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The Oath: The Obama White House and The Supreme Court Paperback – June 4, 2013
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A Washington Post Notable Work of Nonfiction
From the moment Chief Justice Roberts botched Barack Obama's oath of office, the relationship between the Court and the White House has been a fraught one. Grappling with issues as diverse as campaign finance, abortion, and the right to bear arms, the Roberts court has put itself squarely at the center of American political life. Jeffrey Toobin brilliantly portrays key personalities and cases and shows how the President was fatally slow to realize the importance of the judicial branch to his agenda. Combining incisive legal analysis with riveting insider details, The Oath is an essential guide to understanding the Supreme Court of our interesting times.
- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAnchor
- Publication dateJune 4, 2013
- Dimensions5.22 x 0.72 x 7.98 inches
- ISBN-100307390713
- ISBN-13978-0307390714
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Toobin is one of the most talented reporters covering American law." —The New York Times Book Review
“Deeply versed in Supreme Court lore and legal subtlety, [Toobin] draws upon first-hand interviews with the justices and their clerks in crafting an anxious tale of the Roberts court, casting its major rulings as looming symbols of judicial philosophy. . . . A polished and thoughtful dissection.” —USA Today
“A compelling narrative of the early years of the Roberts court. . . . The many pleasures of The Oath come . . . from human details about the justices and their interactions with the White House.” —The Washington Post
“Anyone fascinated by the inner workings of the highest court in the land will be delighted.” —The Huffington Post
“Not until scholars a generation hence gain access to the justices’ papers are we likely to have a more useful, or more readable, picture of this oddly assorted group of judges at this moment in history.” —The New York Times Book Review
“A worthy successor to The Nine, The Oath is a work of probity, intelligence and exceptional reporting.” —Richmond Times-Dispatch
“Might . . . be viewed eventually as the best book about the court during the opening half-decade of John Roberts’ reign as chief justice. . . . Toobin does his job well.” —The Seattle Times
“Court watchers, serious and occasional, will find Toobin’s explanation of the issues at stake . . . before the Roberts court well worth their time.” —St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“Exceptionally readable. . . . Blends strong reporting with a sure historical grasp of the court.” —The Columbus Dispatch
“An artfully constructed chronicle. . . . The Oath delivers a bracing survey of the court’s key decisions and divisions. . . . Toobin’s sketches of the justices are fabulous.” —Bookforum
“Lucid, lively and astute. . . . Toobin has the chops (and the contacts) to take readers inside the court.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune
“For political, and governmental, junkies. . . . Fall[s] into the Robert Caro–Lyndon Johnson category. . . . Reminds us that it is the interplay between different personalities and agendas that more than any scholarly argument or historical text is often at the heart of the laws we live with.” —The Boston Globe
“A reliable and astute guide through the thicket of legalese.” —The Miami Herald
“Toobin [is] a rare authority who knows how to write. . . . This is, in short, a book suitable for reading in the study or while sprawled at the beach.” —Chicago Sun-Times
“A revealing look at the ideological battle between the White House and the Supreme Court.” —Booklist (starred review)
“A skillful probing of the often-discordant relationship between the president and the Supreme Court. . . . Shrewd and elucidating.” —Kirkus Reviews
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1. The Politician’s Path
On February 14, 2008, a man named Steven Kazmierczak opened fire on the campus of Northern Illinois University, in DeKalb, Illinois. He killed five people, and injured twenty-one, before committing suicide. The following day, Barack Obama, the junior senator from the state and a candidate for president, was asked about the shooting at a news conference. In light of this tragedy, what did Obama think about the need for gun control, especially as it related to the Second Amendment?
The Second Amendment states: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” There was and remains unanimous agreement that the text of the amendment is ungrammatical. For more than a century, there was also agreement on what the Second Amendment meant. According to this understanding, the Second Amendment related only to the rights of citizen militias and imposed no barrier to gun control; in other words, the amendment did not give private individuals a right to bear arms.
Obama had a different view.
“I believe that the Second Amendment means something. I do think it speaks to an individual right,” Obama said at his news conference following the massacre. “There’s been a long-standing argument among constitutional scholars about whether the Second Amendment referred simply to militias or whether it spoke to an individual right to possess arms. I think the latter is the better argument,” he went on. “There is an individual right to bear arms, but it is subject to common-sense regulation just like most of our rights are subject to common-sense regulation. And so I think there’s a lot of room before you start bumping up against a constitutional barrier.”
Even a few years earlier, Obama’s comments would have seemed bizarre. Since a Supreme Court case called United States v. Miller, in 1939, hundreds of courts had rejected the individual rights view of the Second Amendment. But then the National Rifle Association, the Republican Party, and their allies invested their time, money, and energy in creating a new understanding of the Second Amendment. Indeed, at the time of Obama’s news conference about the massacre, the Supreme Court was preparing to decide District of Columbia v. Heller, a product of this long effort to create a new interpretation of the Second Amendment. The work of conservatives to change the accepted meaning of the framers’ words was so successful that the recruits to the cause came to include the Chicago liberal who was a leading contender to be the Democratic nominee for president.
This, it turns out, was no surprise. Obama was an unusually well-credentialed lawyer. His life as a public figure began in 1990, when he was twenty-eight and won election as president of the Harvard Law Review, the first African American to hold that position. Obama practiced law for a dozen years and taught at the University of Chicago Law School for nearly as long. But by the time he ran for president, Obama was above all a politician, and a cautious one. Obama admired the heroes of the civil rights movement, including the lawyers, but he did not model his career on theirs. Obama did not believe the courts were the principal vehicle for social and political change. Elections, rather than lawsuits, were his battlefield of choice, and by 2008 he knew that the way to win the presidency was, in part, to embrace the individual rights theory of the Second Amendment.
Near the end of his memoir, Dreams from My Father, which he published when he was thirty-three, Obama reflected on his education at Harvard Law School. His tone was ambivalent. “The study of law can be disappointing at times, a matter of applying narrow rules and arcane procedure to an uncooperative reality; a sort of glorified accounting that serves to regulate the affairs of those who have power—and that all too often seeks to explain, to those who do not, the ultimate wisdom and justness of their condition.” Then, in a gesture that was common in the book, and in Obama’s character, he gave the other side of the story: “But that is not all the law is,” he continued. “The law is also memory; the law also records a long-running conversation, a nation arguing with its conscience.”
Obama’s conversation with himself continued: “How far do our obligations reach? How do we transform mere power into justice, mere sentiment into love? The answers I find in law books don’t always satisfy me—for every Brown v. Board of Education I find a score of cases where conscience is sacrificed to expedience or greed.” As before, though, Obama followed that despairing remark with a hopeful one: “And yet, in the conversation itself, in the joining of voices, I find myself modestly encouraged, believing that so long as the questions are still being asked, what binds us together might somehow, ultimately, prevail.”
Obama arrived at Harvard after spending three years as a community organizer in Chicago. There he had led a small group in a series of fights, usually with the city government, for better housing, for asbestos abatement, and for jobs on the South Side. Like many such endeavors to organize the poor, Obama’s work was difficult and not especially successful; friends and colleagues found Obama more analytical than confrontational. In time, as his frustrations mounted, Obama began thinking about going to law school. Partly, Obama simply wanted to find a way to make a decent living, but the profession also seemed well suited to his particular kind of intelligence and ambitions. He was admitted to Harvard and began his studies in the fall of 1988.
Obama had just turned twenty-seven, which turned out to be a fact of some significance. Most of his fellow students were considerably younger, and Obama’s maturity, both chronological and temperamental, set him apart. He approached law school, as he did much else, with a certain detachment, as both participant and observer. Law school, and Harvard in particular, would leave its mark on Obama, but his core remained unchanged.
There was much truth in the conventional view of a Harvard Law School degree as a passport to Wall Street law firms, but the school also produced eminent role models for an aspiring reformer like Obama. Louis Brandeis, class of 1877, practically invented Supreme Court litigation as a vehicle for social change and, in an article in the Harvard Law Review, first identified a “right to privacy.” Felix Frankfurter, class of 1906, provided much of the intellectual energy behind the New Deal, as well as many protégés to Franklin Roosevelt, before following Brandeis on to the Supreme Court. Archibald Cox, class of 1937, joined the faculty and went on to serve as President Kennedy’s solicitor general and then Watergate special prosecutor. In subsequent decades, untold numbers of Harvard Law graduates moved to Washington, and around the country, to make their marks on the policies of the day.
And there was a time, too, when ideas, as well as people, also made the trip from the Ivy League to Washington. In the Warren Court years—the years of Brown—leading law schools provided much of the intellectual firepower behind the Court’s most liberal decisions. In Goldberg v. Kelly, in 1970, the Court held for the first time that the government must give an individual a hearing before cutting off his welfare benefits. To do otherwise, Justice William J. Brennan Jr. said, would violate the Fourteenth Amendment, by depriving the individual of “property” without due process of law. But were welfare benefits “property”? In the key passage in the opinion, Brennan wrote, “It may be realistic today to regard welfare entitlements as more like ‘property’ than a ‘gratuity.’ Much of the existing wealth in this country takes the form of rights that do not fall within traditional common-law concepts of property.” In support of this novel notion, Brennan cited the work of Charles A. Reich, a professor at Yale Law School, and his articles in the Yale Law Journal. At around the same time, Frank I. Michelman, a professor at Harvard (who was still teaching when Obama was a student), suggested that the Fourteenth Amendment might require a right to economic equality, not just freedom from discrimination. The Supreme Court never went that far, but the idea was, at least for a while, plausible. To write for a law review in those days could be seen as an act of genuine political importance. Harvard’s influence, though, went in cycles, and there was a down period as the country and the Supreme Court began to turn to the right in the 1970s—a period that coincided with the tenure of John G. Roberts ’79 on campus. Richard Nixon famously referred to Harvard as the “Kremlin on the Charles,” so faculty members were generally less welcomed in his administration. Conservative Supreme Court justices needed no direction from liberal academics. On the whole, in these days, the Harvard law faculty still tilted left, but the school returned its focus to its mission as a professional school. As managing editor of the Harvard Law Review, Roberts was known by his colleagues as a political conservative—a modest novelty among his fellow editors—but mostly as a skilled and demanding taskmaster.
Liberals may still have held sway in Cambridge, but conservatives were gaining in the rest of the world, and following his graduation, magna cum laude, Roberts began his Republican ascent. He clerked first in New York for Henry J. Friendly, a legendary judge of moderate Republican views on the Second Circuit, and then in 1980 for William Rehnquist, who was still an associate justice. From there, Roberts went to the Justice Department and Reagan White House. Clearly, then, the Kremlin in Cambridge could launch a brilliant conservative career as well as a liberal one.
Back at the law school, in the eighties, the politics took a peculiar turn. The faculty, and to a lesser extent the student body, became bitterly divided over a movement known as Critical Legal Studies. CLS was a hybrid of traditional Marxism and contemporary literary theory; its adherents purported to expose the contradictions and class biases inherent in all aspects of law. As far back as the 1920s, “legal realism”—which provided the intellectual basis for much of the New Deal—exposed the political nature of most legal rules. But the Crits, as they were known, practiced a kind of legal realism on steroids, taking an almost nihilistic pleasure in showing the meaninglessness of law. They portrayed law as first and foremost an instrument of oppression of the disenfranchised, and they did so in a manner that was both passionate and obscure, with articles full of citations to the work of “poststructuralists” like Jacques Derrida. Crits and conservatives on the faculty battled over tenure appointments, and the fights sometimes spilled into the classrooms, and even into courtrooms. The Kremlin on the Charles became known as Beirut on the Charles.
Roberts experienced a pre-CLS Harvard. Obama arrived just after its heyday. So it was notable that, while still in his first year, Obama sought out Laurence Tribe and went to work for him as a research assistant. The choice was a revealing one on the young student’s part. Tribe was a liberal but no Crit—a description that also fit his prize student. Tribe had managed to avoid the Crits-versus-conservatives warfare on the faculty, largely because he was a leading modern exemplar of the Cambridge-to-Washington axis. After writing the best single-volume treatise on the Constitution, Tribe became an accomplished Supreme Court advocate and adviser to Democratic politicians. In 1987, Tribe gave damning testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee against Reagan’s nomination of Robert Bork to the Supreme Court. The stand made Tribe a Republican target and doomed his own chance of winning a nomination to the Court. Still, Tribe was more than an academic; he was a player on the larger stage, the real world.
Obama excelled in the classroom—he too would graduate magna cum laude—and he succeeded in the writing competition to join the staff of the Harvard Law Review. Students on law reviews edit articles that are submitted by law professors around the country; about forty out of five hundred students in a class make law review at Harvard. Every February, the staff of the law review holds an election to select the president, or editor in chief, of the magazine for the following year. Obama won with broad support. Conservative students, who were a growing presence at Harvard, turned out to be the key to Obama’s victory. The Federalist Society—the national conservative legal organization—had been founded at Yale in 1982, but Harvard soon opened a chapter, and its members asserted themselves as a vocal minority on the staff of the Review. The conservatives recognized that Obama was not one of their own, but they felt he would give them a fair shake, especially about which articles to publish. In winning the confidence of conservatives, Obama’s maturity proved a tremendous asset. In that tumultuous time on campus, Obama always seems slightly removed from the battle lines, in his customary posture of both observer and participant. He had an innate grasp of the politician’s gift for persuading others that you agree with them without ever making an explicit commitment. Obama’s earnest style earned him some mockery from his friends. One of them told David Remnick that a group would go to the movies and tease Obama by imitating his solicitude: “Do you want salt on your popcorn? Do you even want popcorn?”
Suddenly, then, with his election as president of the Review, Barack Obama was a celebrity of sorts. The New York Times did a story about him. Turner Broadcasting asked Obama to record a “Black History Minute,” and the young man, struggling with the teleprompter, gave a brief tribute to Charles Hamilton Houston, one of Thurgood Marshall’s legal mentors. Vanity Fair, which does not generally track the leadership of scholarly publications, devoted a full page to Obama’s election. “The New York Times ran a ‘First Black’ headline, which probably won’t be the last time that label is affixed to Barack Obama,” Elise O’Shaughnessy wrote, before concluding that Obama “responds warily to the assumption that he himself will run for office. ‘If I go into politics it should grow out of work I’ve done on the local level, not because I’m some media creation.’ Though, as media creations go, he’d be a pretty good one.” In addition, around this time, Jane Dystel, a literary agent in New York, approached Obama with the idea of his writing a book. Obama agreed, and signed a contract with a division of Simon & Schuster. (At that point, people embraced Obama without knowing much about him. One publisher thought he was raised in the Chicago ghetto; Vanity Fair said he grew up in Singapore, not Indonesia. No one seemed to know that his real home was Honolulu.)
It was all a rather extraordinary amount of attention to a mere law student, but during his debut as a public figure, Obama demonstrated precocious political skills. “The fact that I’ve been elected shows a lot of progress,” he told Fox Butterfield, of the Times. “But it’s important that stories like mine aren’t used to say that everything is O.K. for blacks.” Likewise, Obama was always careful to show respect for his forebearers in the civil rights movement, whose sacrifices, he said, made his own success possible. He told the Boston Globe, “To some extent, I’m a symbolic stand-in for a lot of the changes that have been made.”
But for all that Obama showed respect for Marshall, Houston, and their peers, he also made clear in his own way what he expected of the contemporary legal system: not much. Those pioneers had used the courts to break down the legal barriers that oppressed African Americans. But by the time Obama was at Harvard, that work was mostly done. The task of legal progressives of Obama’s vintage was to try to hang on to the gains that had been made in the courts—and that wasn’t easy, or of particular interest to him. In 1991, Obama graduated from Harvard Law School into the world of the Rehnquist Court, where the social change on the agenda was (almost always) in the conservative direction. If the right was ascendant, the left was distracted—with the baroque inventions of Critical Legal Studies. For someone like Obama, who had spent years working on the real-world problems of poor people in Chicago, theories untethered to reality had no appeal.
Later, when Obama was a senator, he explained the nature of his disillusionment with the use of the courts for social change. It wasn’t just that things looked bleak at the Rehnquist Court. “I wondered if, in our reliance on the courts to vindicate not only our rights but also our values, progressives had lost too much faith in democracy,” he wrote in The Audacity of Hope. Yes, he pointed out that he believed in the right to privacy and celebrated the legacy of Brown in civil rights, but it wasn’t up to lawyers to preserve those rights. “There was one way to ensure that judges on the bench reflected our values, and that was to win at the polls.” Unlike his honored forebearers, Obama would devote his life to elections, not lawsuits.
Product details
- Publisher : Anchor; Reprint edition (June 4, 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0307390713
- ISBN-13 : 978-0307390714
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.22 x 0.72 x 7.98 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #935,135 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #255 in Courts & Law
- #316 in United States Judicial Branch
- #909 in General Constitutional Law
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Jeffrey Toobin is a staff writer at The New Yorker, senior legal analyst at CNN, and the bestselling author of The Oath: The Obama White House and the Supreme Court, The Nine, Too Close to Call, A Vast Conspiracy, The Run of His Life and Opening Arguments. A magna cum laude graduate of Harvard Law School, he lives with his family in New York.
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Customers find the book's information and perspective on the Supreme Court justices engaging. They describe it as a valuable read that provides insightful commentary on the workings of the court. Readers appreciate the author's ability to masterfully interweave the personalities and philosophies of each justice.
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Customers find the book's information quality good. They say the author does an excellent job of describing the perspectives of each of the recent justices, both past and present. The book is historically informative and educational, providing analysis and interpretation of recent cases. Readers appreciate the depth of reporting and the explanation of the workings of the Court, emphasizing the impact of the Justices' political views.
"...In summary, I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The combination of fascinating topics in the hands of a lucid storywriter makes for a great insightful..." Read more
"Toobin provides brief, biographical info on each of the associate justices and Chief Justice Roberts and President Obama because he believes their..." Read more
"...He also, and this is probably the most valuable insight in The Oath, gives us some perspective into the probable future course of the Court, as the..." Read more
"...Toobin finishes off with a flourish: a lively analysis of why and how Roberts surprised everyone (particularly his conservative Court colleagues) by..." Read more
Customers find the book readable and informative on a complicated subject. They describe it as a police detective novel that keeps them engaged. Readers praise the author's skill in crafting an accessible book for the masses that goes inside the Supreme Court.
"...and Harvard Law School, Jeffrey Toobin, has written an expertly crafted book for the masses that goes inside the Supreme Court and provides readers..." Read more
"...n't really offer any new information, but the book as a whole does a good job of showing what motivates each member of the court and how the court's..." Read more
"...Jeffrey Toobin's books The Nine and The Oath will be essential reading for years to come." Read more
"...Whether or not you agree, however, this book is well worth reading, both informative and thought provoking." Read more
Customers find the book's writing style engaging and easy to read. They appreciate the author's eloquent yet concise writing style that provides an insider's perspective. The book provides a clear overview of the decision process and legal arguments in an accessible way.
"...Positives: 1. A beautifully written book that covers the evolution of the Supreme Court to its current form...." Read more
"...Toobin has a good handle on each justice's writing style...." Read more
"...to every member of the court, but on the whole I found it to be very well-written...." Read more
"...ability to explain the most abstract of legal arguments in an easily accessible way...." Read more
Customers find the book insightful into the Supreme Court and its workings. They appreciate the vignettes on individual justices and the depth of reporting. The book chronicles the changes in the judiciary over several decades. It explores the relationships between the justices and alliances, as well as their personalities and philosophy.
"...18. An interesting look at the retired justices and their influences. To name one of the three, the impact of Sandra Day O'Connor...." Read more
"...The Oath shines as a piece of journalism, as a work of current history of the Supreme Court, tracking it from Obama's inauguration...." Read more
"...The short biographies of the justices are illuminating and very helpful, as is the review of the major cases that came before the court...." Read more
"...Associate Justices in ways that made each of them real, and I daresay, human...." Read more
Customers find the book's look fascinating and excellent. They say it provides an insider's view of the current Supreme Court with interesting portraits of the members. The flow is smooth, the organization is elegant, and the content is comprehensive and illuminating.
"...The book is elegantly organized, basically chronologically but featuring one justice and one issue in turn...." Read more
"...mix of the personal and professional, Toobin's book is a fascinating look at our Supreme Court today...." Read more
"...THE OATH: THE OBAMA WHITE HOUSE and the SUPREME COURT is a fabulous interesting look into the inner workings of the U.S. Supreme Court, under its..." Read more
"...I read this on my Kindle in the publisher's font. Easy on the eyes, as they say." Read more
Customers appreciate the author's skill in describing the personalities and philosophies of the current Supreme Court justices. They find the book well-written, providing concise insights into the current court's history. The author is described as brilliant and an equally adept lawyer and writer.
"...I really enjoyed how the author masterfully interweaved the personalities and philosophies of each one of the justices within the context of court..." Read more
"...The Oath shines as a piece of journalism, as a work of current history of the Supreme Court, tracking it from Obama's inauguration...." Read more
"...the author's description of how Obamacare was upheld is incredibly well-done...." Read more
"...Toobin is a really great writer." Read more
Customers have different views on the book's political content. Some find it non-partisan and neutral from a political standpoint. They appreciate the clear explanation of legal terms without legal jargon. However, others feel the author is too political and politicizes the Supreme Court.
"...the Democrats water, however I found the book to be quite neutral from a political standpoint...." Read more
"...Enough of that. What I found most disturbing was the politicizing of the Supreme Court, and the "pedestal" that our Judges seem to have..." Read more
"...The flow of the book is excellent. Without polemic bias he also demonstrates just how much the Robert's Court has systematically undone more than..." Read more
"...Tho I am a lawyer, he writes clearly and simply without the legal jargon that makes so many "legal books" hard for non-lawyers...." Read more
Customers find the book boring and frustrating. They say it's sub-mediocre and not as good as The Nine.
"...of values, guns are unacceptably dangerous and not all that helpful in a civilized society. 5...." Read more
"As a legal analysis of Supreme Court cases, this book is sub-mediocre...." Read more
"...Court but are anything but a left-side kool-aid drinker, this book is frustrating...." Read more
"...I read bits and parts of it. It's extremely long and not exactly entertaining" Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on September 19, 2012The Oath: The Obama White House and the Supreme Court by Jeffrey Toobin
"The Oath: The Obama White House and the Supreme Court" is the riveting book that covers the evolution of the Supreme Court with a focus on how it relates to President Obama's administration. It discusses many of the hot-button issues of today by the Roberts-led Supreme Court while making precise historical references. It provides enlightening characterizations of the current justices including recent retirees. Award-winning author, senior legal analyst at CNN and Harvard Law School, Jeffrey Toobin, has written an expertly crafted book for the masses that goes inside the Supreme Court and provides readers with the current struggles of constitutional interpretation. This enlightening 352-page book is composed of twenty-three chapters within five parts.
Positives:
1. A beautifully written book that covers the evolution of the Supreme Court to its current form. Enlightening, provocative and stimulating.
2. Riveting topic in the hands of a skilled author.
3. Even-handed and fair. A book of this ilk must cover the main angles of the issues to be fair and it does. Toobin does this book, dare I say it...justice.
4. The book is full of captivating tidbits, personality traits and facts about the justices. I really enjoyed how the author masterfully interweaved the personalities and philosophies of each one of the justices within the context of court cases.
5. The book provides readers with terrific insight on what it entails to be a Supreme Court justice. The preparation, intelligence and caution it takes to be an elite within elite. "It is important to be identified enough with one party to have patrons, but not so closely that you have enemies."
6. The main philosophical differences between liberal and conservative Supreme Court Justices. Many fascinating stories and keen insight. As an example, the idea of unenumerated rights (liberals), and the concept of textualism (conservatives)...
7. Biographies of President Obama and Chief Justice Roberts.
8. Fascinating court cases. Many examples throughout the book. From celebrities (Anna Nicole Smith) to Health Care Reform. Of course, the paramount case of Brown v. Board of Education
9. Ruth Bader Ginsberg her contributions and her quest to give women a voice. The "Thurgood Marshall of the feminist movement."
10. One of my favorite chapters, "Wise Latina" of course I'm talking about the nomination process of the 111th Supreme Court Justice, Sonia Sotomayor. As district court judge she saved baseball. I also enjoyed the recent tradition of her colleagues greeting her with the silent treatment, just like baseball when a rookie phenom hits that first homerun.
11. Issues of taxation (corporations as people), labor issues, right-to-life versus choice, gun control, race, and finance reform are among the many interesting topics covered.
12. The case of Citizens United that illustrates the themes of corporate power, freedom of speech and the intersection of law and politics. The deep political implications.
13. The question that changed a case and perhaps American history. Censorship.
14. The evolution of the Supreme Court to its current more conservative makeup led by Chief Justice Roberts.
15. The interesting parallels between Roberts and Kagan (the Frozen Yogurt Justice).
16. The swing-vote power of Justice Kennedy.
17. The White House's reactions to Supreme Court rulings. How new laws can counter "bad" rulings and the issue of separation of powers. The confrontations between the Obama White House and the Roberts Supreme Court.
18. An interesting look at the retired justices and their influences. To name one of the three, the impact of Sandra Day O'Connor. Her stunning retirement and its deep-felt implications. Her views on Chief Justice Roberts.
19. The nomination and confirmation process of a Supreme Court Justice. How it has evolved over the years. The politics involved. In depth look at Sotomayor and Kagan's nomination process.
20. The impact of the Tea Party: antitaxation, antiregulation, and ant-abortion. "Above all, Tea Party members were originalists, dedicated to restoring the modern government of the U.S. to the views, as they understood them. Of the eighteenth-century framers."
21. The controversial selection of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. His rulings, his impact to the evermore conservative court. The attempt to get Thomas off the health care case. His customary silence.
22. Court cases involving "separation" of church and state.
23. The health care reform issue, the debate the battle, discussions on individual mandates, the results and the stunning decision from Chief Justice Roberts. The ramifications of the decision.
24. Roberts' agenda, his goals for his tenure as chief justice. On the other hand, the apparent lack of interest of the President in judicial nominations.
25. Notes and bibliography provided.
Negatives:
1. Charts and lists of Supreme Court justices would have added value.
2. Having to buy more books for friends and family.
In summary, I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The combination of fascinating topics in the hands of a lucid storywriter makes for a great insightful book. From the blunder of the Oath of Office to the surprising decision to uphold the Affordable Care Act, this book covers everything as it relates to the Obama presidency and the Supreme Court. It also provides fascinating historical narratives of the Supreme Court including political themes of paramount importance. All the major hot-button themes are covered with great skill and Toobin does a wonderful job of covering multiple angles of issues. This book turned out to be an intellectual treat. If you have any interest in the Supreme Court this is the book for you. I highly recommend it!
Further suggestions: "The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court" by the same author, "The U.S. Supreme Court: A Very Short Introduction" by Linda Greenhouse, "Five Chiefs: A Supreme Court Memoir" by John Paul Stevens, "The Brethren: Inside the Supreme Court" by Bob Woodward, "Supreme Conflict: The Inside Story of the Struggle for Control of the United States Supreme Court" by Jan Crawford Greenburg, "The Supreme Court: The Personalities and Rivalries That Defined America" by Jeffrey Rosen, "Making Our Democracy Work: A Judge's View" by Stephen Breyer, "The Majesty of the Law: Reflections of a Supreme Court Justice" by Sandra Day O'Connor and "Simple Justice: The History of Brown v. Board of Education and Black America's Struggle for Equality" by Richard Kluger.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2012Toobin provides brief, biographical info on each of the associate justices and Chief Justice Roberts and President Obama because he believes their background provides a window to their views. It is probably not entirely clear why, in his short histories of Roberts and Obama, that Toobin details the rise of Critical Legal Studies at Harvard Law School. After all, Roberts' tenure at Harvard predated the Crits, and Obama never bought into their views. So why bring it up? The answer lies in Toobin's background. Like Roberts and Obama, Toobin graduated magna cum laude from Harvard and was on law review. Unlike Roberts and Obama, Toobin is a Crit. That is, he buys fully into the theory that all law is merely a vehicle for the application of politics. The Oath should be viewed through that lens. To Toobin, every opinion the justices write is written to advance the positions of their party. This view is ridiculous, which is why CLS is now discredited in the academy, but it still has an obvious adherent in Toobin. Toobin is also a very good journalist and writer.
The Oath shines as a piece of journalism, as a work of current history of the Supreme Court, tracking it from Obama's inauguration. The short bios of the President and each justice are sterling. As is his reporting of the twists and turns of Citizens United and the Obamacare case between oral argument and opinion (this is particularly impressive, sources within the Supreme Court are hard to come by). Interestingly, Toobin thinks it was law clerks, not the justices themselves, who provided leaks on Obamacare, contrary to the conventional wisdom.
Toobin has a good handle on each justice's writing style. Scalia is a master of the polemic, Roberts is a master stylist (curiously, given his views elsewhere, Toobin perhaps overestimates Roberts' abilities as a writer), Souter wrote in stilted prose, Kennedy is prone to bloviation.
He ably shows the humanity of each justice, especially through their relationships with each other--the very conservative Scalia and very liberal Ginsburg are famously great friends (Scalia openly wept as Roberts read a tribute to Ginsburg's late husband from the bench) and the conservative Rehnquist and moderate O'Connor always maintained a bond as westerners from Stanford Law. (Not that any of that was previously unknown.)
Toobin is also generally fair and perceptive in his analyses of the justices' jurisprudence (I think his opinions of Scalia and Thomas push the bounds of reasonableness, but are reasonable nonetheless). He doesn't commit the common error of underestimating Thomas' influence. He doesn't treat the conservative justices as a monolithic block. With one exception, he captures in broad strokes the jurisprudence of each. Alito doesn't have the libertarian streak that Scalia and Thomas do. Thomas doesn't have the reticent to go against precedent in the name of originalism that Scalia does. Kennedy is less a moderate than quite liberal on some issues (e.g., the 8th Amendment) and quite conservative on other issues (political speech).
Unfortunately, given the thesis to the book, the one exception is a significant error. Toobin casts Roberts as the Devil himself, devoted to advancing the Republican party at all costs. According to Toobin, the Roberts Court is engaging in a "war on precedent." But it has been a hallmark of the Roberts Court that it is MORE solicitous of its precedents than past courts--overturning its own precedents and invalidating federal statutes at a slower rate than under Chief Justices Rehnquist, Burger, or Warren. Toobin is perhaps suffering from a form of confirmation bias--it's only those precedents that he likes that he notices being overturned (on the other hand, it's undeniable that Roberts has moved the law significantly through those few precedents overturned). Toobin's own reporting cuts against his thesis. Roberts wanted a narrow ruling in Citizens United but only relented when Kennedy pushed for a more sweeping ruling.
Toobin flatly states that "[a]t its heart, Citizens United was a case about Republicans versus Democrats." But he only does so after rather laughably dismissing the ACLU and unions as Democratic constituencies. And it was called the MCCAIN-Feingold bill. Perhaps a better dividing line over campaign finance would be incumbents versus challengers.
Toobin elsewhere commits egregious, if not uncommon, errors. Toobin equates Lochner with Dred Scott and Plessy. It may be orthodox, but given what we now know about Lochner (it struck down a law primarily for the benefit of large bakery operations squeezed by immigrant mom-and-pop shops), it's irresponsible to equate it to a law stripping a vast slice of Americans of their rights. Toobin accuses the Court of "prevent[ing] any governmental restraints on the great new concentrations of wealth and power in commercial and corporate interests" during the Lochner era. This isn't wrong as a matter of opinion, it's wrong as a matter of fact. The "Lochner" Court only invalidated a very small portion of the regulations that came before it.
Similarly, Toobin states that Scalia brought originalism to the Court. Scalia didn't bring originalism to the Court. John Marshall brought originalism to the Court. Scalia only brought it back after a relatively short (50 years versus 140 years) hiatus.
Toobin compares Heller to Roe. In his eyes, both cases invented new rights not in the Constitution. But the 2nd Amendment is, in fact, in the Constitution (I checked). That the historiography or its application is not entirely clear does not equate it to a provision invented whole cloth. Toobin frequently points to the indeterminacy of determining original public meaning in offense against originalism. Yes, it's often hard. But need I remind Toobin (and the justices) that it's indoor work with no heavy lifting? Difficulty deciding between A and B does not make C an equally valid answer.
According to Toobin, "no one suggested the [individual mandate] was unconstitutional." Going even further, he claims "[n]o one wrote an op-ed piece." This would be news to David Rivkin, whose op-ed arguing an individual mandate would be unconstitutional was published in the Wall Street Journal on September 29, 1993. Similarly, conservative and libertarian scholars were arguing that the individual mandate was unconstitutional before Obamacare passed. It wasn't a widely held or discussed view, but there is a reason potential justices refuse to address hypotheticals during their confirmation hearings--the facts really do matter and each issue really does demand serious study to decide properly (you can see why a Crit would disagree).
All that said, this is still a "must read." There is precious little good reporting on the secretive Supreme Court, and even less by reporters that actually understand the law. It's perhaps too much to ask for them to present it honestly.
Background material comprises 19% of the Kindle edition. It consists of photos, acknowledgements, surprisingly sparse notes, a bibliography, photo credits, and an About the Author section.
Top reviews from other countries
- johnReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 21, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars The oath
Quick delivery and nice clean book. Look forward to read
- Oliver JullReviewed in Canada on August 25, 2018
5.0 out of 5 stars Jeffrey Toobin delivers!
A great read, essential background to the Supreme Court of the United States and for legal observers
- aidan odonnellReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 21, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars Learning Something New
Strange how little things might be seen as having a large effect . As a citizen of the United Kingdom, which does not have a written constitution I found this book fascinating . I really enjoyed it
- SandeepReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 6, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent combination of SC history and relevance today
Brilliant book that manages to intertwine both the history of the Supreme Court as well as the relevance to Obama's reign, and ends on the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). It's quite a niche subject and you need some background knowledge of this field for it all to make sense, but I really enjoyed this.
- vrgsReviewed in the United Kingdom on March 12, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Toobin does it again. With profound knowledge and a ...
Toobin does it again. With profound knowledge and a keen understanding of the Court, the author makes the relationship between the Obama White House and the conservative court clear as canbe. Can't wait for Toobin's next book or article!