charts and regressions. We have two on offer: The first is a curated digest of the best of what’s run on FiveThirtyEight that week. The other is Ctrl + , our weekly look at the best data journalism from around the web. Enter your email below, and we’ll be in touch.




By clicking subscribe, you agree to the FanBridge Privacy Policy

Powered by WordPress.com VIP