Six years ago this summer, back in the innocent, pre-Trumpian epoch — when we thought American public life was plagued by "political polarization" but hadn't seen anything yet — I fretted in this space about a trend I'd been noticing on the Minnesota Supreme Court. I thought I detected a slight hardening of ideological lines and groupings on the court.
"Could this state's high court become like the famously fractious U.S. Supreme Court?" I wondered. "Could it split into ideological blocs, largely defined by the governor who appointed the justices, and with each bloc championing a starkly different philosophy about the proper role of courts in our democracy?"
We're overdue for an update.
The state high court began to change back in 2014 with the arrival of the first two justices appointed by Gov. Mark Dayton — at the time Minnesota's first DFL governor in 20 years. The court Dayton had inherited in 2011 was something of a motley crew, in terms of the justices' political backgrounds.
A bare, four-justice majority had been appointed by conservative Republican Gov. Tim Pawlenty. The other three justices consisted of two veterans of 1990s vintage — one appointed by moderate Republican Arne Carlson and one (Alan Page) directly elected to the court — plus another justice appointed by maverick Gov. Jesse Ventura.
This mixed assortment often proved an unpredictable tribunal without consistent lines of division. It had, among other things, overseen prolonged litigation over the U.S. Senate recount in 2008-09 that ultimately put Democrat Al Franken in office, and had ruled against Pawlenty in a pitched partisan budget fight involving an obscure unilateral maneuver called "unallotment."
But governors can sometimes put their stamp on the state Supreme Court quickly, given a mandatory retirement age of 70 for state judges and the frequency with which justices leave to return to private practice or join the federal bench. Dayton appointees have formed a majority on the court now for four years, and for two years five Dayton picks have sat on the seven-member court.
At the end of July, the first nominee of Gov. Tim Walz, Judge Gordon Moore of Worthington, will join the high court, replacing retiring Justice David Lillehaug.