Adam Liptak’s report for the New York Times on polarization in the hiring of Supreme Court clerks (covered in yesterday’s round-up) attracted significant attention in the blogosphere. The WSJ Law Blog summarizes Liptak’s article, while the Harvard Crimson’s Flyby blog charts the number of Harvard Law alums who serve as clerks at the Court each year. At Balkinization, Jason Mazzone responds to Liptak, arguing that his “claim about increased ideological hiring is exaggerated†because it does not account for an increase in the proportion of court of appeals judges nominated by Republican presidents – from thirty-seven percent in 1980 to fifty-seven percent today. At the Volokh Conspiracy, Orin Kerr also responds. He argues that “the ideology of law clerks roughly matches that of the Justices because the Justices are trying to solve the principal-agent problem†– that is, when a Justice and a clerk are ideologically in sync, “the Justice[ has] more confidence that [his or her] law clerks will be faithful agents without the Justice[] having to engage in costly monitoring of law clerk performance.â€
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