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Timothy Patrick's avatar

Thanks again for this reporting, Gabe. It was written between the lines, but the change in tone of the justices' words doesn't necessarily mean they have a change of heart on Trump. I would say it much more has to do with the exponentially increased absurdity of what they are being given to consider this term. Had they accepted the arguments they were given, it would turn the court into even more of a farce than it already is.

But if that was the only explanation, how do we interpret the decision to grant a president much more immunity only a short while ago? Where were his appointees' pointed questions when Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson were asking all of the obvious horrifying questions, like what if a president orders an assassination? Did Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Barrett have as much imagination then as they do now about how presidential power could be abused? In the immunity case, these same justices who are now grilling Trump's lawyers were remarkably deferential to expansive claims of executive power. Gorsuch focused on protecting "official acts" from prosecution, Kavanaugh worried about chilling future presidents, and Barrett seemed more concerned with procedural questions than the substantive dangers Sotomayor was highlighting. Their skepticism appears highly selective, but this does indicate a major shift that can't be fully explained by the quality of arguments being presented to them.

I also just want to put into context how crazy it is that THIS court isn't Trumpy enough for Trump. We're talking about a Supreme Court that should already be considered illegitimate because it has no relationship to voters' opinions on who placed the justices there. Remember that Republicans told us to "let the American people decide" when they blocked Obama from filling Scalia's seat for nearly a year, claiming it was too close to an election. Then they rammed through Barrett's confirmation just weeks before the 2020 election, abandoning their own stated principle the moment it became inconvenient. This was orchestrated by Mitch McConnell, who was ironically the least popular senator with his own constituents among all 100 senators while making these pleas about listening to the American people. Republicans argued it would be unfair for Obama to get a third Supreme Court pick in eight years, then turned around and crammed three appointments into Trump's four-year term. The result is a court where a president who lost the popular vote twice was able to appoint one-third of the justices, backed by a Senate majority representing far fewer Americans than the minority party, and confirmed by senators whose states collectively cast millions fewer votes than the states represented by the opposing senators. This entire saga has done more to harm the institution of the court than any sitting justices could. This is the illegitimate Supreme Court that Trump himself created, and somehow even this rigged institution isn't subservient enough for his tastes.

We need to reform the process by which justices are selected and how long they serve. Term limits of 18 years would ensure each president gets to appoint two justices per term, creating more regular turnover and reducing the incentive to nominate younger ideologues who will serve for decades. We should expand the court to 13 justices to match the number of circuit courts and dilute the outsized impact of Trump's appointments. The confirmation process should require a supermajority in the Senate, forcing presidents to nominate more moderate candidates who can actually build consensus. We could implement a lottery system where lower court judges are randomly selected from a pool of highly qualified candidates, removing political calculation from the selection entirely. Mandatory retirement ages would prevent justices from timing their departures for maximum political impact. These reforms would restore the court's legitimacy by ensuring it actually reflects the democratic will, rather than the accidents of political timing and Senate math.

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Lynn's avatar

Thank you for this. You have given me a smidgen of hope in these trying days

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