US supreme court justices not ‘political’, John Roberts says amid backlash
US Chief Justice John Roberts stated that Supreme Court justices are not "political actors" during a conference in Hershey, Pennsylvania. He believes the public misunderstands the Court's role, viewing it as making policy rather than interpreting law.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedUS Chief Justice John Roberts stated that Supreme Court justices are not "political actors" during a conference in Hershey, Pennsylvania. He believes the public misunderstands the Court's role, viewing it as making policy rather than interpreting law. Roberts acknowledged that some decisions are unpopular and reaffirmed condemnation of threats against judges. This comes amid backlash over recent Supreme Court rulings, including one undermining the Voting Rights Act and others that have benefited Donald Trump and his allies. The conservative-majority court has overturned precedent and allowed some Trump-era policies to take effect, while also issuing rulings like the overturning of abortion rights during Joe Biden's presidency.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe Roberts court overturned the constitutional right to abortion.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented in a decision allowing Louisiana to redraw congressional maps.
The court has a six-justice conservative majority since 2020.
The Supreme Court's recent decision undermining the Voting Rights Act has been criticized.
US chief justice John Roberts insists supreme court judges are not political actors.