Unsigned Supreme Court opinions and orders in short-fuse election law cases

Linda Greenhouse at the New York Times offers this criticism of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Republican National Committee v. Democratic National Committee:

I wonder how Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh understand the word “ordinarily.” And I wonder why the opinion was issued per curiam “by the court.” Did none of the five have the nerve to take ownership by signing his name?

In short-fuse election law cases before the Supreme Court, the Court routinely issues per curiam opinions, even with dissenting justices who identify themselves. Or it issues orders without reasoning without the names of individual justices who agreed with the order signed onto it, even if some may dissent (and even if some write dissenting opinions). To name a few:

I’m sure others can find more, and I’m sure those who’ve clerked on the Supreme Court can offer more “inside baseball.” But in short-fuse election law litigation (and probably in all short-fuse litigation, to be frank!), the Court routinely issues orders without reasoning. Sometimes, it includes a short paragraph of reasoning. Occasionally, it includes a few pages of reasoning, like it did in RNC v. DNC. In all such cases with reasoning, however, it simply issues those decisions per curiam. (In cases without reasoning, it doesn’t identify who did or didn’t agree with the order. Some justices may dissent or choose not to support the order, but they may not be on record as doing so.)

This is true whether the decision is unanimous or if some justices—even if up to four justices—dissent from the Court’s decision.

I think that if this case were to reach the Supreme Court, the case was briefed on the merits, and the Supreme Court issued a full-length, reasoned decision, it would have an author identified. Rarely does the Court choose not to identify a particular author, but in those cases it seems much more deliberate (think Buckley v. Valeo or, also short-fuse but argued, Bush v. Gore).

In short-fuse election law cases, however, there’s nothing unusual with the decision to issue an order or an opinion related to an order without identifying the author.

UPDATE: Josh Blackman has similar thoughts here.