Showing posts with label impeachment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label impeachment. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

Kastenberg's "Campaign to Impeach William O. Douglas"

Out this month from: The Campaign to Impeach Justice William O. Douglas: Nixon, Vietnam, and the Conservative Attack on Judicial Independence  (University Press of Kansas), by Joshua E. Kastenberg, University of New Mexico School of Law:
The politics of division and distraction, conservatives’ claims of liberalism’s dangers, the wisdom of amoral foreign policy, a partisan challenge to a Supreme Court justice, and threats to the constitutionally mandated balance between the three branches of government: however of the moment these matters might seem, they are clearly presaged in events chronicled by Joshua E. Kastenberg in this book, the first in-depth account of a campaign to impeach Supreme Court justice William O. Douglas nearly fifty years ago.

On April 15, 1970, at President Richard Nixon’s behest, Republican House Minority Leader Gerald Ford brazenly called for the impeachment of Douglas, the nation’s leading liberal judge—and the House Judiciary Committee responded with a six-month investigation, while the Senate awaited a potential trial that never occurred. Ford’s actions against Douglas mirrored the anger that millions of Americans, then as now, harbored toward changing social, economic, and moral norms, and a federal government seemingly unconcerned with the lives of everyday working white Americans. Those actions also reflected, as this book reveals, what came to be known as the Republicans’ “southern strategy,” a cynical attempt to exploit the hostility of white southern voters toward the civil rights movement. Kastenberg describes the political actors, ambitions, alliances, and maneuvers behind the move to impeach Douglas—including the Nixon administration’s vain hope of deflecting attention from a surprisingly unpopular invasion of Cambodia—and follows the ill-advised effort to its ignominious conclusion, with consequences that resonate to this day.

Marking a turning point in American politics, The Campaign to Impeach Justice William O. Douglas is a sobering, cautionary tale, a critical chapter in the history of constitutional malfeasance, and a reminder of the importance of judicial independence in a politically polarized age.
Here are some endorsements:

 “This richly detailed history explores fascinating questions of judicial ethics, impeachment, and racial politics. Its deep-dive account of Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon’s alliance to impeach William O. Douglas could not be more timely.”
    —Noah Feldman, author of Scorpions: The Battles and Triumphs of FDR’s Great Supreme Court Justices

    “After his ‘Wild Bill’ decade in the 1960s, Justice William O. Douglas had every reason to fear being impeached in 1970, especially when Republican minority leader Gerald R. Ford, at the behest of the Nixon administration, argued that ‘high crimes and misdemeanors’ should be ‘whatever a majority of the House of Representatives considers [them] to be at a moment in history.’ Joshua E. Kastenberg’s exhaustive review of the unpublished congressional and Supreme Court documents unlocks the mystery of how Douglas survived the most serious threat to American judicial independence since the 1804 impeachment of Justice Samuel Chase. This book’s thorough analysis of the politics of the impeachment process makes it truly instructive for our times.”
    —Bruce Allen Murphy, author of Wild Bill: The Legend and Life of William O. Douglas

Saturday, October 5, 2019

Weekend Roundup

  • The 12th Annual Court History and Continuing Legal Education Symposium of the Historical Society of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana will be devoted to the history of judicial confirmation.  The symposium includes the presentation, “Paths to the Bench: Southern District of Indiana Appointments from William E. Steckler to Gene E. Brooks,” by Doria Lynch and “a brief synopsis of the Chief Justice Robert B. Taney mural alternation project, which is part of the national trend to remove inappropriate historical symbols from public spaces.”  It will be held from 1 to 4:30 p.m. on November 1 in the Sarah Evans Barker Courtroom of the Birch Bayh Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse in Indianapolis.   (The Indiana Lawyer.)
  • John W. Kluge Center has announced the arrival of several scholars-in-residence at the Library of Congress.  The holder of the Kluge Chair in American Law and Governance is Andrea Campbell, the Arthur and Ruth Sloan professor of political science at MIT, who is working on a book project titled “How Americans Think About Taxes.” 
  • Here at LHB we usually try to keep things nonpartisan, but we still feel obliged to note, in case you somehow missed it, the recent interview ASLH past-president Bruce Mann gave to CNN.  And, while we're on the subject of legal historian spouses to presidential candidates, thank you John Bessler for that shout out at the 2019 Hall of Fame Celebration of the Dubuque County Democratic Party.  DRE 
  • ICYMI:  How Did Magna Carta Influence the U.S. Constitution? (History).  Frank Bowman on the history of impeachment in Rolling Stone.
  • From the Washington Post's "Made by History" section: many historically informed observations about impeachment and President Donald Trump, including by Sidney Milkis (University of Virginia, Miller Center) and Daniel Tichenor (University of Oregon) (here); Thomas Balcerski (Eastern Connecticut State University) (here); and Doug Rossinow (University of Oslo) (here). Also Jessica Wang (University of British Columbia) on "How New York defeated rabies" and why "the city’s history with the disease offers a blueprint for eliminating deaths around the world." More.
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers. 

Saturday, September 28, 2019

Weekend Roundup

  • David Sugarman, professor emeritus at the law school at Lancaster University, has posted a truly lovely appreciation of the law W. Wesley Pue (1954-2019) that appeared in the Newsletter of the Research Committee of the Sociology of Law.
  • Joanna Grisinger (Northwestern), Kimberly Welch (Vanderbilt), Logan Sawyer (Georgia), and Kathryn Schumaker (Oklahoma), the co-organizers of the Law and History Collaborative Research Network of the Law and Society Association, have posted a call for legal history panels for LSA’s annual meeting in Denver, Colorado, May 28-31, 2020.  They also seek volunteers to join their ranks as co-organizers.
  • In other news: A descendant of a Virginia slaveholders sues a professor et al. for saying as much, apparently on the theory that in noting this and his opposition to the removal of Charlottesville’s statue of Robert E. Lee, the defendants claimed he was “a racist and an opponent of people of color” (Roanoke Times). Meanwhile, at Chapel Hill, UNC professors bring the history of Jim Crow to the present.
  • CNN's "Black in America" series recently featured Martha Jones (Johns Hopkins), author of Birthright Citizens. Video here.
Weekend Roundup is a weekly feature compiled by all the Legal History bloggers.