Showing posts with label Neil Gorsuch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neil Gorsuch. Show all posts

Sunday, June 30, 2024

Run With the Pack

 I'm not referring to the Bad Company song.

The last attempt to expand the Supreme Court was made in 1937, when President Franklin Roosevelt sent a bill to Congress that, according to a formula encouraging but not requiring Supreme Court justices to retire once reaching a certain age, would allow the President to appoint six additional justices.  Roosevelt tried unsuccessfully to expand the Court to appoint enough justices to counterbalance the conservative majority under Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, which had overturned various New Deal programs.  Ironically, Roosevelt ended up appointing justices for all nine seats, including the promotion of Associate Justice Harlan Fiske Stone to replace Chief Justice Hughes, and Hugo Black - who served into the early 1970s - was his first appointment.  Black was appointed a few months after the Court-packing effort failed.
Yeah, well, its time to revisit the idea again.
The current Supreme Court demonstrated that it is all about power and not about jurisprudence.  Its idea of originalism is being taken to the extreme as the conservative majority has been overturning precedents they feel were wrongly decided because the specifics in those precedents are not reflected in the text of the Constitution.  The conservatives advocate judicial restraint but have shown no restraint in overturning decisions they felt were overreaches.  You don't correct what you perceive to be overreach with overreach of your own.
As we're waiting for the final rulings from the Courts 2023-24 term (including the Trump immunity decision) tomorrow, I could go on and on and on and on until I run out of bandwidth about the flurry of its most recent decisions, but I should focus on the overturning of the Chevron principle, which was a unanimous Supreme Court ruling in the mid-1980s declaring that agencies, not courts, should decide the ambiguities in government regulations.  It was a victory for Chevron, the oil company that brought the suit before the Court, when lower courts had tried to set the standards for how Environmental Protection Agency regulations should be administered to Chevron's detriment in extracting oil from the earth.  Anne Burford, the pro-business EPA administrator that President Ronald Reagan had installed in 1981, agreed that the courts should not tell agencies how to do their jobs - and her agency, at least, was accused of doing its job more to help business than people.
As it turned out, the Chevron principle worked out wonderfully, for it allowed career agency workers - civil-service employees who did not answer to presidential administrations - to uphold the spirit of regulations and statutes even when a presidential administration did not.  Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia thought the decision was prudent on the issue of resolving ambiguous rules because it would curtail the power of federal judges who would overreach to threaten private interests based on personal politics and not the law.
Justice Scalia, for all of his faults, was largely a man of integrity and a serious legal scholar - that's why he was unanimously confirmed by the Senate in 1986 with one member absent.  He was not a hack like today's conservative jurists.  They overturned the Chevron ruling with the three liberal justices in dissent.  Federal agencies, Chief Justice John Roberts wrote, "have no special competence in resolving statutory ambiguities. Courts do." That may be, but federal agencies do have special competence in the areas of expertise that statutes govern.  Anne Burford certainly would have agreed with that, saying of criticism of her handling of the job of EPA administrator, "Nobody can be that wrong, all that much, all the time." 
Justice Neil Gorsuch agreed with Chief Justice Roberts, writing in concurrence that this ruling "returns judges to interpretive rules that have guided federal courts since the Nation's founding."  It is extremely significant that Justice Gorsuch would side with Roberts and would not have sided with Scalia, whose seat he took, and especially not with Anne Burford, who died in 2004, because, well, before Burford married her second husband in 1983, she went by her first husband's name - Gorsuch.
Yes, Neil Gorsuch is the son of Anne Burford.  
The little snot.
Ironically, Gorsuch himself turned out to be the poster boy for why the Chevron ruling that Scalia and, later, generations of environmentalists championed was actually a good idea.  In writing in favor of pausing a Biden Administration program to curb smog being generated in one state and wafting over another, he confused nitrogen oxide, a harmful gas, with nitrous oxide, a harmless gas.  Justice Gorsuch clearly demonstrated that judges are not the ones who should be resolving ambiguous text in federal statutes. He also demonstrated with equal clarity that he's as dumb as the President who appointed his mother to run the EPA.  Campaigning for the Presidency in 1980, Ronald Reagan also confused the two similar-sounding gases with each other and based on his confusion the suggestion that trees caused more pollution than cars.  
Ladies and gentlemen, here's the only Sequoia that ever caused more pollution than my VW!
House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries lamented that, until the reversal is reversed,  Congress will have to write more clear government regulations less prone to ambiguity and multiple interpretations.  The only problem is that Congress keeps demonstrating its inability to do so.
And that's why we have to run with the idea of packing the Court.
And if we don't, I'm leaving here.  You won't even see me, no, no . . . for dust. 
Movin' on . . . movin' out . . .  

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Supreme Strikeout

So how are all of these Supreme Court rulings working out for Trump?  Okay, let's review:
This month, the Court ruled that the 1964 Civil Rights Act, while originally written and passed with blacks in mind, protects any underserved and underprivileged minority, hence it bans discrimination against homosexuals, bisexuals, transsexuals, and any other sexual you can think of.  (LGBT?  Sorry, I'm not into unpronounceable acronyms.)  Justice Neil Gorsuch -  a Trump appointee - wrote the majority opinion.
The Court also ruled that the state of California does not have to acquiesce to the federal government and provide state troopers or any other forms of assistance to enforce immigration laws.  It's a solidly conservative opinion, upholding the rights of the states guaranteed by the Tenth Amendment.
And finally, the Court ruled against Trump's effort to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, meant to help immigrant children brought to this country in infancy by their parents stay in the U.S.  The kids covered by the program aren't out of the woods yet, but Chief Justice John Roberts isn't going to let Trump end the program as he wants to, because the procedure Trump has followed is unconstitutional.
And this all happened within a week.
Once again, we were reminded that the Supreme Court is independent, it answers to no President, and lifetime appointments are not necessarily a bad thing.
Just remember to vote for Biden in November.  Because, all of that notwithstanding, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is 87 years old. 

Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Gorsuch and Such

The Whigs - er, Democrats - clearly don't know when and how to pick a fight.
Despite getting support from Democratic senators Joe Manchin and Heidi Heitkamp of, respectively, West Virginia and Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota - two states that admittedly would not have existed were it not for Republican administrations bending the rules - and also Democratic senator Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch faces an otherwise united front of the Senate Democrats ready to oppose him to the point of filibustering his nomination.  Although he is a right-wing honky, he is highly qualified, he has impeccable credentials, and he is likely the best Supreme Court candidate that anyone is ever going to get from a Republican President - especially the current Republican President.  Democrats are nonetheless ready to filibuster him for two primary reasons:
  • He's right-wing.
  • He's a honky.
But I understand he does have a good singing voice.
Look, this is a fight Democrats are bound to lose.  They could pick fights they can win, like one on health care, but they'd obviously prefer to let ordinary citizens do the fighting.  But Gorsuch is going to get on the Court.  Not only does he have at least 55 votes, but if the Democrats try to stop him, Senate Republicans will likely change the rules to prevent a filibuster and steamroll the minority (something the Senate GOP is very good at!).  I know that the Democrats are also trying to avenge Merrick Garland for never getting a hearing, but when they try to deny someone like Gorsuch an up-or-down vote for a petty reason like that, they further denigrate an already denigrated legislative chamber, and they further politicize an already politicized confirmation process.  In other words, it means that the Democrats are no better than the Republicans are.
That's precisely why six percent of the American electorate voted in 2016 for third-party presidential candidates.
Senate Democratic leader Charles Schumer has suggested that no Supreme Court nomination from Trump should go ahead until the legitimacy questions regarding Trump that have been raised by alleged collusion with the Russians during the 2016 presidential campaign have been put to rest.  Yeah . . . Chuck, you're going to have to do better than that.   
The Democratic strategy against Gorsuch does not make sense when Gorsuch would be replacing the late Antonin Scalia on the Court, because it wouldn't change the court's ideological balance.  They also insult the handful of Republican senators who wanted Merrick Garland to have hearings.  It's best for Democrats to hold their fire until Trump tries to name a right-winger to replace Ruth Bader Ginsburg or Stephen Breyer should either one of them die or retire.  If  Democrats waste their time stopping Gorsuch and cause the Republicans to change the filibuster rules irrevocably, there will be nothing - nothing! - to stop the GOP next time, when it counts!  If Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell is bluffing on the proposed rule change, it's better to call his bluff later rather than now. 
And by the way, I don't want to hear any complaints from Democrats about those of us who voted for Jill Stein and how we didn't care about what would happen with the Supreme Court.  What, you were afraid of someone who only pays lip service to the middle class but looks out for corporate interests and is a complete narcissist getting into the White House and choosing Supreme Court justices?  Well, that's why I didn't vote for Hillary.  If you were afraid of losing the opportunity for a Democratic President to name a Supreme Court justice, why didn't you back someone other than Hillary for the Democratic presidential nomination?  Why didn't you at least get elected a Democratic Senate that would have gotten Garland confirmed in President Obama's last seventeen days in office?  Why didn't you lobby hard for Garland to get confirmation hearings before the election?
(Pointless aside I couldn't resist: Both Merrick Garland and Neil Gorsuch have seven-letter surnames starting with the letter "G."  Ya think this is Trump's way of tweaking his opponents?)        

Thursday, March 23, 2017

Comey, Gorsuch, Whatever . . .

James Comey can't not tell the truth.  The FBI director publicly leveled with everyone about Hillary Clinton, and now he's doing the same about Donald Trump.  I love this guy.  
On Monday, he came right out and said there is no evidence whatsoever that Trump got wiretapped before taking office by President Obama, and yet Trump painted himself in an even deeper corner by refusing to admit he was wrong. He did tweet ecstatically when he said that Comey proved that the Russians had nothing to do with influencing the outcome of the 2016 presidential election.  Not so fast - what Comey meant by that was that there's no evidence that the Russians hacked voting machines to stuff the electronic ballot box.  But he does believe that the Russians may have been responsible for the leaks of Democratic National Committee (DNC) e-mails and fake-news Internet posts that may have swayed enough people to vote for Trump.
On the other hand, the recent revelation of the government legally recording Trump campaign staffers in 2016 in an effort to get more intelligence on the Russians - not wiretapping, but an action that might have snared more than a few Trump aides - has made the waters even murkier . . .
Be that as it may, even if the Russians did hack the DNC, what they uncovered wasn't fake news.  It was true - an uncovering of real efforts to tip the scales for Hillary and manipulate the voters with a flawed general-election candidate.  And by the way, now that he doesn't have to campaign for her anymore, Martin O'Malley says he's done with the DNC.
I may be done with the whole damn party.  Because, also this week, Senate hearings for the confirmation of Judge Neil Gorsuch to fill a Supreme Court seat President Obama should have been allowed to fill began, and despite the fact that the Republicans are going to get him confirmed one way or another, even if it means suspending the filibuster rule, Democrats have no idea or strategy as to what the hell to do about it.  If they fight the nomination, they'll get steamrolled and look like fools.  If they acquiesce to it, the base will never forgive them, and party disunion will ensue.  
Delay it by trying to tie it to the Russia investigation? You're going to have to do better than that, Senator Schumer.
Those who say we'd be a whole lot better off if Hillary had won and picked Antonin Scalia's replacement on the High Court forget that Democratic hopes of retaking the Senate and controlling the confirmation process faded long before it became apparent that Hillary was actually gong to lose the election.  They also forget that the Republicans were ready to do to any Supreme Court nominee she would have put forward what they did to Merrick Garland - ignore said nominee. And her nominee would not have been another William Brennan or Thurgood Marshall - it would have been a centrist.  Merrick Garland, who's at least slightly left of center,  might be a Supreme Court justice today if the public had pressured Mitch McConnell into allow hearings, but no, the Democratic base was dissatisfied with the fact that he was just another white guy, and so couldn't get excited for him.  Yet another example of identity politics ruining America for everyone.  Now the hapless Democratic caucus in the Senate is trying to figure out how to avenge Garland without having it backfire on them.
But then, who cares when only 43 percent of Americans can name any Supreme Court justices and the other 57 percent are the ones who will be most affected by the rulings of a Justice Gorsuch?  Not that the Democrats did a lot to push the issue in the 2016 elections.
Face it, Democrats, you blew it.  While I'm glad to see Trump cratering, I'm also glad to see you doing the same.  Whig out and let a new party take your place.  It's over.   

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Donald Trumps the Court

Donald Trump has made his choice for the vacancy on the Supreme Court.  And the winner is . . .
. . . Neil Gorsuch, a judge from Colorado who sits on the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals.
Be afraid.  Be very afraid.  Not only is he an originalist and a strict constructionist like Antonin Scalia, but he has ruled against federal agencies in their interpretation of the law, and he ruled for the religious freedom of companies to deny contraceptive coverage to women (the Hobby Lobby case?  it came from his court ruling on its way to the Supreme Court).  He also bitched about how liberals try to force the judiciary to legislate their agenda, saying that they "have become addicted to the courtroom, relying on judges and lawyers rather than elected leaders and the ballot box, as the primary means of effecting their social agenda" while "failing to reach out and persuade the public."
Well, I can't argue with that, given the disastrous results of Democrats in every major election (and most of the minor ones) since 2008.
Oh yeah, his mother, Anne Gorsuch Burford, was President Reagan's first EPA administrator, and she used her office to help and serve polluters.  Her biggest distinction was mishandling the chemical-waste cleanup fund to help political cronies. 
Be that as it may, Gorsuch was confirmed with broad bipartisan support for his current judicial post in 2006 when George Walker Bush named him to the Tenth Circuit.   Democrats wanting revenge for the way Republicans blocked Obama nominee Merrick Garland will find it pretty damn hard to exact it now.  Especially when the Republicans still control the Senate and are prepared to shove the Gorsuch appointment right down the Democrats' throats.
Meanwhile, the White House is scrambling to put the best face on its odious travel ban, continuing to insist that it's not an anti-Muslim ban when there are seven countries cited and there are several other Muslim-majority countries from which people can travel to the United States without any problem.  Would they still be able to so even if he didn't have business interests in those other countries? 
Martin O'Malley posed that question.  Seriously.