
Clarke Rountree
Clarke Rountree is Professor of Communication Arts at the University
of Alabama, Huntsville. Rountree was awarded the prestigious 2008-
2009 Kohrs-Campbell Prize in Rhetorical Criticism by Michigan...
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Judging the Supreme Court
Constructions of Motives in Bush v. Gore
Clarke Rountree
WINNER:
2009 Kohrs-Campbell Prize in Rhetorical Criticism
This volume questions the motives of Supreme Court justices in a
landmark case: The Supreme Court's intervention in the presidential
election of 2000, and its subsequent decision in favor of George W.
Bush, elicited immediate, heated, and widespread debate. Critics
argued that the justices used weak legal arguments to overturn the
Florida Supreme Court's ruling, ending a ballot recount and awarding
the presidency to Bush. More fundamentally, they questioned the
motives of conservative judges who arrived at a decision in favor of
the candidate who reflected their political
leanings.
Judging the Supreme Court examines this
controversial case and the extensive attention it has received. To
fully understand the case, Clarke Rountree argues, we must
understand "judicial motives." These are comprised of more than each
judge's personal opinions. Judges' motives, which Rountree
calls "rhetorical performances," are as influential and publicly
discussed as their decisions themselves. Before they are dissected
in the media, judges' motives are carefully crafted by the decision-
makers themselves, their critics, and their defenders. Justices
consider not only the motives of the government, of military
officials, of criminals, of public speakers, and of others, they
also consider, construct, construe, spin, and deconstruct the
motives of dissenters (whom they want to show are "misguided"),
earlier courts, lower courts, and, especially, themselves.
Every judicial opinion is essentially a portrait of
motives that says, "Here's what we did and here's why we did it."
Well-constructed judicial motives reinforce the idea that we live
under "the rule of law," while motives articulated less successfully
raise questions about the legitimacy not just of individual judicial
decisions but also of our political system and its foundation on an
impartial judiciary. In Bush v. Gore, Rountree concludes, the
judges of the majority opinion were not motivated by judicial
concerns about law and justice, but rather by their own political
and personal motives.
Rhetoric & Public Affairs Series
Notes, references, indexWorld Rights
640 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", November 2007
Cloth, $79.95,
0-87013-809-X 978-0-87013-809-6
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