Like the country itself, the justices are divided between democracy and authoritarianism [View all]
Supreme Courts tariffs ruling reveals two political orders
Like the country itself, the justices are divided between democracy and authoritarianism
By Austin Sarat
Published February 21, 2026 9:00AM (EST)
(
Salon) The American people have grown used to reading about Supreme Court cases decided by a 6-3 vote. In almost all of those rulings, the courts six conservatives are arrayed on one side, with its three liberals on the other. But Fridays decision striking down many of Donald Trumps tariffs scrambled the deck, showing that at least some of the courts conservatives are not yet willing to set fire to the Constitution.
That the presidents immediate reaction to the ruling was to call it a disgrace and denounce the justices who had the temerity not to fall in line behind him indicates that this country is caught between two political orders.
The first, represented by the courts decision, is the remnant of a constitutional democracy in which rules still matter. On this side are the three liberal justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson along with conservatives Amy Coney Barrett, Neil Gorsuch and Chief Justice John Roberts, who authored the ruling. The second is an emerging authoritarian order in which the will of a single person is all that matters, an order the three dissenters in the case Samuel Alito, Brett Kavanaugh and Clarence Thomas seem ready to embrace.
Dont be taken in by any triumph of the first political order. The courts tariff ruling, while a welcome break from its pattern of pro-Trump decisions, is but one skirmish in an existential struggle. ....................(more)
https://www.salon.com/2026/02/21/supreme-courts-tariffs-ruling-reveals-two-political-orders/