Jennifer Rubin is a columnist for the Washington Post. I believe she was chosen to express a conservative view but she was quickly repelled by Trump and Trumpism. In this column, she explains how a Democratic Congress can protect progressive policies—by doing their job.
The prospect of Republican senators marching lock-step to confirm a justice — picked precisely because of her hostility to the Affordable Care Act and legal abortion — should help Democrats boost their already commanding position in Senate races. Only by retaking the Senate can a Democratic-led Congress prevent conservative rule by the judiciary.
Come to think of it, wasn’t an overly powerful Supreme Court something Republicans used to worry about? Back when Roe v. Wade was decided, they argued that the political branches of government should determine such issues; now they seek refuge in an uber-conservative Supreme Court out of step with a large majority of Americans on everything from guns to abortion to health care.
If Democrats do go on to win the White House and have comfortable majorities in both chambers, they can begin to defang a Supreme Court that has been stocked with rigid ideologues. Much has been made of the Democratic threat of “court packing” (was it “court stripping” when Republicans decided that eight justices were enough rather than consider the nomination of Judge Merrick Garland?); however, the threat of adding justices to the bench may have its intended effect in curbing the court’s quest to overturn decades of precedent. It is the last card to be played, not the first.
Instead, the first step Congress should take is — get ready! — to legislate. It can pass a federal statute (likely to require the demise of the filibuster if it cannot be accomplished in a reconciliation bill) to codify Roe (which draws more than 60 percent support) and, if lawmakers see fit, stripping out the Hyde Amendment that limits federally funded abortions to cases of rape, incest or cases in which the life of the mother is at risk. In other words, the federal government can decide not only to protect the right to seek an abortion but also to make abortions more accessible to poor women. We can argue whether that is a good or bad policy, but no one can argue that Congress has no prerogative to address the issue. Nor can anyone say that Congress can’t, say, pass a Defense of All Marriages Act, which would secure same-sex marriages.
Congress can also “fix” the Affordable Care Act, which it intends to expand anyway, should the Supreme Court strike the law down on the basis that the tax justification that Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. used to uphold the law vanished when the individual mandate fell out.
Call this the Ruth Bader Ginsburg approach. When the Supreme Court refused to extend the statute of limitations in wage discrimination lawsuits, her dissent in Ledbetter v. Goodyearinvited Congress to amend the statue. It did. Much of the anti-democratic, precedent-busting work of a hyperpartisan Supreme Court can be undone by a unified Congress and White House.
Congress can also use its constitutional power to limit the jurisdiction of the court’s appellate power and to limit the terms of justices. If the Supreme Court is to be a partisan outfit, then give it less to do and make each seat less valuable.
Conservatives are rushing through a rock-ribbed conservative with little regard for precedent for one reason: They are watching their electoral majority slip away — and, “worse,” they know their prospects of a comeback are diminishing, given that the electorate is looking more and more like America and that voting is not being suppressed. A court that zigzags its way through the Constitution depending on the policy preferences of the presidents who appointed them is not a court that will engender respect. It is one that needs to be cut down to size.

Supreme Court 2.0 Amp It To Eleven —
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The media have been trying to push Biden to admit he plans to “pack the court.” What finally Biden did say is that he does not like the idea of expanding the court. Maybe it was strategic move to get the media from hounding him. Robert Reich points out in this video that the Republicans have been packing the courts for years despite losing the popular vote twice. https://www.facebook.com/watch/?ref=search&v=711774602881134&external_log_id=316c2583-b490-4232-93dd-139b91441b8b&q=robert%20reich
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Assuming Barrett gets the nomination, if Congress only upped it to 11, the Conservatives would still hold a majority, even if Democrats managed to appoint 2 more justices.
I think it needs to be amped to 13 (or more)
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I think the point of the post is that instead of worrying about what the Supreme court can or cannot do, democrats should do what they are supposed to do in Congress: legislate. So let’s not get too depressed about the Supreme court.
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Mate: I found it a very encouraging law. The Supreme Court is supposed to rule on the law, not write it themselves or refer to the Founders’ intent.
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Yeah, me too, and after reading the post, I jumped up and ran to vote. Waited only 5 minutes in line and the process itself took only 34 seconds. DONE.
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But Congress determines the makeup of the Supreme Court, including the number of Justices and even the fraction of Justices required to overturn settled law.
I think it’s advantageous to have more justices, regardless of whatever else Congress does. The smaller the number of Justices, the easier it is to get a majority.
A regular jury has 12 members and there is really no logical reason why the Supreme Court should only have 9.
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Personally, I would much prefer to have a jury of my peers deciding my fate than a Supreme Court of right wing extremists.
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History of mankind have shown that only a few people making decisions for millions is a bad idea even if the few people are elected, but in case of the Supreme court, the members are not even elected.
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Even the number of 12 for a jury is arbitrary, harking back to a welsh King who established trial by jury in 725AD , allegedly because Jesus had 12 apostles.
I would also change the life appointment to a limited one, say 10 years, which would probably make more difference than anything else.
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Congress could also require that any ruling by the Supremes had to be unanimous.
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Presumably, if they are actually basing their rulings on the Constitution, that should not be too difficult, right?
Ha ha ha.
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Feeding the Constitution to an appropriate algorithm, a computer could make accurate decisions—much more accurate than those bias, appointed members there. The whole supreme court smells outdated by a few hundred years. Their dress code, their mannerism, the ceremonious way they enter the room as if they were gods look foreign when they are supposed to make decisions for the 21st century.
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Not incidentally, the mere fact that the number of Justices is of concern tells you that the number is too small.
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Yes, the Supreme Algorithm.
Good idea.
Is this what computer scientists mean by Quantum Supremacy?
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I dunno; you are the programmer.
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Nice eye patch by the way.
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I’m a little concerned about who might code the Supreme Algorithm, though.
Specifically, I am worried it might include the following code:
If Constitution
Overturn Roe
Return $$$
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Ah, the SA (Supreme Algorithm) would be coded open source, with one of the licenses of the Free Software Foundation. The coding would be managed exactly as laws should be managed. That way, corruption is impossible,since, for one, coders wouldn’t get paid a dime. Still, the quality would be the highest, since the review would be done by the general population.
How does Free Law Foundation sound?
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Clearly the fewer the number of ddecision-makers involved, the worse the decisions.
Just look at the example!d of God.
The universe is headed toward maximum entropy and heat death, for God’s sake.
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And I hope to God , the Supreme Algorithm is not written in the HolySee++ language.
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I have actually looked into the Quantum Supremacy claim and could not make heads or tails of it. So maybe I should just flip a coin to decide if it is true.
It seems there is a lot of hype associated with “Quantum computing” in general, but I don’t know enough about specifics to say anything about the QS claim that Google recently made.
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Because I don’t understand most if it (even though I took basic Quantum mechanics), i kind of have to rely on the Quantum bullshit Detector to give me the low down.
https://mobile.twitter.com/bullshitquantum?lang=en
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It is a myth that the Supreme Court is unmoved by political pressure. Does anyone see the Brown decision as occurring in a vacuum without regard to the rising civil rights movement? Why did a conservative Earl Warren rule the way he did?
Go back farther. Is there any doubt that Roger Taney meant for the Dred Scott decision to settle the question of slavery to the side of the Slave owners? Together with the so-called compromise of 1850 with its Fugitive Slave Act, Taney’s decision ripped the country into its pieces and all but assured a nasty Civil War.
When Roberts upheld the ACA, is there any doubt that he feared to give those who called for other medical options political ammunition?
The Supreme Court does not operate in a castle. The myth that is does has given it out-sized power.
So what needs to happen? Here is my list:
The expansion of the highest court to many more jurists, perhaps as many as 19 or 25. this would mean that no single appointment would be crucial to the balance of the court.
The creation of courts at a lower level to allieviate the problems of too many cases waiting. We are a much larger population than we were years ago.
The establishment of minimum standards for jurist’s qualifications by constitutional amendment
Do you have a list?
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The first thing I would do is nominate Diana Ross
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And then I would nominate Mary Wilson
And they could sing this
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I think the Founders labored under the impression a lifetime appointment would put a man (sic) beyond the influence of the rabble’s political pressure. They were by no means naive about human nature but if they imagined there was any place beyond the dreams of avarice and greed for power then they failed to guess the species of vipers our times would generate.
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Given that they were all wealthy white men , I seriously doubt the founders labored under any circumstances.
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The Founding Failures
They failed to understand
That President could be
A power hungry man
How wide-eyed could they be?
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I think the FFs understood this very well and this is exactly why they made the Constitution so permissive. One day, they may be presidents, and they wanted to do all kinds of powerful stuff.
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Permissive and vague.
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I disagree.
If they had really understood this, they would have been much more specific about what the president can and can not do.
Making the Constitution “permissive” was just asking (begging?) for abuse, in my opinion.
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As I said, they made it permissive on purpose. FFs were not saints.
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My bad
I agree.
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It was especially true about Fondling Fathers like Thomas Jefferson
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SDP, should it be Fondling Fathers or Foundling Fathers? Or Floundering Fathers?
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In Jeffersons case, definitely Fondling Fathers.
He couldn’t keep his hands(and other things) off his slave women
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