"Biskupic, an accomplished and well-sourced journalist, knows the court as well as anyone now covering it... In her new book Biskupic has done something different and a good deal harder. She has written a group narrative that combines close accounts of the court's public business in the Trump years with a history of its private dramas and conflicts... The deeper message of Nine Black Robes is that even with a new president in office we remain captive to the Age of Trump... A quiet urgency ripples through this informative, briskly paced and gracefully written book." — New York Times Book Review
"Biskupic opens a window onto the opaque, insular world of the justices to show an institution sinking gradually into crisis . . . Biskupic is a longtime chronicler of the court, and Nine Black Robes puts on display her connections within its chambers." — Washington Post
"[Biskupic] knows how to make news and illuminate the personalities atop the judicial org chart . . . The book reveals unseen sausage-making . . ." — Wall Street Journal
"This is the story of the Trump transformation of the Court—and perhaps America. Joan Biskupic is one of our great Supreme Court reporters and here, in Nine Black Robes, she skillfully blends the public record with her own reporting from a majority of the justices." — Bob Woodward, Washington Post reporter and author or co-author of 15 #1 New York Times bestselling books
"Fascinating and informative . . . [Biskupic's] long experience covering the court . . . has put her in an incomparable position to comment on its make-up, historical positions and direction. It has also made her privy to many significant, little-known secrets about Supreme Court personalities and their historical behaviors." — The National Book Review
“Piece by piece in her meticulously crafted books and newspaper coverage, Joan Biskupic has built a reputation as the nation's most astute observer of the Supreme Court. All of that seemed in preparation for Nine Black Robes, a seminal work that reveals in sharp detail the atomization and politicization of a once-revered institution in the Trump era.” — David Maraniss, Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer
"The best Supreme Court reporter in the country has done it again. In Nine Black Robes, Joan Biskupic brings readers into their cloistered chambers, details motivations and maneuvering, life stories and leadership, with scoop after scoop on the internal machinations that have led to decisions with very real consequences for the American people." — Jake Tapper, host of The Lead with Jake Tapper on CNN
“Joan Biskupic’s Nine Black Robes takes us unsparingly through the most devastating and consequential period in modern Supreme Court history. Biskupic’s fact-rich, detailed reporting demands that we confront how drastically the Court, led by a relentlessly determined conservative super-majority, has aggressively reframed and diminished the boundaries of rights and protections that Americans have enjoyed for decades. And Biskupic’s sober review makes clear that the consequences of the “Trump effect” on our Court are far from over.” — Sherrilyn Ifill, Former President & Director-Counsel, NAACP Legal Defense Fund, Inc.
"[A] classic insider's story, filled with personal details and behind-the-scenes stories . . . Biskupic makes a worthy contribution to the genre." — Financial Times
"Comprehensive and accessible, this is a valuable overview of a profound shift in American jurisprudence." — Publishers Weekly
"[A]n up-to-the-minute, laser-focused examination of the Court . . . Devoted Court-watchers will devour this behind-the-scenes expose." — Booklist (starred review)
"Court watchers and civil rights activists alike will find this essential—and disturbing—reading." — Kirkus Reviews
[E]ven-handed, well-written . . . U.S. Supreme Court watchers will appreciate an inside look at recent momentous decisions." — Library Journal
"[Nine Black Robes] details how Chief Justice John Roberts lost control of an increasingly conservative US Supreme Court as it moved to overturn the constitutional right to abortion last year." — Bloomberg
"Biskupic has borne witness to some of the most disruptive, unprecedented changes of the legal guard and resulting shifts in democracy the United States has ever witnessed . . . Nine Black Robes: Inside the Supreme Court's Drive to the Right and Its Historic Consequences, invites us to sit alongside her perch in the Supreme Court during the past six years and all its tumult." — Shondaland
"New Supreme Court Tell-All Reveals Shady Tidbits about the Conservative Justices." — Jezebel
03/01/2023
CNN legal analyst Biskupic (The Chief) updates the inner workings of the U.S. Supreme Court. Previously, Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong's The Bretheren and Jeffrey Toobin's The Nine revealed the discord behind the cloak of collegiality. This book is a middle-ground between Woodward's chronological discussion of significant cases and Toobin's engaging analysis of the rise of the Federalist Society and its effect on the Court. Biskupic shows how the Senate's rejection of vocal conservative Robert Bork led to conservative justices Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch, Samuel Alito, Brett Cavanagh, and Amy Coney Barrett. The book benefits greatly from interviews with Don McGahn, Donald Trump's White House counsel who worked with the Federalist Society to place its members on the bench. The book remains a study of the workings of the Court, not in-depth profiles of the judges and how they think. Overall, this is an even-handed, well-written look at the U.S. Supreme Court, with the author despairing of the conservative takeover and lack of compromise. VERDICT U.S. Supreme Court watchers will appreciate an inside look at recent momentous decisions.—Harry Charles
2023-02-07
The senior Supreme Court analyst for CNN examines the current court and the elemental dangers it poses.
It wasn’t long after being installed that Trump’s three appointees to the Supreme Court—Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett—began to pull the institution hard to the right, joining Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito in an openly evident program to dismantle abortion rights and LGBTQ+ equality. “This court is not comprised of a bunch of partisan hacks,” Barrett remarked, but all signs point to the contrary even if the justices collectively, at least, repudiated Trump in his quest to overturn Joe Biden’s electoral victory. Indeed, writes Biskupic, Trump “treated the judiciary as if it were his to command, from his early weeks in office to his final weeks after he lost the 2020 election.” Of course, he had willing allies on the bench: Even if Clarence Thomas did not vote in Trump’s favor, he “showed sympathy for Trump’s claims of fraud,” influenced by his Trump-supporting, election-contesting wife, and has refused to recuse himself from cases involving tests of “independent state legislative theory that could collapse judicial safeguards.” On the latter point, Biskupic adds that Alito, Gorsuch, and Kavanaugh showed signs of being willing to entertain arguments in favor of state authority over federal elections—which, had it been in place, would have installed Trump. The court has taken to fighting “culture-war issues of guns and religion,” Biskupic notes, and is moving steadily to fulfill the right-wing desideratum of less and less federal regulation—as can be seen, for one, by its curtailing of some of the Environmental Protection Agency’s regulatory powers. The court is likely to prove destructive by any progressive measure, she closes, “a majority laying waste to precedents and, indeed, offering no one confidence that it was done with its work.”
Court watchers and civil rights activists alike will find this essential—and disturbing—reading.