Crossroads
By

Jan Crawford /

CBS News/ January 28, 2010, 10:59 AM

Obama Skewers Court--and Signals Change Ahead

The legal world is on fire from last night's dustup between President Obama and Justice Alito. Mr. Obama took it straight to the justices in the State of the Union, criticizing their decision in last week's campaign finance reform case, as six of them looked on from the audience. You'd have to go back to FDR to see a Democratic president lash out at the Court like that.

Perhaps it was from the surprise of it all, but as I wrote last night, Justice Alito didn't take Mr. Obama's trash talking in stride. He shook his head and mouthed "not true" as Mr. Obama said the ruling would open the floodgates to special interest money in political campaigns. You'd have to go back to, well, I don't think this has ever happened before--a justice reacting publicly like that to a president's speech. But then again, no president in modern history has ever gone after the Supreme Court in a State of the Union, either, so let's call this one a draw.

But there will be fallout from this. As my friend Orin Kerr put it this morning on Volokh, you can almost see the justices thinking as they're sitting there listening to the president and Congress jeer at them: "We are so not coming to this next year."

And Orin points out that Justice Harlan believed it was inappropriate for justices to attend such an inherently political event. In fact, six justices is a pretty high attendance mark. In 2008, 2007, and 2006, only four showed up. Before that, it was only one or two. And there have been years when no justices attended.

But it's even more than that. The fact that Mr. Obama was willing to so dramatically take on the Court as part of his new-found populist persona shows he intends to keep this storyline going awhile--including, perhaps, through confirmation hearings for the expected Supreme Court vacancy later this year. Those hearings will take place as the midterm elections are well underway, and they give the White House chance to make political points by hammering the Court some more.

That's why Mr. Obama may go an entirely different direction with his nomination than we've all expected. I have long predicted the president would tap Elena Kagan, the dazzling former Harvard Law School dean who now is Solicitor General, to replace Justice John Paul Stevens (pictured). (And remember, I did accurately predict on Face the Nation that Alabama would win the National Championship.)

But that was before Scott Brown and the retooling of Mr. Obama as a president who stands against corporate interests and fights for the little guy.

Granted, Kagan defended campaign finance reform in the Supreme Court. But as a northeastern Ivy Leaguer, she doesn't fit the populist narrative of the outsider, the regular person. And in conversations this week with people inside and outside the administration, it's clear Mr. Obama could look elsewhere for his next nominee.

To continue his populist narrative and really make something of it--that the Court is out of touch, in the pocket of big business—Mr. Obama needs someone with a more common touch. Someone from the Midwest, someone who attended a state school and state law school, someone who has known the struggles--a working mom, for example.

That's someone like Judge Diane Wood. Not Elena Kagan.

So the astounding win in Massachusetts of Scott Brown--the pickup driving political unknown who grabbed Ted Kennedy's Senate seat and put the finishing touches on Obama's new populist approach--may reverberate well beyond Congress and the White House. He could well have shaped the future makeup of the Supreme Court. We got the first public clues of that last night.

More Coverage of Obama's State of the Union:

Obama Vows to Fight for Jobs
Full Text of Obama's Speech
Alito Winces as Obama Slams Supreme Court Ruling
Obama's Speech Leveraged His Strengths
Obama Criticizes Supreme Court
Full Coverage: Obama's 2010 State of the Union
© 2010 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
  • Jan Crawford On Twitter »

    Jan Crawford is CBS News Chief Political and Legal Correspondent. She is from "Crossroads," Alabama.

11 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
duffyn says:
The amazing win by scott brown - what a bunch of cr***p. Helped by the dying press who have to create create controversy to attract attention. No one is paying for news and it is dying and I'm sick of the news....
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
duffyn says:
President Obama is far from a shame. I am so proud and happy to have him as a President. Read about the man, his life, he is so much more than those who so easily call him names and run him down. President Obama is awesome and so much more honest and a good heart for the common man! I love seeing him on TV. It makes me so happy!!!! bush and the rich man suck up repugs, err uhh republicnas... now there's something shameful....
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
akinos2009 says:
Mussolini defined Fascism in the most simple terms, the defined it as being an alliance of government and corporations. This ruling by the Supreme Court is opposed by most Americans. Rightfully so because it takes the power out of the public and into the rich and powerful.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
RobAla says:
The President is all about bipartisanship when everyone agrees with his extreme ideas, but he bashes the daylights out of everyone who may hold a different opinion. Not very Presidential, and not very classy. He brings shame on the office.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
NowBeWithThat says:
The President used his SOTU as a bully pulpit to publicly rebuke and attempt to control the opinion of the SCOTUS. There is separation of powers.

Weak leaders berate and blame others in order to feel strong. Mr. Obama crossed the line of decorum, further exposing his amateurishness and lack of experience.

He emerged from the matrix of dirty Chicago politics. You can take the man out of Chicago, but you can't take Chicago out of the man.

He bows deeply in great respect before a Saudi king, but he shows disrespect for our own honorable Supreme Court justices.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
CBSisCommunist5 says:
Attack Banks
Attack Insurance
Attack Wall Street
Attack Medical Care
Attack Supreme Court

What is next ?
reply
jgg000101 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
actually you're leaving out attacking the cia, the boston police, corporate executives and anyone who is successful.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
starleo146 says:
When Obama and Biden took the oath and was in office they both went to the Supreme Court to shake there hand and introduce themselves and all the justice's attended the meeting except Alito he is so right wing just the thought of shaking Obama's hand was more than he could comprehend. Congrats Bush you really know how to pick a justice that will only screw up America even more than they have already,course Bush and Cheney had a ball tearing up the justice system from the attorney generals office to the supreme court, and got away with it all.we will never straighten all the pieces broken in this country thanks to the last administration.

I cannot believe some are ready to elect another republican to anything what have they done to earn anyone's vote. Big Business will surely elect them, but the American people should really think long and hard on this election.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
pr_boxer says:
The President is right, Alito is either a foll, or a tool of big business, likely both!
reply
starleo146 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
You are so right and Roberts is no saint either, Democracy is so dead as we know it. Bush and Cheney did a job on the Justice dept. from the Attorney General's office to the Supreme Court, got away with it all as well. Electing a president in 2000 and now helping big business.The same 5 will be there no matter what we do. We now know how they will vote, If I was a constitutional lawyer I would be hollering so loud something would get done once and for all with these 5. Dirty republican politics has risen all the way to the Supreme Court.The republican Senate is not much better trying with every breath to obstruct just so Obama will look fail. He was right about they are in a campaign mode, and that is all they wantis more power to destroy a country that is almost on its knees already. They expect Obama to fix immediately the problems of the the last 8 years. It will be a long time before we fix this mess Bush and Cheney did.We are lucky we are not in a soup line hoping to get a bowl. How we can even think of electing these republicans to do more harm is beyond me. The blue dog democrats are just as bad.
bb2010 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
President Obama is correct, although I think he did not do enough. He should have arrested the 5 justices who ruled positively on this matter. They overturned 0ver 80 years of precedent for a very radical right, un democratic right to corporations both domestic or foriegn the unfair advantage to sway our elections. It's horrible and treasonous to our democracy. I say hang them in public!
See all 11 Comments