6 Democrats introduce longshot bill to put term limits on Supreme Court, citing a post-Roe ‘legitimacy crisis’

Mia Jankowicz, Business Insider, 7/28/22

SOURCE: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/6-democrats-introduce-longshot-bill-to-put-term-limits-on-supreme-court-citing-a-post-roe-legitimacy-crisis/ar-AA103Ozf?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=e0f87178c4f2499da9e0fafd6b3eaacc

EDITORIAL: This is NOT a proposal to restore the “independence” of the Judiciary. It is a bill to DESTROY the independence and make the current sitting judges COMPLETELY dependent on the whims of the sitting president. The Declaration Of Independence cited the SAME tactics as a reason for the revolution:

“He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.”

[Declaration of Independence, 1776; https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/declaration-transcript]

Whatever the Democrats claim their motives are, the reality is usually the OPPOSITE of what they say.

The Constitution , Article III, Section 2, says judges shall serve upon good behavior. They aren’t judges unless they are literally serving AS judges, not “backup judges” waiting in the wings as they propose. This is a directly willful insurrection to undermine the constitution much worse than than Jan 6 alleged insurrection.

If this bill passed, it would create AN EVEN WORSE “legitimacy crisis”, because the majority in the court would be directly controlled by the sitting U.S. president.

This is also a direct interference with the separation of powers, because Congress CANNOT exercise direct legislative control over members of an independent branch of government not their own as they are attempting to do here.

A group of six House Democrats introduced a bill Tuesday that seeks to end lifetime service on the Supreme Court.

The proposal is “an effort to restore legitimacy and independence” to the court, according to its lead sponsor, Rep. Hank Johnson of Georgia.

The proposal would create a much faster rotation of justices in two ways: by guaranteeing two new appointments in each presidency and creating absolute term limits of 18 years.

The idea faces very long odds: neither Congress nor the White House has demonstrated an appetite for even mild reform of the court.

But it shows the desire among some Democrats to push back after the court reversed decades of universal access to abortions in the US by overturning Roe v. Wade.

Under the Democratic proposal, new appointments to the court no longer come only when a justice dies. Instead, each president could appoint two justices per term, in their first and third years of office.

Related video: House passes bill protecting contraception access, but Democrats still have uphill battle

Existing justices would leave the court in the order they joined. Per the bill, they would keep their pay and status but no longer actively serve unless another justice was incapacitated.

The bill comes in the wake of what Rep. Jerry Nadler called “harmful and out-of-touch rulings.”

Abortion rights supporters hold signs of U.S. Supreme Court Justices as they participate in a rally and march on May 14, 2022 in New York City. Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images

Since news of the Roe v.Wade ruling was leaked, there has been widespread discussion in the Democratic Party about how to deal with the reality of a Supreme Court with a 6-3 majority of conservative justices, three of which were appointed by President Donald Trump and likely have decades still to serve.

Johnson, the bill’s proposer, said: “America is alone among modern constitutional democracies in allowing its high-court justices to serve for decades without term or age limits, resulting in some Presidents appointing no justices and others appointing as much as a third of the Court.”

The idea of term limits has some popular support. A May YouGov poll of 6,868 US adults found that 72% of Democratic voters and 54% of Republican support the idea. The length of the term itself was not specified.

A bipartisan group commissioned by President Joe Biden also concluded in December that term limits would be a viable method of reform.

Democrats like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have called for less far-reaching methods of reform such as expanding the court — a move that Biden opposed in June

The bill is co-sponsored by Reps. Jerry Nadler (NY), David Cicilline (RI), Shelia Jackson Lee (TX), Steve Cohen (TN) Karen Bass (CA) and Ro Khanna (CA). 

Cicilline said in a statement: “We must address the crisis currently facing the Court in terms of its legitimacy and the public’s confidence in it. This legislation is an important step to restoring the Court’s important role in our constitutional system.”

A June poll — conducted by Gallup before the court overturned Roe v. Wade, but after the draft opinion was leaked – found that a record low of 25% of Americans trust the Supreme Court. The reasons for that lack of confidence were not specified.

Related Articles

Rethinking the Liberal Giant Who Doomed Roe

Opinion by Caitlin B. Tully, Slate, 6/25/23 SOURCE: https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/rethinking-the-liberal-giant-who-doomed-roe/ar-AA1d1sds?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=b6f062c06f2542b3916ac10d359b5185&ei=10 A year after Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, the Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, most…

Property, Race, Colonialism, and Capitalism

Story by Brenna Bhandar, Jacobin, 7/2/23 SOURCE: https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/realestate/property-race-colonialism-and-capitalism/ar-AA1dkuIh?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=c0f47e1b51814c8cabb6ae5f42f5bb75&ei=14 In colonial regimes, dominant conceptions of private property developed alongside racial hierarchies. Who can claim ownership of…