Movement on Judges
- Brandon Hasbrouck, Movement Judges, 97 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 631 (2022).
- Brandon Hasbrouck, Saving Justice: Why Sentencing Errors Fall Within the Savings Clause, 28 U.S.C. § 2255(e), 108 Geo. L.J. 287 (2019).
A National Law Journal article described how, in keeping with prior Democratic administrations, President Biden has relied less on clerkship experience—or at least a particular kind of clerkship experience—than prior Republican administrations. The article observed that while “the road to the bench for many Trump nominees ran through the chambers of a handful of particular judges and justices” (such as Justices Thomas and Scalia), “Biden has relied far less on feeder judges in his nominations.”
Why might that be? And is that a good or a bad thing? A recently published article by Brandon Hasbrouck offers one way of thinking through this. In Movement Judges, Hasbrouck writes movingly (no pun intended) about the importance of appointing jurists “who understand[] that our Constitution contains the democracy-affirming tools we need to dismantle systems of oppression”—judges who “consistently bear in mind the consequences cases have for individuals’ real lives beyond the courtroom.” (Full disclosure: I’m thanked in the article’s acknowledgments for comments on a draft.) Hasbrouck further describes a movement judge as a jurist who is “more committed to shifting fundamental understandings of how the law operates.” And he contrasts these judges and the strategies for appointing these judges with the kinds of judges and the kinds of strategies that Republican administrations have pursued; Hasbrouck describes the Republican strategy as a top-down, hierarchical approach to judicial selection that may have advanced the “conservative legal movement’s” goals, but does not offer the kind of sociological or democratic legitimacy that movement judging would. Continue reading "Movement on Judges"






