"Executive Summary
On April 9, 2021, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. issued Executive Order 14023
establishing this Commission, to consist of “individuals having experience with and
knowledge of the Federal judiciary and the Supreme Court of the United States.” The Order
charged the Commission with producing a report for the President that addresses three sets of
questions. First, the Report should include “[a]n account of the contemporary commentary and
debate about the role and operation of the Supreme Court in our constitutional system and
about the functioning of the constitutional process by which the President nominates and, by
and with the advice and consent of the Senate, appoints Justices to the Supreme Court.”
Second, the Report should consider the “historical background of other periods in the Nation’s
history when the Supreme Court’s role and the nominations and advice-and-consent process
were subject to critical assessment and prompted proposals for reform.” Third, the Report
should provide an analysis of the principal arguments for and against particular proposals to
reform the Supreme Court, “including an appraisal of [their] merits and legality,” and should
be informed by “a broad spectrum of ideas.”
The Report begins by explaining the genesis of today’s Court reform debate, including by
identifying developments that gave rise to President Biden’s decision to issue the April 2021
Executive Order, particularly the debates surrounding the most recent nominations. This
Introduction emphasizes that the Court’s composition and jurisprudence long have been
subjects of public controversy and debate in the nation’s civic life: The Court serves as a
crucial guardian of the rule of law and also plays a central role in major social and political
conflicts. Its decisions have profound effects on the life of the nation. Though conflict
surrounding the processes by which the President nominates and the Senate confirms Justices
is not new, it has become more intensely partisan in recent years.
The Introduction also articulates three common and interrelated ideas frequently invoked
in reform debates and throughout the Chapters of the Report: the importance of protecting or
enhancing the Court’s legitimacy; the role of judicial independence in our system of
government; and the value of democracy and its relationship to the Supreme Court’s
decisionmaking. These important ideas can mean different things to different people. The
Introduction discusses the range of meanings ascribed to these terms, with the aim of clarifying
how they are deployed in arguments for and against reform.."
Supreme Court
Friday, December 10, 2021
Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment