After a decade of silence, did Justice Clarence Thomas find his voice?

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas broke a decade of silence this week. With the death of his more vocal ideological twin, Antonin Scalia, could this mark the emergence of a new court voice?

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Michael Dwyer/AP/File
Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas speaks at College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., Jan. 26, 2012. Justice Thomas has asked questions during Supreme Court arguments for the first time in 10 years. Thomas' question came Monday, in a case in which the court is considering placing new limits on the reach of a federal law that bans people convicted of domestic violence from owning guns.

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas broke a decade-long silence from the bench on Monday, provoking audible gasps in the chamber and, perhaps, indicating that he may be more willing to speak up in the future following the death of Justice Antonin Scalia earlier this month.

Justice Thomas's remarks came near the end of oral arguments in a case regarding a federal law that bans people convicted of domestic violence from owning guns.

Ten minutes from the end of the hourlong session, Thomas asked Justice Department lawyer Ilana Eisenstein whether a misdemeanor conviction of any other law "suspends a constitutional right," prompting gasps from lawyers and journalists in the chamber. Thomas and Ms. Eisenstein then engaged in a back-and-forth for a few minutes.

Thomas hadn’t asked a question in the Court since Feb. 22, 2006 – an unparalleled achievement in modern times ("it has been at least 45 years since any other member of the court went even a single term without asking a question," the New York Times reported this month). 

For his part, Thomas has argued in that time that he doesn’t need to ask questions of lawyers in court, relying on written briefs to form his opinions. 

"I don't think it’s helpful" to ask questions before deciding cases, he said during a talk at Harvard Law School in 2013. "I think we should listen to lawyers who are arguing the cases."

At best, Thomas's monkish silence has been viewed as a curious eccentricity. At worst, it has been viewed as a serious abdication of responsibility that disrespects the Court and his fellow justices.

On the eight-year anniversary of Thomas’s last question, the New Yorker's Jeffrey Toobin wrote that the silence had "gone from curious to bizarre to downright embarrassing, for himself and for the institution he represents."

"His leather chair is pitched so that he can stare at the ceiling, which he does at length," Mr. Toobin continued. "He strokes his chin. His eyelids look heavy. Every schoolteacher knows this look. It's called 'not paying attention.'"

Other court observers disagree, noting that Thomas can often be seen conferring with Justice Stephen Breyer, his neighbor on the bench, during arguments.

"It's pretty obvious he is engaged," said Ilya Somin, a law professor at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va., in an interview with the American Bar Association Journal. "It's also obvious he's engaged from the opinions he writes."

Monday marked only the second week the nation's highest court has heard arguments since Justice Scalia's death. Scalia, who sat next to Thomas for seven years, was renowned for frequently questioning lawyers with energy and aggression.

The two were friends – Thomas was one of only two people invited by Scalia’s family to read from Scripture at his Feb. 20 funeral – and, ideologically, almost twins. With Scalia’s chair now empty – potentially for a historic period of time – Thomas may decide to speak more and fill the void left by his friend and fellow conservative.

Scalia was famous for his "originalist" principles as a justice, a method of constitutional interpretation that seeks to interpret the Constitution as it was understood by the Founding Fathers. Yet Mr. Toobin wrote that, on paper, Thomas is "the most extreme originalist on the Court," adding that Thomas’s influence is palpable in some of the Court’s more conservative rulings.

Scalia wrote the majority opinion for District of Columbia v. Heller, a 2008 ruling that restricted gun control, while Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the majority opinion for the Citizens United ruling in 2010, which loosened restrictions on campaign financing.

However, "Thomas was an intellectual godfather of both decisions," Toobin wrote.

Ralph Rossum, a professor at Claremont McKenna College in California who has written books on Justices Scalia and Thomas, told the ABA Journal in an interview that "at the end of the day I am convinced that Thomas is much deeper and much more serious than Scalia."

Whether he speaks or not, Prof. Rossum added, Thomas "is moving the court in his direction." Whether he will speak more in Scalia’s absence remains to be seen.

Material from the Associated Press was used in this report.

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