We’ve been waiting for a Supreme Court retirement, but it turns out, we were watching the wrong justice.
Sandra Day O’Connor, the first woman Supreme Court justice and a decisive swing vote for a quarter-century on virtually all the major legal issues of our time, announced her resignation today.
Because she is a moderate, her departure gives President Bush a major opportunity to alter the direction of the court if he so chooses.
O’Connor’s possible resignation has been rumored for months, although many thought Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, who has been ailing with cancer, would go first.
When the conventional wisdom believed that Rehnquist would retire, the opportunity for a major shift in the court’s direction was minimal. Rehnquist is a conservative, Bush would replace him with a younger conservative, and the balance of the high court would remain largely the same.
O’Connor, however, is the definitive moderate swing vote on the Supreme Court. The overwhelming number of 5-4 decisions has generally been directed by her willingness to go with one side or the other.
The political fight over a Supreme Court vacancy was going to be a massive, expensive, and ugly fight when Rehnquist was the subject of speculation, but with O’Connor stepping down, that same fight will be intensified significantly.
Stay tuned.
Update: Here’s the text of O’Connor’s retirement letter.