Sorry, liberals: The Supreme Court is still plenty conservative

Liberals just had their best term of the John Roberts era. But they shouldn't expect history to repeat itself.

Supreme Court
(Image credit: Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

Liberals have not had a great deal to celebrate when it comes to the Supreme Court led by Chief Justice John Roberts. But last week, liberals won three high-profile victories in cases involving the Affordable Care Act, the Fair Housing Act, and same-sex marriage. Still, while these cases are very important, it's also important to keep things in perspective. This remains a very conservative court, and this term is likely to prove an outlier.

Liberals fared unusually well this year. The court has had a Republican-nominated chief justice and (more importantly) median vote since early in the Nixon administration, and as Alicia Parlapiano, Adam Liptak, and Jeremy Bowers demonstrated recently in The New York Times, you would have to go back that far to find another term in which liberals did just as well. Whether you use quantitative or qualitative measures, this has been a standout year for liberals when it comes to the Supreme Court.

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Scott Lemieux

Scott Lemieux is a professor of political science at the College of Saint Rose in Albany, N.Y., with a focus on the Supreme Court and constitutional law. He is a frequent contributor to the American Prospect and blogs for Lawyers, Guns and Money.