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John Roberts:  The Chief Justice Who Broke American Democracy

President George W. Bush announces Roberts’s nomination to be Chief Justice (2005)

When John Roberts appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee in 2005, he offered one of the most memorable metaphors in confirmation hearing history. “Judges are like umpires,” he told senators. “Umpires don’t make the rules; they apply them.” He promised to call balls and strikes, nothing more. Twenty years later, that promise stands as one of the most consequential deceits in the history of the American judiciary. Roberts has not been an umpire. He has been a pitcher, a batter, and the groundskeeper, and he has consistently rigged the field for one team. The result, measured across ten landmark decisions, eight of whose majority opinions Roberts wrote himself, is a Supreme Court that has done more lasting structural damage to American democracy than any politician, including Donald Trump, has managed to inflict.

The indictment begins with the right to vote. In Shelby County v. Holder (2013), Roberts authored the opinion gutting Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, which had required states with a documented history of racial discrimination to obtain federal preclearance before changing their voting laws. Roberts declared that the racial conditions justifying preclearance were relics of the past. States across the South responded within hours, enacting new voting restrictions that proved his optimism catastrophically wrong. In Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee (2021), the Court rewrote Section 2 of the VRA so narrowly that voting laws producing stark racial disparities were rendered effectively immune from challenge.

And the capstone arrived on April 29, 2026, when the Court decided Louisiana v. Callais. In a 6-3 ruling along ideological lines, the majority, joined by Roberts, struck down Louisiana’s congressional map as an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. That map had created a second majority-Black district, drawn specifically to comply with Section 2 as courts had interpreted it. Justice Elena Kagan, in dissent, argued that the majority’s new evidentiary requirements had rendered Section 2 “all but a dead letter.” The crown jewel of the Civil Rights Movement has been reduced to ceremonial language. Three decades of systematic Roberts Court jurisprudence accomplished what Jim Crow’s defenders could not achieve by open defiance: the quiet, legalistic suffocation of minority voting power.

Before Callais, Roberts had already corrupted the financial architecture of democracy. In Citizens United v. FEC (2010), the Court struck down limits on corporate political spending, drowning elections in dark money and transforming them from contests of ideas into auctions of influence. Roberts personally wrote Arizona Free Enterprise Club v. Bennett(2011), which killed Arizona’s public campaign financing system, the one mechanism that gave ordinary candidates a fighting chance against entrenched wealth. Then in McCutcheon v. FEC (2014), he authored the plurality opinion dissolving aggregate contribution limits, blowing open another pipeline for oligarchic control. American elections, as a practical matter, no longer belong to citizens. Roberts handed them to donors.

He then made democratic representation itself a fiction. In Rucho v. Common Cause (2019), Roberts wrote the opinion declaring extreme partisan gerrymandering unreviewable by federal courts, even as workable legal standards to address it were argued directly before him. The result has been legislatures in Texas, North Carolina, and across the country drawing maps not to represent voters but to nullify them. Minority parties govern as majorities. The will of the people is engineered out of the outcome before a single vote is cast.

The final cluster of decisions dismantled what remained of the constitutional framework. In Trump v. Mazars (2020), Roberts authored a test so demanding it effectively ended Congress’s ability to subpoena a corrupt executive, gutting the oversight power that is the legislature’s most essential check. And in Trump v. United States (2024), Roberts authored the majority opinion conferring sweeping immunity on the presidency for official acts, a doctrine with no foundation in the Constitution’s text and no precedent in two and a half centuries of American law. He placed the president above accountability. He called it jurisprudence.

Ten decisions. Eight majority opinions written by Roberts himself, spanning voting rights, campaign finance, redistricting, congressional oversight, and presidential accountability. And throughout it all, Roberts has insisted he is merely the umpire. But an umpire who consistently calls strikes for one team and balls for the other is not officiating. He is fixing the game. Whether Roberts has been pitching and batting in disguise, or whether his purportedly neutral officiating simply happens to favor one side in every close call, the effect on the democratic playing field is identical.

What makes this legacy uniquely devastating, more so than Trump’s disruptions, which future administrations can at least partially reverse, is that Roberts’s damage is structural and durable. Constitutional doctrines do not expire with administrations. Gutted statutes do not restore themselves. Entrenched gerrymanders do not redraw themselves. The Roberts Court’s rulings are baked into the architecture of American governance for a generation or longer.

Ironically, Roberts has repeatedly expressed public concern for the institutional reputation of the Court. He has written and spoken about the dangers of perceiving justices as political actors. The numbers suggest he has failed catastrophically on his own terms. According to the Annenberg Public Policy Center, public trust in the Supreme Court stood at 75% in 2005, the year Roberts was confirmed. By March 2025, that figure had collapsed to 41%, a 27-percentage-point freefall and the lowest level recorded since tracking began. Nearly one in three Americans now say they have no trust whatsoever in the Court to act in their interests. Pew Research finds the Court’s favorable rating is 22 percentage points below its 2020 level. Gallup reports that American confidence in the judicial system hit a record low of 35% in 2024, a 24-point decline in just four years. Among OECD nations, the U.S. now has the largest gap in court confidence, 20 points below the median, in the history of the survey. The partisan chasm tells its own story: 71% of Republicans trust the Court while only 24% of Democrats do, a 47-point divide that reflects not healthy disagreement but a broken institution perceived by much of the country as a political arm of one party.

The Court Roberts has presided over is not perceived as a legal institution. It is perceived as a political one, and the perception is accurate. The man who promised impartiality has delivered the most politically consequential Court in modern history, systematically ruling in favor of one party’s structural interests across voting rights, campaign finance, redistricting, executive power, and congressional oversight.

History will render its verdict in full. Roberts will be remembered not as a careful institutionalist who protected the Court’s legitimacy, but as the Chief Justice who, decision by decision, opinion by opinion, in his own careful prose, took a wrecking ball to the democratic architecture Americans spent generations building. The fingerprints on every breach are his. The legacy is written. And no amount of institutionalist reputation management will erase it.

The post John Roberts:  The Chief Justice Who Broke American Democracy appeared first on CounterPunch.org.

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