• SoftestSapphic@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    A democracy shouldn’t have a single person in power who wasn’t elected.

    The United States needs to discard the “republic” part of our democratic republic.

    • no more electoral college
    • no SCOTUS
    • no appointments for positions of power
    • no private political donations

    And in order for these changes to happen, rich men in positions of power will need to die.

  • dhork@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    The real problem is the lifetime tenure of the justices. The Founders did that for good reason, to insulate the Court from the immediate politics of the time. But people are simply living longer now, and Republicans figured out how to ratfuck the Court to stack it in their favor. (Helped in no small part by RBG, who could not be convinced to retire at the right time). Openings on the Court are so rare that it is worth expending significant political effort to get them to go your way.

    If Democrats ever get control of the Presidency and Congress again, they should immediately move to blow up the Court to 13 members. They can do it by immediately turning it up to 11, and then making it 13 two years later, in order to stagger the changes. But this is important enough that they should blow up the filibuster to do it.

    (13 is a magic number because it matches the number of Federal district courts.)

    And then, after the bill is passed, they should work with Republicans on a framework to add term limits to the Constitution. Each of the 13 justices gets a 13 year term, each justice could serve up to two terms, consecutive or not, and would have to be re-appointed and re-confirmed for their second term. They can even tie the number of justices directly to the number of Federal circuits, so that it is harder to ratfuck on the future. 26 years is long enough to insulate a justice from politics. And out of our 116 justices to date, only 28 have served more than 26 years.

    But by giving every President the right to nominate one justice per year, it makes the process more regular, and the political payoff for engineering a single appointment becomes less attractive. Supreme Court turnover becomes a predictable thing.

    At this point, Republicans may be willing to support that amendment, because the alternative would be for President Newsom to appoint 4 Liberals to the court for Life in quick succession, and wait for their own full control to ratfuck it again. That might take a while.

    • homura1650@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      You do not need a constitutional amendment. Until 1911; part of a Supreme Court Justice’s job was “riding circuit”, to serve on more local circuit courts. This practice was established and abolished by Congress. Congress has the existing constitutional authority to assign Justices to circuit courts.

      There is also a recently proposed TERM act, which would promote Justices to senior Justices after 18 years. A senior Justice is still a Justice, but would not actively decide cases unless there was a shortage of active Justices.

      Congress could also impeach some of the current Justices. Either for partisan political reasons; perjury at their confirmation; or blatant corruption.

    • xenomor@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      It’s so adorable that you think Democrats might ever actually do anything if they got power. Enjoy your cookie.

      • SippyCup@lemmy.ml
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        5 hours ago

        We have two pro capitalist parties in the US.

        What’s interesting is that during the great depression they knew that economic collapse would lead to a socialist revolution, and so put in the work to “inoculate” the US against it. They would give us a little socialism, so that we wouldn’t go all in. Medicare, social security, minimum wage, all these things came out of that philosophy. And it fucking worked. The US had the single most robust economy in human history from the 40s all the way through to the 1970s. When, in response to the civil rights movement, white southerners actively voted against their own self interest KNOWINGLY, so that black people wouldn’t get a fair share of the pie. Nixon began the week to work to dismantle the New Deal, and we’re basically living with the shattered broken corpse of the best social program we were ever going to get with votes.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    One author is in the federalist society (the reason SC is corrupt)…

    And the other seems to believe international laws shouldn’t exist and Israel is totally cool…

    They want us to “accept” it’s corrupt and somehow do away with the entire notion of a SC and replace it with some “populist rule”.

    Similarly, progressives are increasingly converging on the idea of both expanding and “disempowering” federal courts. Attentive to the reality that the supreme court especially is not and rarely has been their friend, left-leaning advocates are finding ways to empower ordinary people, trading the hollow hope of judicial power for the promise of popular rule.

    To label as “nihilists” those sketching an alternate, more democratic future is, in other words, not only mistaken but outright bizarre. Rather than adhere to the same institutionalist strategies that helped our current crisis, reformers must insist on remaking institutions like the US supreme court so that Americans don’t have to suffer future decades of oligarchy-facilitating rule that makes a parody of the democracy they were promised.

    In Trump’s second term, the Republican-appointed majority on the supreme court has brought their institution to the brink of illegitimacy. Far from pulling it back from the edge, our goal has to be to push it off.

    They’re right wingers trying to hijack progressivism to destroy the SC after it changes all the laws to how they want, and before the left can use it as a weapon to change the laws back.

    I’d love to say people won’t be naive enough to fall for this, but I don’t want to lie

    • LesserAbe@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      I think this is a misread of the article. They don’t seem to be suggesting any actual solution, and only mention “populist rule” in passing with no specifics.

      But they do seem to be blaming the left for not doing anything about the problem. And I thought it was funny how at the top they were like “even liberals like Roberts”

  • jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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    9 hours ago

    Unfortunately, there’s no process for that. Single judges can be removed via impeachment, but being a partisan hack is not a high crime.

    Similarly, nothing can happen with Conservatives controlling the House and Senate.

    • ooterness@lemmy.world
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      3 hours ago

      A core problem is that impeachment votes have become a team popularity contest, with the details of charges, innocence, guilt, etc. being irrelevant except for theatrics.

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      Oh, they know…

      https://fedsoc.org/bio/ryan-doerfler

      They want to trick people into dissolving the SC before the left gains control and can replace the problematic ones while taking steps to prevent this from happening again.

      It’s like a kid that walks up and slaps a peer, then immediately says “no tag backs” and says the game is over…

      The federalist society got what it wants out of the SC, and now they want people to stop abusing it before we can undo what they just did.

      I don’t know why googling authors isn’t the norm when billionaires own all the media companies. If you don’t you’ll never notice clear hypocrites like Ryan Doerfler.

    • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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      8 hours ago

      Alas, the Constitution does little to protect against incompetent voters who refuse to act to protect their democracy.

    • dhork@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      It’s illegitimate because Mitch McConnell refused to hold a vote on Obama’s last SC pick, because he knew it would pass if that vote was held. So he left the SC one member short until Trump won, and they confirmed his pick instead. Basically, he (and the chairman of the Judiciary Committee) exercised a two-person veto on the pick.

      He claimed it was too close to an election to act, but then when RBG passed away with even less time before an election, he pressed ahead with Trump’s pick anyway.

      He made up a new rule, then abandoned it when it was expedient to do so. If rules mattered, one of those picks would have been different.

        • dhork@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          “illegitimate” is different than “illegal”. In some context they are the same, but “illegitimate” can also mean “against rules” or “against custom”.

          The President nominates these officials, but they take office “with the advice and consent of the Senate”. I take that to mean that after the President consults with the Senate, he makes an appointment, and the Senate is obligated to give an up-or-down vote on it.

          I remember that time well, and Merrick Garland (yes, that guy) was the compromise candidate that Obama picked because he had the respect, of a lot of Republican Senators. The Senate had a constitutional duty to put it to an up or down vote, which Mitch ignored, because he would not like the outcome. (If Garland didn’t have any Republican support, after all, they could have just held the vote, and voted it down. But that would have given Obama another chance to nominate someone else.)

          There is no law that says “the Senate must act within this period of time”. We can’t haul McConnell to the brig because of it. Yet, it is clear to me that he flat out ignorea something the Constitution obligated him to do. It can be clearly seen as illegitimate, especially when he changed those rules a few years later.