A solid majority of Americans say Supreme Court justices are more likely to be guided by their own ideology rather than serving as neutral arbiters of government authority, a new poll finds, as the high court is poised to rule on major cases involving former President Donald Trump and other divisive issues.

The survey from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that 7 in 10 Americans think the high court’s justices are more influenced by ideology, while only about 3 in 10 U.S. adults think the justices are more likely to provide an independent check on other branches of government by being fair and impartial.

The poll reflects the continued erosion of confidence in the Supreme Court, which enjoyed broader trust as recently as a decade ago. It underscores the challenge faced by the nine justices — six appointed by Republican presidents and three by Democrats — of being seen as something other than just another element of Washington’s hyper-partisanship.

  • stembolts
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    7/10 Americans are aware / woke.

    The owners, “Stop being aware, go back to being a cog in the machine. Stop reading the founders intent that we can overthrow them. That’s against the law and the law is what we will use to enforce our ideologies upon you.

    The “war against woke” is a war against awareness.

    • clearedtolandEnglish
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      I would say it’s a war against knowledge and critical thinking. Those two things threaten their control and reasoning. Why else fear books or competing ideologies?

      It’s one thing for the deer to see headlights coming at it. It’s another for it to know what it means and what it should do.

      • KnightontheSun
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        I think that is what stembolts is saying. Awareness is borne from knowledge and critical thinking.

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        It’s deeper than that for some. You could allegorically describe that awareness as the fruit of the tree of goodness and evil. Temptation from Satan and they will burn in hell if they accept it.

    • bamficEnglish
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      Too bad the system is designed by the founders so that 70% of the people are guaranteed in perpetuity to always have less than 50% of the power, and thus never get what they want.

      This was done to keep slavery in place.

    • SeaJ
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      There needs to be some sort of great awakening or something

      /s

    • RememberTheApollo_
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      I don’t know that this is the case. It’s roughly like 33% of the people say the judges are too liberal because they’re liberal, another 33% say the judges are to conservatives because they’re conservatives, and another 33% don’t have a clue. That ~66% of conservative + liberal aggregated are the 7/10. I wouldn’t call it woke, I would call it opposing opinions on what side the judges are one and the perspective of the respondent.

  • Ranvier
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    Is bribery and corruption an ideology?

      • Ranvier
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        Then put me in with the 7 out of 10 Americans.

      • dactylothecaEnglish
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        It’s called Cronyism.

        Funny way to spell “conservatism”

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      Have you seen the interest rates on motorhomes nowadays?

  • hperrin
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    Alternate headline: 3/10 Americans are living in fantasy land.

    • FuglyDuckEnglish
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      I would suggest 3/10 share their extremists ideology. (Well, the ideology of the majority,)

      “Warriors are fine. Nerf warlocks. -Me, a mage in Vanilla WoW.

  • OldWoodFrame
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    Non-politicized decisions are wacky, the Sackler decision had Gorsuch and Jackson in the majority and Kavanaugh and Sotomayor in the minority.

    “Coincidentally, the abortion and gun rulings are all exactly the same 6-3 teams based on who appointed them.

    It’s pretty much settled fact that this Supreme Court puts ideology over impartiality.

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      They definitely do on the most important issues, however they continue to be impartial on the issues that don’t hit mainstream media (Fox Business Network)

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      The Sackler decision makes a lot more sense when you see it as the court disagreeing with how to protect the wealthy elite from future cases. Either the novel method here, being allowed to make an agreement that forecloses any future problems; or the traditional method of burying the other side in lawyers until you die.

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    3 out of 9 Supreme Court Justices agree!

  • Facebones
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    3 out of 10 Americans are lying 🤣

    • CileTheSane
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      3 out of 10 believe impartiality means agreeing with their ideology.

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      Or 3 out of 10 Americans are either to dumb or don’t care as long as they have “Freedumb! and “Gunnses!

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    Ideology of “I get mine, you get shit”. Ideology of “I get what I want because I’m on this bench”. Ideology of “what can you do for me?.

    Illegitimate court. Every single ruling by them should be overturned and every citizen should ignore them.

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      Maybe they believe that the supreme court is more influenced by money than ideology?

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        I bet a chunk of those republicans are mad that the court is “too liberal”

        Republicans are the worst

    • muse
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      The other 3 agree, but silently are agreeing with it

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        I don’t know. This is America. I’d say at least 1 out of 10 says, “the supreme what now?

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            Using her real name and then reporting the results as “they thought Judge Judy was a SCOTUS justice” seems disingenuous. It’s not like the option that they chose said “Judge Judy”. I wouldn’t even have known that Judith Sheindlin is her real name and not just a generic old lady name.

            I would wager the majority of American college grads can’t name all 9 SCOTUS justices (or even all 4 women), and if you’re just guessing then any choice that isn’t obviously wrong (like “Judge Judy”) has around the same chance of being chosen as any other not obviously wrong option.

        • Billiam
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          4 in 10 Americans say SCOTUS makes decisions based on ideology instead of the law, but they’re cool with that because it’s their ideology too.

  • crystalmerchant
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    Go read the Heritage Foundation’s founding documents. Literally says in black and white that the way to shift the landscape in your favor is by getting your people on the SC.

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    The other three aren’t paying attention.

  • WanakaTree
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    I’m curious how many of those 7/10 think it’s a good thing

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    I don’t think it. I KNOW it.

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    But how many of them think that’s a bad thing?