The term “swing vote” refers to a justice whose political views fall on the middle of the spectrum of the rest of the Supreme Court. Because such a justice could swing left or right, their vote is considered a critical tiebreaker.
It was no ordinary lawsuit. The case tested the very stability of the American electoral system, and its winner would go on to become president of the United States. Election night 2000 was chaotic and confusing. News channels swung between declaring Democrat Al Gore and Republican George W. Bush the winners of the election.
When Bush won Florida by just 1,784 votes, the razor-thin margin prompted an automatic recount per state law. That recount shrank the margin even more, reducing Bush’s lead to a mere 327 votes. After a flurry of lawsuits, the Florida Supreme Court weighed in, ruling for manual recounts throughout the state. Bush’s legal team appealed to the Supreme Court, asking for the recounts to stop and arguing that Florida was reaching beyond its election authority.
The stakes were high—nothing less than the legitimacy of the electoral system hung in the balance. And for O’Connor, the personal stakes were high, too. A Republican, she had repeatedly said that she’d only retire if a Republican came into office during the 2000 election so that her replacement would also be a Republican. When O’Connor heard a proclamation that Gore had won the election during an election-night party, she turned away from the television in distress.
“She’s very disappointed because she was hoping to retire,” her husband reportedly told other partygoers. However, notes legal scholar Richard K. Neumann, Jr., this version of the party story is contested, with others suggesting that O’Connor was upset because the election was already being called while polls in other time zones were still open.
Regardless of this potential bias, O’Connor still had to weigh in on Florida’s decision to order manual recounts throughout the state. She took a strong anti-recount stance and joined the majority for a 7-2 ruling that the recounts violated the 14th Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause. She wrote a brief along with Justice Anthony Kennedy, objecting to what both saw as the state’s unequal treatment of the recount in different counties. O’Connor also voted with the 5-4 majority to stop the recounts, breaking a tie in an apparently contentious court. The decision effectively declared Bush president and ended a nearly two-month-long standoff over the election results.