Term Limits for Supreme Court Justices?

Read Time:4 Minute, 10 Second

It’s clear by its recent decisions that the Supreme Court is no longer a bi-partisan body voting on the merits of a case.  They are a bitterly divided body of men and women who can no longer agree on anything that crosses party lines.  Religion, as evidenced by the latest ruling which seeks to diminish the church and state doctrine, plays a significant role in a branch of government that should be above such nonsense.  All of this plays to an ever more popular theme and that’s term limits of US Supreme Court Justices.

Calls for Ginsburg to retire betray the problems with our current system. (REUTERS/Pablo Martinez Monsivais/Pool)
Calls for Ginsburg to retire betray the problems with our current system. (REUTERS/Pablo Martinez Monsivais/Pool)

The mechanics of limiting the terms of justices could be a bit complicated.  Surprisingly there’s at least one high profile conservative politician who might be on board with term limits.

From The Week:

Unlike nearly every other democracy in the world, justices appointed to our highest court remain there for life. This is purportedly done to promote judicial independence. But in reality these life-long Supreme Court appointments generate an absurd political spectacle: a court that is both nakedly partisan and less democratic.

For starters, because judges have lifelong terms, openings on the court come at totally random intervals. As a result, the number of judges any given president appoints varies widely. Jimmy Carter appointed zero judges in his one term, while Bush Sr. appointed two. Clinton appointed two judges in his two terms, while Eisenhower appointed five.

Filling up the court in such a random manner makes its overall political composition more random as well, rather than a democratic reflection of the political trends of the country as a whole.

Indeed, it is worse than mere randomness. Supreme Court judges are not replaced only when they die, but also when they retire. This makes it possible for judges to strategically retire only when they are certain they will be replaced by a president with the same ideological commitments. The relatively conservative Sandra Day O’Connor, for instance, retired during Bush Jr.’s presidency. The relatively liberal John Paul Stevens and David Souter retired during Obama’s presidency.

And now, a heavy push is under way to get the liberal Ruth Bader Ginsburg to retire in time for Obama to suitably replace her. If these strategic retirements continue, the court’s political composition will never change, other than when accidents occur.

For those who think judges are apolitical umpires of the law, this might not seem like that big of a problem. But those people would be wrong. Judges are totally political, especially those on the Supreme Court. We have become so used to this reality that current coverage of the court already assumes a 4-4 split in the most contentious cases, with the swing vote Anthony Kennedy breaking the tie.

In a recent study of 516 free speech cases, researchers found that the justices were far more likely to protect speech when its sentiment aligned with their own political orientation. This was much more true for conservative justices than liberal justices, but still true of both.

Contrary to our idealized expectations, the Supreme Court largely appears to work the way Richard Posner claims it does. The justices figure out what they want the outcome to be, then they interpret the law to justify that outcome, unless the prevailing law makes it brazenly ridiculous to do so. Because law is composed of words, and words are vague and open to multiple interpretations, a huge space exists for judges to act as political legislators — and they do.

So what does that leave us? A Supreme Court that is an eminently political institution whose composition is at best random and at worst a function of strategically timed retirements. This makes no sense and needs to be reformed.

The best reform proposal I’ve seen is the brainchild of law professor Paul Carrington. Under his proposal, Supreme Court judges would serve single, staggered 18-year terms, such that a new judge would be appointed every two years. This fixes the issue of randomness, which can create huge judicial windfalls for certain presidencies. It also fixes the strategic retirement problem, since judges would be forced out after 18 years.

Furthermore, it allows the court to change in line with the political tides of the country. The ideological composition of the court at any given time should generally mirror that of the presidency in the 18 years prior.

This is not a partisan proposal. In fact, the most high-profile proponent of it in recent years was Rick Perry, the Republican governor of Texas.

Think about it this way: Since the Supreme Court is already a mostly political body that has taken upon itself to legislate, then it only makes sense to treat it like a kind of legislature. You wouldn’t appoint senators for life and allow them to effectively choose their successors. We shouldn’t let Supreme Court justices do that either.

About Post Author

Professor Mike

Professor Mike is a left-leaning, dog loving, political junkie. He has written dozens of articles for Substack, Medium, Simily, and Tribel. Professor Mike has been published at Smerconish.com, among others. He is a strong proponent of the environment, and a passionate protector of animals. In addition he is a fierce anti-Trumper. Take a moment and share his work.
Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of

6 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Bill Formby
9 years ago

Good post Mike. I agree that there needs to be some type of balance restored. I don’t know if this plan would be the best but since I have none, it is better this is better than mine.

Josh Taylor
9 years ago

My concern with all the disclosures of NSA spying on Americans is that the Justices could be targeted or blackmailed. Anytime they break from their rigid politically ideology I wonder.

Rachael
9 years ago

Did anyone notice that the men on the court are all Catholics? And yes we need to be able to get rid of them.

9 years ago

“The justices figure out what they want the outcome to be, then they interpret the law to justify that outcome,” Wow, that;s exactly how the bible works!

Coincidence? Not likely.

Marsha Woerner
9 years ago

It should come as no surprise that I definitely am in favor of limiting terms for Supreme Court judges. Of course, I’m still in favor of impeaching those that don’t respect the law and the nation, but given that said impeachment almost never happens, flushing them out after a reasonable term is really a necessity. The nation changes over time. The justices in themselves change over time. And term limit would take away an individual’s desire to play to the voters.

Timmy Mahoney
9 years ago

Hell yes! Dumb fucks like Clarence Thomas and bigoted religious crazies like Scalia need to go…yesterday.

Previous post Worldwide Fully One-Third Doubt Holocaust Evidence
Next post Missouri Passes Anti-Abortion Three Day Waiting Period
6
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x