Why do some Republican Supreme Court Justices evolve over time, becoming more liberal than they were - or at least more liberal than they were generally thought likely to be - when they were appointed, while others prove to be every bit as conservative as expected? Although idiosyncratic factors undoubtedly play some role, for every Republican nominee since President Nixon took office, federal executive branch service has been a reliable predictor. Nominees without it have proved moderate or liberal, while those with it have been steadfastly conservative. This Essay demonstrates the correlation for all twelve Republican appointees during this period and hypothesizes a selection effect: important legal positions in Republican Administrations...
Ideological drift is the phenomenon in which an actor shifts their original political stance to the ...
We analyze the Supreme Court nomination process in order to provide a gen-eral explanation of presid...
Elected officials have a difficult time controlling politically insulated institu-tions, leaving the...
Why do some Republican Supreme Court Justices evolve over time, becoming more liberal than they were...
When Richard Nixon became president in 1969, he had laid out a conservative agenda for shaping the f...
The modern trend of appointing judges from the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to the U.S. Supreme Co...
This Article offers the first empirical analysis of the Senate’s role in constraining presidents’ ch...
For approximately the past forty years, Republican Presidents have appointed younger Justices than h...
Despite the widespread perception that judges are not political beings and should rule in an imparti...
When President George W. Bush declared that his Supreme Court nominee, Harriet E. Miers, was "not go...
In recent years, we have come to expect the debate over Supreme Court nominations to reflect ideolog...
The inauguration of President Bill Clinton, who will appoint more than three hundred new federal jud...
The purpose of this article is to examine the recent history of nominations to the Supreme Court wit...
This paper analyzes the extent to which the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court cast votes that suppo...
Spatial models of Supreme Court appointments assume that the president knows the preferences of nomi...
Ideological drift is the phenomenon in which an actor shifts their original political stance to the ...
We analyze the Supreme Court nomination process in order to provide a gen-eral explanation of presid...
Elected officials have a difficult time controlling politically insulated institu-tions, leaving the...
Why do some Republican Supreme Court Justices evolve over time, becoming more liberal than they were...
When Richard Nixon became president in 1969, he had laid out a conservative agenda for shaping the f...
The modern trend of appointing judges from the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to the U.S. Supreme Co...
This Article offers the first empirical analysis of the Senate’s role in constraining presidents’ ch...
For approximately the past forty years, Republican Presidents have appointed younger Justices than h...
Despite the widespread perception that judges are not political beings and should rule in an imparti...
When President George W. Bush declared that his Supreme Court nominee, Harriet E. Miers, was "not go...
In recent years, we have come to expect the debate over Supreme Court nominations to reflect ideolog...
The inauguration of President Bill Clinton, who will appoint more than three hundred new federal jud...
The purpose of this article is to examine the recent history of nominations to the Supreme Court wit...
This paper analyzes the extent to which the justices of the U.S. Supreme Court cast votes that suppo...
Spatial models of Supreme Court appointments assume that the president knows the preferences of nomi...
Ideological drift is the phenomenon in which an actor shifts their original political stance to the ...
We analyze the Supreme Court nomination process in order to provide a gen-eral explanation of presid...
Elected officials have a difficult time controlling politically insulated institu-tions, leaving the...