Publication | Closed Access
How the Supreme Court Alters Opinion Language to Evade Congressional Review
73
Citations
48
References
2013
Year
Public PolicyUs Supreme CourtGovernmental ProcessLegislative AspectConstitutional LawLawPublic OpinionPolicy ChoicesPolitical CommunicationEvade Congressional ReviewLegal Information RetrievalFederal Constitutional LawJusticeSupreme Court JusticesPolitical ScienceSocial SciencesCase Law
Abstract We argue that actors can attempt to shield their policy choices from unfavorable review by crafting them in a manner that will increase the costs necessary for supervisory institutions to review them. We apply this theory to the US Supreme Court and demonstrate how justices strategically obfuscate the language of majority opinions in the attempt to circumvent unfavorable review from a politically hostile Congress. The results suggest that Supreme Court justices can and do alter the language of their opinions to raise the costs of legislative review and thereby protect their decisions.
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