

Heโs had win after win yet seems more and more aggrieved. What drives his anger?

By Margaret Talbot
Staff Writer
The New Yorker
Some baby boomers were permanently shaped by their participation in the countercultural protests and the antiwar activism of the nineteen-sixties and seventies. Others were shaped by their aversion to those movements. Justice Samuel Alito belongs to the latter category. For many years, he lacked the power to do much about that profound distaste, and in any case he had a reputation for keeping his head down. When President George W. Bush nominated Alito to the Supreme Court, in 2005, many journalists portrayed him as a conservative but not an ideologue. The Times noted that legal scholars characterized his jurisprudence as โcautiousโ and โrespectful of precedent.โ Self-described liberals whoโd known himโas an undergraduate at Princeton, as a law student at Yale, or in some later professional capacityโsketched portraits of a quiet, methodical, reasonable man.
On the Court, even as Alitoโs opinions aligned consistently with the goals of the Republican Partyโin particular, of social conservativesโadmirers praised him as pragmatic and Burkean. According to a 2018 C-span/P.S.B. poll, he was the conservative Justice the fewest Americans could name, and for years he was overshadowed by his more flamboyant late colleague, Antonin Scalia; by Clarence Thomas, whose notorious confirmation hearings were followed by a rivetingly long silence on the bench; even by Neil Gorsuch, with his cussed libertarian streak. Richard Lazarus, a professor at Harvard Law School who has studied the Court, told me that in Alitoโs first years as a Justice he was known primarily as Chief Justice John Robertsโs right-hand manโโsomeone the Chief could assign to write an opinionโ that would not be too flashy or provocative, and that โwould keep five votes together when he couldnโt trust Scalia to do it, because Scalia would swing for the fences and risk losing votes.โ
Now, though, Alito is the embodiment of a conservative majority that is ambitious and extreme. (He declined to be interviewed for this article.) With the recent additions of Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett to the Court, the conservative bloc no longer needs Roberts to get results. And Alito has taken a zealous lead in reversing the progressive gains of the sixties and early seventiesโfrom overturning Roe v. Wade to stripping away voting rights. At a Yale Law School forum in 2014, he was asked to name a personality trait that had impeded his career. Alito responded that heโd held his tongue too oftenโthat it โprobably would have been better if I said a bit more, at various times.โ Heโs holding his tongue no longer. Indeed, Alito now seems to be saying whatever he wants in public, often with a snide pugnaciousness that suggests his past decorum was suppressing considerable resentment.
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