Senator says court packing is necessary to balance conservative justices
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.) is backing legislation to expand the Supreme Court, accusing Republicans of hijacking the tribunal to subvert democracy.
Warren announced Tuesday that she will add her name to a court-packing bill that Democrats introduced in April. That legislation would add four seats to the High Court, bringing the total number of justices from 9 to 13.
The endorsement makes Warren the new frontman for court-packing, which has attracted support in Congress from a handful of low-profile lawmakers. Her support is a needed jolt to the expansion campaign, which gives every sign of sputtering out for the time being. President Joe Biden's Supreme Court commission refused to endorse Supreme Court expansion, and top Democratic lawmakers in both chambers are refusing to entertain the court-expansion bill.
Democrats offer shifting rationales for the legislation. House Judiciary Committee chairman Jerry Nadler (D., N.Y.), who introduced the bill in July, described it as a benign management necessity. Each justice handles administrative matters for 1 or 2 of the 13 federal appeals courts. Nadler said four seats ought to be added to the Court so that there is one justice per appeals court, which would reduce the strain of those administrative responsibilities.
There is no evidence that the justices are struggling to keep pace with their work—the Court is hearing its lowest number of merits cases per term since the Civil War—and the various circuit courts do not produce Court-caliber cases at an equal rate.
Warren was more forthright about her motives in a short video released Tuesday morning. She connected the Supreme Court's conservative majority with a broader Republican scheme to cleave to power by using "broken rules" such as the filibuster and the Electoral College.
"Republicans steal power to ram through an extremist, unpopular agenda. Basic protections like Roe v. Wade, supported by 70 percent of Americans, are hanging by a thread," she said. "And that's just the tip of the iceberg."
Warren ticked off a litany of grievances with the Supreme Court, citing decisions that favor corporate political spending and a 2018 ruling that forbade public-sector unions from collecting mandatory dues.
Studies show that left-wing groups and Democratic campaigns significantly outpace Republicans on so-called dark-money spending. And in the aftermath of...
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3 comments:
Once again the democrats have lost the debate of good ideas for our constitutional republic so they rip out the goal posts in order to claim victory against their self avowed political enemies. Once we finally figure out that they are the uncivil and immoral Mr. Adams warned US about so long ago we will be closer to ending their death grasp of our experiment in self governance but not until.
Yes. And Liberty is maintained, not attained.
Of course she does
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