Hawktawk wrote:After the Merrick Garland injustice and now jamming through a Justice with an election underway to create the most conservative court in 70 years its just time to change it up. Its been proven one not even need the WH, just the Senate to block a qualified nominee and it's the luck of the draw who keels over when and provides an opening. Frankly I think the voters should decide in any election year but its time to change the model to have a court that reflects the American mainstream, not a time when blacks sat in the back of the bus.
Hawktawk wrote:After the Merrick Garland injustice and now jamming through a Justice with an election underway to create the most conservative court in 70 years its just time to change it up. Its been proven one not even need the WH, just the Senate to block a qualified nominee and it's the luck of the draw who keels over when and provides an opening. Frankly I think the voters should decide in any election year but its time to change the model to have a court that reflects the American mainstream, not a time when blacks sat in the back of the bus.
RiverDog wrote:Just a few statistics: Out of the 63 cases decided by SCOTUS in the 2019 term (the 2020 term is just beginning), Chief Justice Roberts was in agreement with the judgement 96.8% of the time. The two Trump appointees, Kavanaugh and Gorsuch, were in agreement 93.5% and 85.5% respectively. In contrast, the two other conservative justices, Thomas and Alito, agreed just 68.3% and 71.4% respectively. That's lower than the 75.6% average of the 4 liberal judges (Ginsberg, Breyer, Sotomayer, and Kagan).
Obviously that's not a completely accurate graphic and is open to various interpretations, but it does show that Roberts and the Trump appointees aren't lining up in lock step with the the conservative wing of the court and were more likely to side with the 4 liberals. The country isn't in danger of making this huge shift to the right due to the make-up of SCOTUS.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_term ... ted_States
It's also interesting to note that both Kavanaugh and Gorsuch voted AGAINST Trump in his attempt to keep his tax records from the Manhattan District Attorney in an ongoing criminal investigation against him.
c_hawkbob wrote:In 16 the Republicans floated the idea of reducing the size of the court if Hillary won. Were youas vocally against that plan?
c_hawkbob wrote:https://www.nationalreview.com/2016/10/supreme-court-2016-election-fewer-justices-would-curb-power/
https://www.npr.org/2016/11/03/50056012 ... t-nominees
https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2016/11 ... ion-battle
c_hawkbob wrote:No, my point is you didn't hear about it then because it was a non issue but you're hearing about it now because the R's want it to suddenly be an issue. Obfuscation.
Dems are the ones that brought up the topic
Dems are the ones that brought up the topic
c_hawkbob wrote:Not sure that's accurate. I believe Chris Wallace is the first one to bring it up this election cycle.
c_hawkbob wrote:Why would I get bent about your source, it reinforces my position: "The first round of that debate was kicked off by prominent conservative law professor Stephen Calabresi".
c_hawkbob wrote:No, my point is you didn't hear about it then because it was a non issue but you're hearing about it now because the R's want it to suddenly be an issue. Obfuscation.
Aseahawkfan wrote:
Hi, I'm hawktawk. I read the papers and decided to take the line against Trump. It doesn't matter that Coney Barrett is highly qualified and that the court hasn't actually made many right wing decisions. Evidence is irrelevant in the Trump Era. All that matters is what I think absent any relevance to the way the court has actually voted or what laws are really in effect in the land. So I'm going to make some really dumb extreme statements that have no relevance as to what Amy Coney Barrett would vote like.
Hawktawk wrote:Id like to see a court of 21.
9 people , many aged and capable of dropping dead in the dying throes of an utterly failed administration shouldn't carry nearly the weight it does right now. The fight wouldnt even be happening. More minds than 9 should be involved in deciding our fates for the rest of my life.More diversity of opinion, more "stealth" potential to prevent their ideologically rigid president from packing the court. The dumbest reason to do anything is cause that's how it was always done.
RiverDog wrote:This isn't just Republicans pushing the issue to scare voters. George Stephanopoulos, a Democratic advisor to Bill Clinton, was very insistent that Biden respond to the question rather than ducking it like he has. Biden could put this issue to rest tomorrow if he would just come out and say that he's opposed to it, but he won't do it. His refusal to do so keeps the issue alive. It's giving credence to Trump's claim that Biden is a wolf in sheep's clothing and will cave into the liberal wing of his party.
RiverDog wrote:
IMO the biggest problem with the Supreme Court is the nomination/confirmation process, not the number of justices or the fact that they're appointed for life. In my former line of work, the way the union and company decided on an arbitrator to hear a case that had reached binding arbitration was that they petitioned the FMCS for the names of 5 arbitrators. Each side would then alternately cross off one arbitrator they didn't want to hear the case until one was left.
I'm not sure how that would work with a SCOTUS nomination as I do think that the party in power should have an advantage in naming SCOTUS justices, but some sort of method should be developed to keep the court from lurching to one side or the other of the political spectrum.
Hawktawk wrote:And my 3rd is SCOTUS. A president who lost the popular vote by 3 million and governs to his 43% base is not the man who should put 3 people on the court. I despise Hillary, she's as responsible as Vlad Putin, Fox News and a bunch of racist idiots in early primary states for this 4 year apostasy weve gone through. But I agree with her on one thing. The judiciary process for the supreme court is irrevocably broken.
Right now we are ruled by an emperor for whatever their term is.
Like it or not the reason that the SCOTUS nominations by Trump have gone through is because the Senate was/is Republican. It's Republican because that's who the people voted in
RiverDog wrote:IMO the biggest problem with the Supreme Court is the nomination/confirmation process, not the number of justices or the fact that they're appointed for life. In my former line of work, the way the union and company decided on an arbitrator to hear a case that had reached binding arbitration was that they petitioned the FMCS for the names of 5 arbitrators. Each side would then alternately cross off one arbitrator they didn't want to hear the case until one was left.
I'm not sure how that would work with a SCOTUS nomination as I do think that the party in power should have an advantage in naming SCOTUS justices, but some sort of method should be developed to keep the court from lurching to one side or the other of the political spectrum.
mykc14 wrote:I think the current system works. Obviously there are issues and it's not perfect, but it does what it is supposed to do. It separates power, gives the people a voice through their representatives, and typically has led to a pretty good ideological split amongst judges in our country. Here is a pretty cool graph that shows ideological leanings in judges over time. It does seem to show a that the average judge votes slightly more liberal over time, although that is not the case with all judges obviously. I know it's Wikipedia- take it for what it's worth, but it is interesting.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ideologic ... t_justices
c_hawkbob wrote:
And the same will be true if and when the Senate is under Dem control, I don't wanna hear complaints about what they do with that control that seems to be OK with conservatives while it's under their control. Packing the court to re-balance it is no different from forcing through a candidate after an election has already started to insure that it is a conservative court after those same Senators guaranteed they wouldn't do exactly that 4 years ago.
c_hawkbob wrote:Packing the court to re-balance it is no different from forcing through a candidate after an election has already started to insure that it is a conservative court after those same Senators guaranteed they wouldn't do exactly that 4 years ago.
RiverDog wrote:
I agree, the system works as well as any and better than most in our government. I was just musing about what it might look like in a perfect world, similar to the changes I'd make in the electoral college if I had my druthers. There are a lot more things right with SCOTUS than there is wrong, such as lifetime appointments and a very high removal standard. It has the effect of insulating justices from political pressures.
mykc14 wrote:I think that our founding fathers do a pretty good job constructing our government but the Balance of Powers is exceptional. It really is difficult for any one person or party to gain complete control over our government unless they change the constitution go do so. I believe that the current set up of the SCOTUS is a big reason why we have been so successful as a country which is why I am so against messing with it in anyway.
RiverDog wrote:I do think that they left some holes in the Constitution regarding SCOTUS and would be for addressing them through the amendment process. This caustic, divisive political culture that we're currently in could literally rip it to shreds. The number of justices needs to be limited to a specific number and a nomination/confirmation process needs to be more clearly spelled out.
But given the current divide that exists in the country, we wouldn't be able to get 2/3 of Congress and the states to agree on the time of day.
Aseahawkfan wrote:If Amy Coney-Barrett is put on the court, I predict she will do well. Roe vs. Wade will not be over-turned. She will vote the law with an emphasis on the Constitution. If this is not what you want as an American, then I'm not sure what you think the law should be.
mykc14 wrote:That's true there are holes. There are 'political' avenues that a group could take to put the country in a bad situation. At the same time the process for nomination/confirmation are pretty well spelled out, it just isn't ideal maybe, like possibly limiting how late in an election year a president can nominate somebody. There's also the threat of a political avenue that the government 'could' take but probably really shouldn't, like when Pelosi said she would think about pushing for impeachment for Trump if he nominated a justice before the election.
RiverDog wrote:
It is? The only thing that's spelled out is that the President will nominate and the Senate will give their "advice and consent". That seems awfully vague to me. Over the course of time, the Senate has interpreted that "advice and consent" clause from a 2/3 majority to 60 votes to a simple majority, chose not to offer their advice and consent or did so in an expedited fashion in order to beat a self imposed deadline, and now there's talk of expanding the number of justices.
Aseahawkfan wrote:If Amy Coney-Barrett is put on the court, I predict she will do well. Roe vs. Wade will not be over-turned. She will vote the law with an emphasis on the Constitution. If this is not what you want as an American, then I'm not sure what you think the law should be.
I have a lot of confidence in Chief Justice John Roberts.
I-5 wrote:If Amy Coney Barrett is approved (and she will be), I don't expect her to overturn Roe vs Wade, but I do expect her to chip away at it, based on her previous writings and lectures. Why wouldn't she?
I-5 wrote:I don't think Trump has much feeling either way about confirming Barrett. This has everything to do with McConnell and the Federalist Society's initiatives. Trump is only hoping he has an ally if the election goes to the courts. He's not even remotely religous, and he could care less about Roe vs Wade. He does care about repealing Obamacare, so if he thinks she can help him do that, then I think he would have more energy for it.
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