"I think I present an overwhelming case that these five justices were up to no good, and they deliberately set out to hand the election to George Bush"
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Bugliosi doesn’t bother with the neutral language of “error” or “controversy.” “Up to no good” is schoolyard plainspoken, and that’s the point: he’s trying to strip a robed institution of its mystique and drag it into the moral register of a backroom deal. Pair that with “deliberately set out,” and he’s not alleging misjudgment; he’s alleging mens rea. The line reads like a prosecutor’s closing argument because Bugliosi, famous for building narratives of intent, is importing courtroom logic into civic outrage.
The context is Bush v. Gore, the decision that effectively ended Florida’s recount and put George W. Bush in the White House. By narrowing the charge to “these five justices,” Bugliosi aims at the 5-4 split that made the ruling feel less like constitutional destiny and more like partisan arithmetic. The subtext is corrosive: if the deciding votes were motivated, not reasoned, then the Court’s legitimacy is less a pillar than a performance.
His phrasing also anticipates the defense. “I think I present an overwhelming case” signals evidentiary confidence while admitting, technically, it’s an argument. That hedged bravado is strategic; it invites readers to treat the claim as prosecutable rather than merely rhetorical. The larger intent is cultural, not just legal: to normalize skepticism toward the Supreme Court as a political actor, and to recast 2000 not as a legal endpoint but as an institutional betrayal with consequences still rippling through every contested election since.
The context is Bush v. Gore, the decision that effectively ended Florida’s recount and put George W. Bush in the White House. By narrowing the charge to “these five justices,” Bugliosi aims at the 5-4 split that made the ruling feel less like constitutional destiny and more like partisan arithmetic. The subtext is corrosive: if the deciding votes were motivated, not reasoned, then the Court’s legitimacy is less a pillar than a performance.
His phrasing also anticipates the defense. “I think I present an overwhelming case” signals evidentiary confidence while admitting, technically, it’s an argument. That hedged bravado is strategic; it invites readers to treat the claim as prosecutable rather than merely rhetorical. The larger intent is cultural, not just legal: to normalize skepticism toward the Supreme Court as a political actor, and to recast 2000 not as a legal endpoint but as an institutional betrayal with consequences still rippling through every contested election since.
Quote Details
| Topic | Justice |
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