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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsRepublicans Sound Like They're Getting Nervous About Supreme Court Expansion by Madiba K. Dennie

On Thursday, House Judiciary Committee Republicans held a hearing to discuss, as they put it in the hearings official title, a threat to the Supreme Courts legitimacy. The threat to which they referred, though, was not the Courts myriad ethical scandals, or its efforts to gut both the Voting Rights Act and the Fifteenth Amendment, or its 200-plus-year track record of concentrating power in the hands of well-connected white guys named John.
Instead, the threat that had House Republicans all riled up is the idea of increasing the number of justices on the Court. On its website, the Judiciary Committee promised during the hearing to examine the history and perils of court packing, as well as other policy proposals that threaten to undermine the integrity of the judicial branch.
Throughout the morning, Republicans framed their resistance to Court expansion as a defense of the institutions legitimacy. The GOPs first witness, Missouri Solicitor General Louis Capozzi, claimed that expansion would undermine the Courts insulation from partisan politics, which enables it to make decisions based on what the law requires, and not the fleeting goals of political actors. The second witness, Cumberland School of Law professor William Ross, claimed that expansion would let the elected branches manipulate the outcome of judicial decisions by appointing justices who would be expected to conform to the political predilections of the president.
The third witness, a law firm partner named Gene Schaerr, claimed that expansion proposals distract from the more important work of building political and legislative coalitions. Schaerr further suggested that people who dont like the Courts interpretation of the Voting Rights Act should simply ask the Republican-controlled Congress to amend the statute.
Instead, the threat that had House Republicans all riled up is the idea of increasing the number of justices on the Court. On its website, the Judiciary Committee promised during the hearing to examine the history and perils of court packing, as well as other policy proposals that threaten to undermine the integrity of the judicial branch.
Throughout the morning, Republicans framed their resistance to Court expansion as a defense of the institutions legitimacy. The GOPs first witness, Missouri Solicitor General Louis Capozzi, claimed that expansion would undermine the Courts insulation from partisan politics, which enables it to make decisions based on what the law requires, and not the fleeting goals of political actors. The second witness, Cumberland School of Law professor William Ross, claimed that expansion would let the elected branches manipulate the outcome of judicial decisions by appointing justices who would be expected to conform to the political predilections of the president.
The third witness, a law firm partner named Gene Schaerr, claimed that expansion proposals distract from the more important work of building political and legislative coalitions. Schaerr further suggested that people who dont like the Courts interpretation of the Voting Rights Act should simply ask the Republican-controlled Congress to amend the statute.
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/cafe/republicans-sound-like-theyre-getting-nervous-about-supreme-court-expansion]
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Republicans Sound Like They're Getting Nervous About Supreme Court Expansion by Madiba K. Dennie (Original Post)
justaprogressive
5 hrs ago
OP
Jilly_in_VA
(14,627 posts)1. There's nothing sacred about the number nine
Just because we have 9 justices now doesn't mean we always did, or always should. If the G00Pers would even LOOK at their history books, they would know that there is no specified number of justices on the Supreme Court, nor has there ever BEEN any specified number. Furthermore, there haven't even always BEEN 9 justices.
Secondly, they can stop ranting about the SC being "politicized", because it's never been as political or politicized as it is right this moment. You cannot tell me that the Roberts court as it is now composed is anything BUT a RepubliKKKan rubber stamp! So STFU and get over yourselves, Repugs. As soon as we get control again, some things are about to change.
WSHazel
(846 posts)2. Good
It is overdue.
lees1975
(7,200 posts)3. It should have been done in 2021 when we had the ability to do it.
Then we would not be here now.