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7 Dec 2006, 2:38 pm
Justices Scalia and Thomas will likely advocate for undoing the damage that Grutter/Gratz created, as may Chief Justice Roberts and Alito. [read post]
3 Jul 2017, 4:15 am by Edith Roberts
At Constitution Daily Abigail Perkiss marks the 12th anniversary of Justice Sandra Day O’Connor’s retirement and looks at O’Connor’s legacy “as both the first female justice and as a critical swing vote on an increasingly politicized Court. [read post]
28 Jan 2010, 6:32 am by Erin Miller
, one of the online games at Justice O'Connor's civic education program, Our Courts. [read post]
8 Jul 2015, 12:05 pm by Amanda Frost
  Howard points out that advocates today cannot assume that a female Justice will strike down all restrictions on abortion (Justice O’Connor didn’t), or that an African-American Justice will support affirmative action (Justice Thomas doesn’t). [read post]
24 Jun 2019, 4:29 pm by Joel Goldstein
In the process, Alito, who had written a forceful dissent in Atlantic Sounding, was joined in today’s opinion by Justice Clarence Thomas, the author of the majority opinion in Atlantic Sounding, even though Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who had joined Thomas then, argued in dissent that the logic of Thomas’ majority opinion dictated a contrary result. [read post]
19 Jun 2019, 9:55 am by Adam Feldman
Two of Thomas’ decisions were self-assigned and two were assigned by Roberts. [read post]
25 Sep 2018, 11:56 am by Adam Feldman
By utterance we also see that although Justice Samuel Alito took a similar number of talking turns on average as Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, he was well behind Justice Potter Stewart in this category. [read post]
17 Jun 2010, 5:00 am by Bexis
  511 U.S. at 534-37 (statute unconstitutionally operated “retroactively, divesting [plaintiff] of property long after the company believed its liabilities . . . to have been settled”) (O’Connor, J., et al.). [read post]
11 Apr 2018, 9:00 am by Adam Feldman
With an average of 87.81 percent agreement, Ginsburg had over 90 percent alignment with the more conservative Justice Sandra Day O’Connor and Rehnquist. [read post]
12 Sep 2016, 11:00 am by Erwin Chemerinsky
Actually, Justice Clarence Thomas goes even further in limiting the application of the Establishment Clause. [read post]
11 Oct 2018, 6:52 pm by Deborah Pearlstein
 Compare the Clarence Thomas/Anita Hill hearings. [read post]
19 Sep 2018, 9:00 pm by John Dean
The six justices with executive experience remained solid conservatives (Burger, Rehnquist, Scalia, Thomas, Roberts, and Alito); while the six without such backgrounds became moderates and even liberal (Blackmun, Powell, Stevens, O’Connor, Kennedy, and Souter). [read post]
25 Apr 2011, 9:52 am by Steven Schwinn - Guest
  Justice O’Connor wrote a concurrence, joined by Justices Scalia and Thomas, that would not have so “recharacterize[d] and narrow[ed]” the Young doctrine.) [read post]
15 Jun 2020, 11:15 am by Adam Feldman
Justices Anthony Kennedy and Sandra Day O’Connor, although both relatively conservative, were the most moderate justices during this period and fall toward the middle of the graph. [read post]
9 Nov 2011, 4:43 am
My own tentative view is more nearly the opposite of Justice Thomas's. [read post]
3 Jan 2023, 5:00 am by Timothy Bonis
But Chief Justice Roberts joined Justices Thomas and Scalia in dissent against Oregon, leaving only the Democratic appointees and the long-departed swing justices O’Connor and Kennedy in support of the kind of Commerce Clause interpretation needed for radical federal involvement in medical licensure. [read post]