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The fascinating, behind-the-scenes story of
Franklin Roosevelt’s attempt to pack the Supreme Court has special
resonance today as we debate the limits of presidential
authority. The Supreme Court has generated many dramatic
stories, none more so than the one that began on February 5, 1937.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, confident in his recent landslide reelection
and frustrated by a Court that had overturned much of his New Deal
legislation, stunned Congress and the American people with his announced
intention to add six new justices. Even though the now-famous “court
packing” scheme divided his own party, almost everyone assumed FDR would
get his way and reverse the Court’s conservative stance and
long-standing laissez-faire support of corporate America, so persuasive
and powerful had he become. I n the end, however, a Supreme Court
justice, Owen Roberts, who cast off precedent in the interests of
principle, and a Democratic senator from Montana, Burton K. Wheeler, led
an effort that turned an apparently unstoppable proposal into a
humiliating rejection—and preserved the Constitution.
FDR
v. Constitution is the colorful story behind 168 days that
riveted—and reshaped—the nation. Burt Solomon skillfully recounts the
major New Deal initiatives of FDR’s first term and the rulings that
overturned them, chronicling as well the politics and personalities on
the Supreme Court—from the brilliant octogenarian Louis Brandeis, to the
politically minded chief justice, Charles Evans Hughes, to the mercurial
Roberts, whose “switch in time saved nine.” The ebb and flow of one of
the momentous set pieces in American history placed the inner workings
of the nation’s capital on full view as the three branches of our
government squared off.
Ironically for FDR, the Court that
emerged from this struggle shifted on its own to a liberal attitude,
where it would largely remain for another seven decades. Placing the
greatest miscalculation of FDR’s career in context past and present,
Solomon offers a reminder of the perennial temptation toward an imperial
presidency that the founders had always