Segal–Cover score

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A Segal–Cover score is an attempt to measure the "perceived qualifications and ideology" of nominees to the United States Supreme Court. The scores are created by analyzing pre-confirmation newspaper editorials regarding the nominations from The New York Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and The Wall Street Journal. Each nominee receives two scores that range from 0 to 1 based on the average score of all articles from these sources:

  • Qualifications: 0 means unqualified and 1 means extremely qualified
    • Qualification scores are based on the characterization of each editorial as positive, neutral, or negative toward the nominee. Positive articles are coded as 1, neutral articles as 0.5, and negative articles as 0.[1]
  • Ideology: 0 means most conservative, and 1 means most liberal.
    • Ideology scores are based on each editorial's characterization of the nominee as liberal, moderate, conservative, or not applicable. Articles characterizing the nominee as liberal are coded as 1, moderate as .5, conservative as 0; articles deemed not applicable are omitted from the ideology score.[1]

The Segal–Cover scoring was introduced by Jeffrey Segal and Albert Cover (both of Stony Brook University) in their 1989 article "Ideological Values and the Votes of U.S. Supreme Court Justices".[2][3] The scores have since been updated as part of The Supreme Court Justices Database, a project led by USC Gould School of Law Professor Lee Epstein.[4] The updated scores cover all nominees from Hugo Black in 1937 to Amy Coney Barrett in 2022.[4] A score for Kentanji Brown Jackson has not yet been published.

Because the scores are based on perceptions before the nominee takes a seat on the Court, they provide a measure of the ideological values of Supreme Court justices that is independent of the votes they later cast.

Scores

The Segal–Cover perceived qualifications and ideology scores for all nominees to the Court between 1937 and 2022:

Nom.
Order
Nominee Chief
Justice
Senate
Vote
Ideology
Score
Qualifications
Score
Nominator (Party) Year
1 Script error: No such module "Sort". 67 – 18 0.875 0.160 Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) 1937
2 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 0.725 0.875 Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) 1938
3 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 0.665 0.965 Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) 1939
4 Script error: No such module "Sort". 62 – 4 0.730 0.820 Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) 1939
5 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 1.000 0.650 Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) 1940
6 Script error: No such module "Sort". CJ Voice Vote 0.300 1.000 Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) 1941
7 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 0.330 0.800 Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) 1941
8 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 1.000 0.915 Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) 1941
9 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 1.000 1.000 Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democrat) 1943
10 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 0.280 0.930 Harry S. Truman (Democrat) 1945
11 Script error: No such module "Sort". CJ Voice Vote 0.750 0.785 Harry S. Truman (Democrat) 1946
12 Script error: No such module "Sort". 73 – 8 0.500 0.125 Harry S. Truman (Democrat) 1949
13 Script error: No such module "Sort". 48 – 16 0.720 0.355 Harry S. Truman (Democrat) 1949
14 Script error: No such module "Sort". CJ Voice Vote 0.750 0.855 Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican) 1953
15 Script error: No such module "Sort". 71 – 11 0.875 0.750 Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican) 1955
16 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 1.000 1.000 Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican) 1956
17 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 0.500 1.000 Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican) 1957
18 Script error: No such module "Sort". 70 – 17 0.750 1.000 Dwight D. Eisenhower (Republican) 1958
19 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 0.500 0.500 John F. Kennedy (Democrat) 1962
20 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 0.750 0.915 Lyndon B. Johnson (Democrat) 1965
21 Script error: No such module "Sort". Voice Vote 1.000 1.000 Lyndon B. Johnson (Democrat) 1965
22 Script error: No such module "Sort". 69 – 11 1.000 0.835 Lyndon B. Johnson (Democrat) 1967
23 Script error: No such module "Sort". CJ 45 – 43 * 0.845 0.635 Lyndon B. Johnson (Democrat) 1968
24 Script error: No such module "Sort". CJ 74 – 3 0.115 0.960 Richard M. Nixon (Republican) 1969
25 Script error: No such module "Sort". 45 – 55 0.160 0.335 Richard M. Nixon (Republican) 1969
26 Script error: No such module "Sort". 45 – 51 0.040 0.111 Richard M. Nixon (Republican) 1969
27 Script error: No such module "Sort". 94 – 0 0.115 0.970 Richard M. Nixon (Republican) 1970
28 Script error: No such module "Sort". 89 – 1 0.165 1.000 Richard M. Nixon (Republican) 1972
29 Script error: No such module "Sort". 68 – 26 0.045 0.885 Richard M. Nixon (Republican) 1972
30 Script error: No such module "Sort". 98 – 0 0.250 0.960 Gerald Ford (Republican) 1975
31 Script error: No such module "Sort". 99 – 0 0.415 1.000 Ronald Reagan (Republican) 1981
32 Script error: No such module "Sort". CJ 65 – 33 0.045 0.400 Ronald Reagan (Republican) 1986
33 Script error: No such module "Sort". 98 – 0 0.000 1.000 Ronald Reagan (Republican) 1986
34 Script error: No such module "Sort". 42 – 58 0.095 0.790 Ronald Reagan (Republican) 1987
35 Script error: No such module "Sort". Withdrawn 0.000 0.320 Ronald Reagan (Republican) 1987
36 Script error: No such module "Sort". 97 – 0 0.365 0.890 Ronald Reagan (Republican) 1988
37 Script error: No such module "Sort". 90 – 9 0.325 0.765 George H. W. Bush (Republican) 1990
38 Script error: No such module "Sort". 52 – 48 0.160 0.415 George H. W. Bush (Republican) 1991
39 Script error: No such module "Sort". 96 – 3 0.680 1.000 Bill Clinton (Democrat) 1993
40 Script error: No such module "Sort". 87 – 9 0.475 0.545 Bill Clinton (Democrat) 1994
41 Script error: No such module "Sort". CJ 78 – 22 0.120 0.970 George W. Bush (Republican) 2005
42 Script error: No such module "Sort". Withdrawn 0.270 0.360 George W. Bush (Republican) 2005
43 Script error: No such module "Sort". 58 – 42 0.100 0.810 George W. Bush (Republican) 2006
44 Script error: No such module "Sort". 68 – 31 0.780 0.810 Barack Obama (Democrat) 2009
45 Script error: No such module "Sort". 63 – 37 0.730 0.730 Barack Obama (Democrat) 2010
46 Script error: No such module "Sort". Lapsed 0.730 1.000 Barack Obama (Democrat) 2016
47 Script error: No such module "Sort". 54 – 45 0.110 0.930 Donald Trump (Republican) 2017
48 Script error: No such module "Sort". 50 – 48 0.070 0.400 Donald Trump (Republican) 2018
49 Amy Coney Barrett 52 – 48 0.230 0.820 Donald Trump (Republican) 2020
50 Ketanji Brown Jackson 53– 47 ? ? Joe Biden (Democrat) 2022

* The vote on Fortas for the Chief Justice position was on cloture and failed to receive the necessary two-thirds majority.

  • A highlighted row indicates that the Justice is currently serving on the Court.
  • A Senate vote in red text indicates that the nomination was blocked.
  • A question mark indicates that no Segal-Cover score is available for this Justice.

Predictive power

Segal and Cover found that their ideology score is strongly correlated with the subsequent votes of the justices in civil liberties cases, with a correlation of 0.80 and an r² of 0.64.[2]

Segal-Cover scores require subjective assessment of subjective sources. They are not based on any observed voting behavior of judges.[5]

In a 1995 paper revisiting the Segal-Cover score, Segal and his coauthors concluded that the ideology score was significantly more accurate for justices who served during and after the Warren Court .[3] For earlier Court eras Segal et al. (1995) conclude that "scholars should be sensitive to changes in the legal, political, and social environments (which generate the newspaper reactions on which the scores are based) and use appropriate diagnostic tools to tease out their potential effects." They caution that researchers analyzing the ideology of earlier justices should supplement the ideology scores of earlier judges with "other potential determinants of the vote, or redefine their ideological variables to reflect as precisely as possible the issues that their Court addressed."[3]

See also

References

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