Much has been written about the decline in the public
perception of the U.S. Supreme Court and the judicial branch. Americans believe politics played “too great a role” in the original health care cases surrounding the Affordable Care Act by a greater than two-to one margin. Over
sixty percent of Americans express no to little confidence in the Supreme Court.
Academics continue to debate how much politics actually influences the Court,
but Americans are excessively skeptical.
The vast majority of Americans fail to
know that, on average, almost half of the cases brought before the Supreme
Court are decided unanimously, and the Justices’ voting pattern split by the
political party of the president to whom they owe their appointment in fewer
than seven percent of cases. Why the mistrust? We argue that Americans have increasingly viewed the government as being guided by interests outside of the general good. More specifically, we suggest Americans believe the government is
increasingly beholden to specialized, entrenched interests that have corrupted
a political system.
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