By Nick Catoggio
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Of all the “big if true” garbage that floats around
online on a given day, the hot rumor in legal circles that Supreme
Court Justice Samuel Alito is about to call it a career is among the
biggest. Yuge, as the president might say.
It’s the “if true” part that’s a little sticky. Isn’t it
always?
The logic behind the rumor is compelling and clear,
enough so that even casual political observers will intuit it without needing
further explanation. But the evidence that supports it is a slender reed even
by the typical dismal standards of “big if true.”
The case that Alito is about to pull the ripcord rests
almost entirely on the fact that his new book is set to be published on October
6. That happens to be one day after the court begins its fall term, which will
greatly complicate any promotional tour that the justice might be planning.
Unless, of course, he intends to no longer be on the
bench in October. Aha.
Before we pronounce this case cracked, though, consider a
few things. One: Justices often release their books at moments
that are less than optimal for publicity. Amy Coney Barrett’s book was
published last September, just a few weeks before her day job would draw her
away from promoting it. Ketanji Brown Jackson’s memoir was published in
September a year earlier. Sonia Sotomayor’s 2014 memoir was released in early
January, the middle of the term. All are still on the court, of course.
Two: For reasons of temperament and circumstance, Alito
might not want an extensive book tour. The justice is “famously introverted,” David
Lat writes at Bloomberg Law, and won’t relish having to gladhand
hundreds of attendees at promotional events. Nor would he relish the security
that a tour would require, I’d guess. Having authored the decision that
overruled Roe v. Wade and stoked left-wing suspicions of political bias
with his
choice of, er, flags, his appearances are destined to attract protests—and
threats.
Three: Nothing sells books like relevance. A sitting
justice who doesn’t do PR might very well outperform an ex-justice who’s
willing to barnstorm, as Lat notes that Barrett’s and Jackson’s works were both
bestsellers while former Justice Anthony Kennedy’s was not. If Alito wants to
move merchandise, clinging to the gavel is probably the canniest thing he can
do.
Four: Per our own Sarah Isgur,
he’s already hired clerks for several terms to come.
All told, the timing of his book release is thin gruel
for retirement rumors. But combined with the fact that we’re eight months out
from a midterm election in which Democrats’ chances of winning a Senate
majority seem to grow by the day?
That makes things a little more interesting.
The case for retirement.
If not for Alito’s book, Clarence Thomas would be the
more obvious target for retirement rumors. He’s a few years older than his
colleague, has served on the court for much longer (14 years longer!), and has
faced occasional
health hiccups from which Alito has been spared. As the two most reliably
right-wing votes on the court, it’s unthinkable that either man would want
Democrats to be in a position to exert some power over their replacement.
But Thomas is less
than three months away from becoming the second-longest serving justice in
U.S. history and slightly more than two years away from becoming the
longest-serving. It’s assumed that he’ll stick it out and go for the record,
which makes Alito the only game in town for scenarios involving a pre-midterm
court vacancy.
So let’s play along. The case for Alito retiring now is
straightforward: If he waits, he risks making it difficult-to-impossible for
Republicans to fill his seat with a conservative for the near- and possibly
medium-term future.
It’s likely that Democrats will gain seats in the Senate
this fall, and conceivable that they’ll gain control of the chamber. If Chuck
Schumer ends up with a veto over Trump’s Supreme Court appointees, he and his
caucus will likely refuse to fill any vacancy on the court before 2029.
“Revenge for Gorsuch!” liberals will cry, remembering how Republicans held open
Antonin Scalia’s seat in 2016 after Barack Obama nominated Merrick Garland to
fill it.
Even if the Senate doesn’t flip in November, Republicans
losing two seats and ending up with a 51-49 advantage next year will make
confirming judicial nominees risky business for the GOP with Lisa Murkowski and
(maybe) Susan Collins as the deciding votes. If Alito doesn’t retire now, in
other words, he’s potentially stuck on the court until 2029.
But that seems optimistic, as no one would bet heavily at
this moment on Republicans controlling the White House and the Senate
after the 2028 election. Should Democrats retake the presidency, Alito would
need to slog it out for four more years—and then potentially four more on top
of that, as incumbent presidents usually win reelection.
Bottom line: If he’s determined to keep his seat in
conservative hands, he can either quit in 2026 or he might need to serve until
… 2037, when he’ll be 86 years old. (And there are no guarantees of Republican
control in Washington then either!) Democrats learned a hard lesson a few years
ago about elderly justices hanging on too long instead of stepping down when a
like-minded president could successfully appoint their successor. Alito surely
doesn’t want to replicate the Ruth Bader Ginsburg disaster.
“But what about election turnout?” you might say. “If he
retires this summer and Republicans ram through a successor before the
election, as they did in replacing Ginsburg with Barrett in 2020, Democratic
voters will go ballistic. The expected blue wave might become a blue tsunami.”
In theory, sure, but I’m not sold. For one thing,
Republicans did quite
well in congressional races in 2020 after rubber-stamping Barrett and very
nearly held onto the presidency. For another, Democrats’ enthusiasm to vote in
November is already
sky high such that there probably isn’t much room realistically for it to
climb further. What sort of liberal has spent the past 13 months on the fence
about Trumpist fascism but will tip over into apoplexy if the president gets to
fill Sam Alito’s seat with another Alito-esque figure?
If anything, Alito not retiring after months of
rumors to the contrary might be better turnout fuel for the left than a
retirement would. It would remind Democratic voters that control of the Senate
over the next two years isn’t just a matter of getting to investigate Trump, it’s
a matter of getting to tie his hands when a court vacancy eventually opens.
There’s even a scenario in which Alito retiring this
summer could boost Republicans’ enthusiasm to vote in November more so than
Democrats’. Ed
Kilgore recently recalled the so-called “Kavanaugh effect” that may or may
not have helped the GOP to overperform in Senate races in the 2018: Democrats
were so vicious in impugning Brett Kavanaugh during his own hearings, the
argument goes, that outraged Republican voters showed up to the polls en masse
to take revenge.
That theory is somewhat complicated, shall we say, by the
fact that Democrats spanked Republicans in House races that year. But if you’re
looking for reasons why Alito should exit stage right immediately, there you
go.
The case against retirement.
Why might he want to stay on the court? Let us count the
ways.
He’s not very old by SCOTUS standards, for starters. He’s
also part of a right-wing majority that will likely persist until he does
eventually retire, ensuring that he’ll continue to wield real influence over
American jurisprudence for the rest of his career. It might frustrate him that
he doesn’t exert the same leverage over outcomes that the court’s “swing
voters,” Barrett and Chief Justice John Roberts, do. But Alito retains enough
sway to have written the majority opinion in the most momentous culture-war
decision of the past 50 years.
That’s a pretty good reason to hang on, no?
There’s also a ruthless political case for him to stick
around related to the turnout discussion above. If the GOP wants to use a court
vacancy to goose voter turnout, an Alito retirement in 2028 makes more sense
than an Alito retirement in 2026.
Sure, turning the next presidential election into a
referendum on who should get to fill an empty conservative seat would be the
highest of high-stakes wagers for Republicans. But it worked out well for them
the last time it happened, in 2016. And the trajectory of Trump’s presidency
and likelihood of an underwhelming J.D. Vance candidacy two years from now
could leave the right desperate for ways to get the base excited to vote in the
next cycle. “A red seat on the court will turn blue if you don’t” is a good
one.
Although I suppose Alito retiring this year and Thomas
retiring in 2028 would cover all bases.
The argument against Alito retiring now that interests me
most is this, though: As an ideological matter, he might not want Trump
to have a completely free hand in appointing his replacement. He’s a
conservative, last time I checked, and his successor is unlikely to share his
philosophy.
Recently when the prospect of a court vacancy was raised,
a lawyer I know floated appellate judge Andrew Oldham as a potential nominee.
Oldham is whip-smart, under 50, and earned a valentine last year from
George Will for an opinion that refused to let the FCC, an executive
agency, impose a fee on phone users on grounds that the power to tax rightly
belongs to the legislature.
A stickler on separation of powers: Sounds good to me.
But is that what the president wants, or expects, from a “Trump judge”?
Ditto for Oldham’s professional affiliations. Not only is
he a member of the
Federalist Society, he delivered the keynote address
at the group’s 2025 National Lawyers Convention. For most of the last 45 years,
that would have been a top-flight credential for a Republican SCOTUS nominee.
Not anymore. “I am so disappointed in The Federalist
Society because of the bad advice they gave me on numerous Judicial
Nominations,” Trump whined
last year after a lower federal court blocked his tariff authority. He went on
to describe Leonard Leo, the organization’s longtime adviser to the White House
on judicial nominees, as a “sleazebag.” If the president felt that way then,
imagine how he feels now that FedSoc luminaries Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney
Barrett have helped blow up his tariffs once and for all. Or how he’ll feel if
and when they nuke his executive order purporting to deny birthright
citizenship to the children of illegal immigrants, which is more likely than
not.
It’s true that Trump has continued to nominate Federalist
Society members for lower-court vacancies but I suspect that has to do with his
comparative disinterest in those positions and the fact that there simply
aren’t enough MAGA zombies in right-wing legal circles to fill every opening on
the bench. He’ll react differently to a seat on the Supreme Court. The
president doesn’t care a whit about originalism or credentials or, lord knows,
impartiality. He cares about outcomes, and will undertake to find a nominee in
his second term whom he believes will deliver the outcomes he desires.
He won’t want Oldham. He’ll want Aileen
Cannon or Emil
Bove.
Is that whom Justice Alito wants to be replaced by?
Maybe he does! He voted with the minority last week to
uphold the president’s egregiously lawless tariff regime, after all. “Does
anyone believe Thomas, Alito, or Kavanaugh would have voted to uphold
unilateral Clinton, Obama, or Biden tariffs—of this magnitude?” pundit Matt Lewis asked
afterward. The question answers itself.
If Alito wants a reliable Republican vote to
succeed him on the court, the time to quit is now. It’s hard to imagine the GOP
majority in the Senate saying no to the president, even if his nominee is
unfit, with a national election mere months away. Trump momentarily has carte
blanche to appoint the most reliable Republican vote he can find, which means
the odds for a Justice Cannon or Justice Bove will never be higher than they
are right now.
But if Alito wants to boost his chances of having a
reliable conservative vote succeed him on the court, the time to quit is
… later.
The gang of four. Or two. Or one.
The only way Trump will choose a conservative over a
crony for a SCOTUS vacancy is if a majority in the Senate forces him to.
It could, in theory, happen even if Alito retires this
summer. A “gang of four” composed of Lisa Murkowski, Thom Tillis, Mitch
McConnell, and Susan Collins could hand the president a menu of potential court
nominees whom they find acceptable and demand that he order from it if he wants
their support. Oldham and other originalists would be on the menu, Cannon and
Bove wouldn’t.
But, as I’ve said, I doubt that that’s realistic months
out from a midterm. Murkowski and Tillis might be willing, as the latter is
retiring and the former has gone full “maverick,” but it’s hard to imagine
McConnell risking his legacy of painting the federal bench red by roadblocking
a Republican Supreme Court nominee. And Collins, who’s on the ballot in
November, would face a revolt at home in Maine among her right-wing base if she
dared thwart god-emperor Trump on a matter as consequential as a SCOTUS seat.
If Alito wants a conservative to replace him, he might
actually be better off waiting until the Senate is slightly less red. Next
year, if the chamber is 51-49 in favor of Republicans, Murkowski and a partner
to be named later—if one can be found—would be in the same position as the gang
of four I described. (Collins is an obvious candidate if she’s still in
office.) The “gang of two” could dictate terms to the White House on replacing
Alito.
But what if Democrats reclaim control of the Senate this
fall? Wouldn’t that kill any attempt to replace Alito over the last two years
of Trump’s term?
Maybe. Probably. But not definitely.
If it’s 51-49 in favor of Chuck Schumer’s caucus, John
Fetterman would have veto power over any Trump nominee. By voting with his
party, he could keep Alito’s seat open for two years; by voting with the GOP,
he could create a 50-50 tie for J.D. Vance to break. In that scenario Fetterman
would be a “gang of one” with leverage to demand an ideological compromise on
Alito’s replacement. No Cannons, no Boves, maybe no strict conservatives like
Oldham either—but he might be open to supporting someone who resembles a
traditional Republican nominee more so than the type of henchmen who tickle the
president’s fancy.
That’s a good outcome for Justice Alito if he’d
prefer to have his seat filled by someone like Brett Kavanaugh rather than
Aileen Cannon, no?
And yes, I realize that Democratic voters would want to
tar and feather Fetterman if he spoiled the party’s bid to keep Alito’s seat
open by agreeing to a SCOTUS compromise with Trump. Guess what, though:
Democratic voters already want to
tar and feather him. The odds of him winning his party’s Senate primary in
2028 are about the same now, I’d guess, as Liz Cheney’s odds were of winning
her House primary in Wyoming after January 6. Fetterman is either going to
retire after this term or he’s going to switch parties and run as a Republican.
Either way, he’ll have the opportunity in a 51-49 Senate
to become a “gang of one” next year if he wants to be.
The fascinating and potentially ominous thing about an
Alito retirement is that it will reveal to what extent there remains any
meaningful constituency for conservative jurisprudence among the president
(giggle), Republican (and would-be Republican) members of Congress, and Alito
himself. Each of the three has influence they can use to improve the odds that
whoever lands in the justice’s seat is someone in the Scalia mold. Given how far
the right has fallen civically, I’ll be surprised if any of them ends up using
it.