Listen "Tushnet's Approach Concluded At Last!"
Episode Synopsis
The final (!) episode laying out Tushnet’s “craft” account of what judicial review done well looks like. We discuss Tushnet’s argument that good judges use legal reasoning, not direct appeals to justice, to explain and justify what they do. His shorthand is that, just as a well-designed legislative process gives everyone a fair shot at getting their policies adopted and so produces outcomes that those who lose out should and typically do accept, so a well-performed judicial function gives everyone a fair shot at making reasoned arguments that judges evaluate on the merits. And that means, for him, that good judges engage in legal reasoning, working with the plumbing of our constitutional system. Seidman argues that legal reasoning is so far removed from the way ordinary people think about the issues raised in constitutional cases that the judges Tushnet admires or hopes to see on the Court can’t resolve constitutional controversies in a way that those whose positions are rejected should or are likely to accept. Along the way we talk about the mindset judges should bring to their task, criticizing Justice O’Connor’s slogan, “Sometimes Wrong but Never in Doubt.”
More episodes of the podcast Supreme Betrayal: How the Supreme Court and Constitutional Law Have Failed America
A Conversation with Genevieve Lakier
05/12/2025
Constitutionalism After Trump Part Two
14/11/2025
Conversation with Richard Re
04/11/2025
Constitutionalism After Trump Part One
31/10/2025
Birthright Citizenship
03/10/2025
A Conversation with Will Baude
27/09/2025
Recap and Trump's Tariffs
15/09/2025
Constitutional Criminal Procedure
03/08/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.