A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024

Amid signs of dysfunction and disarray, Chief Justice John Roberts reasserted his authority, while the influence of Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito waned.

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A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

The Supreme Court term that ended on Monday was studded with more potential blockbusters than any in recent memory.

Former President Donald J. Trump had a very good year at the Supreme Court. On Monday, the court ruled that he is substantially immune from prosecution on charges that he tried to subvert the 2020 election. On Friday, the court cast doubt on two of the four charges against him in what remains of that prosecution. And in March, the justices allowed him to seek another term despite a constitutional provision barring insurrectionists from holding office.

Administrative agencies had a horrible term. In three 6-to-3 rulings along ideological lines, the court’s conservative supermajority erased a foundational precedent that had required courts to defer to agency expertise, dramatically lengthened the time available to challenge agencies’ actions and torpedoed the administrative tribunals in which the Securities and Exchange Commission brings enforcement actions.

The court itself had a volatile term, taking on a stunning array of major disputes and assuming a commanding role in shaping American society and democracy. If the justices felt chastened by the backlash over their 2022 abortion decision, the persistent questions about their ethical standards and the drop in their public approval, there were only glimmers of restraint, notably in ducking two abortion cases in an election year.

The court was divided 6 to 3 along partisan lines not only in Monday’s decision on Mr. Trump’s immunity and the three cases on agency power, but also in a run of major cases on homelessness, voting rights, guns and public corruption.

An unusually high proportion of divided decisions in argued cases — more than two-thirds — were decided by 6-to-3 votes. But only half of those decisions featured the most common split, with the six Republican appointees in the majority and the three Democratic ones in dissent.

A Lack of Consensus in Agreement

The rate of concurring opinions — more than one per case — hit a record high.

A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

1.05

1.0

0.8

0.6

0.4

Concurring

opinions per case

0.2

’40

’50

’60

’70

’80

’90

’00

’10

’23

A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

1.05

1.0

0.8

0.6

0.4

Concurring

opinions per case

0.2

’40

’50

’60

’70

’80

’90

’00

’10

’23

Source: Analysis by Lee Epstein and Andrew D. Martin, Washington University in St. Louis; and Michael Nelson, Penn State; using the Supreme Court Database.

Years reflect the start of terms.

The New York Times

A Highly Polarized Court

Some of the current justices are among the most conservative and most liberal in recent history. Each bar represents the rate at which each justice since 1937 voted for a liberal result.

A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

RATE OF LIBERAL VOTES

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

Sotomayor

Jackson

Kagan

Former

justices

Roberts

Gorsuch

Kavanaugh

Barrett

Alito

Thomas

A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

RATE OF LIBERAL VOTES

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

Sotomayor

Jackson

Kagan

Former

justices

Roberts

Gorsuch

Kavanaugh

Barrett

Alito

Thomas

Source: Analysis by Lee Epstein and Andrew D. Martin, Washington University in St. Louis; and Michael Nelson, Penn State; using the Supreme Court Database.

Votes in divided cases.

The New York Times

The Court’s Partisan Gap

How often each of the court’s ideological blocs voted for a liberal result.

A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

100%

83%

Democratic

appointees

80%

60%

40%

33%

Republican

appointees

20%

’53

’60

’70

’80

’90

’00

’10

’23

A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

100%

83%

80%

Democratic

appointees

60%

40%

33%

Republican

appointees

20%

’53

’60

’70

’80

’90

’00

’10

’23

Source: Analysis by Lee Epstein and Andrew D. Martin, Washington University in St. Louis; and Michael Nelson, Penn State; using the Supreme Court Database.

Votes in divided cases. Years reflect the start of terms.

The New York Times

Trump Justices Are Not the Court’s Most Conservative

How often each justice voted for a liberal result.

A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

Trump appointees

100%

Kagan

Sotomayor

80%

Jackson

60%

Barrett

Gorsuch

40%

Roberts

Kavanaugh

Thomas

20%

Alito

Last term

This term

A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

100%

Kagan

Sotomayor

80%

Jackson

60%

Trump appointees

Barrett

Gorsuch

40%

Roberts

Kavanaugh

Thomas

20%

Alito

Last term

This term

Source: Analysis by Lee Epstein and Andrew D. Martin, Washington University in St. Louis; and Michael Nelson, Penn State; using the Supreme Court Database.

Votes in divided cases.

The New York Times

The Trump Administration Has Fared Poorly

The former president won personal victories at the court this term, but his administration has had the lowest success rate in the modern era.

A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

ADMINISTRATION SUCCESS RATE

50%

Biden

54%

Trump

42%

Obama

50%

W. Bush

62%

Clinton

63%

H.W. Bush

70%

Reagan

75%

Carter

66%

Ford

74%

Nixon

67%

Johnson

69%

Kennedy

60%

Eisenhower

63%

Truman

65%

Roosevelt

66%

A Fractured Supreme Court’s Decisions Remade America in 2024 | INFBusiness.com

ADMINISTRATION SUCCESS RATE

50%

Biden

54%

Trump

42%

Obama

50%

W. Bush

62%

Clinton

63%

H.W. Bush

70%

Reagan

75%

Carter

66%

Ford

74%

Nixon

67%

Johnson

69%

Kennedy

60%

Eisenhower

63%

Truman

65%

Roosevelt

66%

Source: Analysis by Lee Epstein and Andrew D. Martin, Washington University in St. Louis; and Michael Nelson, Penn State; using the Supreme Court Database.

The New York Times

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Source: nytimes.com

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