The Supreme Court of the United States receives between seven and eight thousand certiorari petitions each term. It grants arguments in ... about 80 of them each year. The math is simple: this means that somewhat less than 1% of cases that one or more parties seek to take to the Supreme Court actually get its full attention. What this means, in turn, is that control of the US Supreme Court is not the be-all and end-all of judicial politics. Most cases will remain decided the way courts below that have decided them. It is an important fact. The Biden administration was diligent in filling as many of those seats as possible. That is what has kept alive some hope that we will return after the Trump has gone to a world somewhat like the one he disrupted. I mean not to idealise the pre-Trump United States but simply to state the obvious: Trump has done a good job of making us nostalgic for the old republic. The courts, especially the lower courts, a...
This will be my last post on this blog in this month. And this has been so poignant, so fascinating, so philosophically packed a month that I thought I could most fittingly end it with a rumination on months of January I have known as a resident in New England for most of my days on this planet. Heck, even when I have lived for periods outside the charmed circle of New England it has seldom been further away than Poughkeepsie. Or Staten Island. So ... what do I think about this mythically two-faced moment of a month in this recurrent trip of ours around the sun? It sucks.