Biden's Supreme Court Reforms Are Unnecessary and Wrong
The Supreme Court is not as “extreme” or divided as it may seem.

President Joe Biden's new op-ed in The Washington Post makes the bold argument that, following a constitutional amendment to reverse a recent Supreme Court decision, Congress should pass both Supreme Court term limits and an ethics code to "restore the public's faith in the judicial system." According to Biden, the Court's "extreme" decisions and ethical crisis require immediate action.
Looking at the last Supreme Court term, none of this is true. The Court's opinions were nuanced and largely unanimous, and there are no credible allegations of vote-buying. If Biden wants to restore faith in the Court, he'd do better to highlight these nuances rather than using the Court as a political talking point.
At the outset, it's worth taking a bird's eye view of the Court. This term, the Court ruled unanimously in almost half (46 percent) of cases, which was similar to the year before (48 percent) and a significant uptick from the term before that (29 percent). Among the Court's unanimous or near-unanimous opinions were hot-button cases involving former President Donald Trump's eligibility for the presidency, access to the abortion drug mifepristone, the government's ability to dissuade companies from doing business with the National Rifle Association, regulation of social media companies, and the scope of the Second Amendment. Such consensus among the justices undercuts Biden's characterization of a rogue or extremist Court.
It's true that the Court is sometimes divided along partisan lines—and in many of those cases, the justices disagree vigorously. As Biden points out, Trump v. United States (regarding presidential immunity) and Dobbs v. Jackson (regarding abortion) represent two such cases. But just because these opinions were divisive doesn't make them radical.
For example, Biden chided the Court for imposing "virtually no limits on what a president can do" in the immunity case, but the Court maintained an ample sphere of liability for presidential acts. All nine justices agreed that presidents have absolutely no immunity for unofficial acts. While the majority ruled that absolute immunity applies to core, official acts, it emphasized that noncore duties are only presumptively immune.
Reasonable people can disagree about whether the Court made it too hard to rebut that presumption. But to make that call, we'll have to see how the standard plays out in practice. Trump's case, for example, will now go back down to the district court, which will determine which acts are official or unofficial, core or noncore, and whether the special prosecutor can surmount any presumption of immunity that applies. It makes little sense to say at this premature stage, as Biden does, that the only limits left on the president are "self-imposed."
Biden also criticizes the Court for "overturn[ing] settled legal precedents" like Roe v. Wade. But this is a critique with no substance. Precedent isn't an end in and of itself; prior cases should stand when they're correct and well-reasoned and fall when they're not. Some of the most important Supreme Court decisions in history "overturned settled precedent," including Brown v. Board of Education (overturning the separate but equal doctrine) and Gideon v. Wainwright (extending the right to counsel to felony defendants in state courts). Overturning precedent is part of a Supreme Court justice's job description. Without context, saying a judge overruled an earlier case is meaningless.
Biden's ethics accusations similarly lack substance. Though many have wrung their hands over Justice Clarence Thomas' friendship with businessman Harlan Crow, not one person—including Biden—has pointed to any specific instance where the justice supposedly traded his vote for a gift from his wealthy friend (and they ignore that Thomas voted against Crow's personal convictions in the abortion case). That's not surprising. Thomas is widely regarded as one of the most consistent justices on the Court who regularly writes separate opinions to explain his idiosyncratic views. Given that his views are so consistent, transparent, and well-known, it would be especially difficult for him to abandon them in exchange for a flight on a private jet. If anything, bribes are much more likely in the context of opaque decision making—as happens behind closed doors in the legislative and executive branches.
In at least some ways, the Court is showing more restraint than in prior years. It's taking fewer cases than ever (just 59 this year, compared to 82 a decade ago), it's finding reasons to sidestep thorny issues, and it's increasingly using judge-made legal doctrines to rule that the plaintiffs have no right to sue or that the case needs more time before the Court can step in. It also continues to produce interesting alignments between justices considered to be on opposite ideological spectrums. In a case involving the January 6 defendants, for example, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson voted with "conservative" justices to throw out the convictions while Justice Amy Coney Barrett voted with the "liberals" to affirm them.
In sum, the Supreme Court is not exactly a radical conservative monolith. This term, Court watchers actually observed strong disagreements among Republican-appointed justices. If Biden cares about bolstering the public's faith in the judiciary, he'd be wise to emphasize this nuance.
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They are necessary because the liberals are not getting their way.
Liberals whine and cry about judicial activism and legislating from the bench whenever they don't get their way, yet their absolute favorite decision, RvW, was literally legislating from the bench. The decision itself was treated as law.
The Left does not have principles. They are utterly utilitarian, and are after power and mean to have it by any methods they can get away with.
It is law; The Supreme Law of the Land. The 'peoples' law over their government.
The court was never a problem until the conservatives got a majority. RvW was terrible legal logic, and that's coming from a position that is not opposed to abortion in all cases.
Now you have people talking about stacking the court, Venezuela-style. I just do not understand how leftists will so easily abandon the checks on government to impose their will, like their tactics will never, ever be turned back upon them when they are in the minority.
RvW was a LIMIT on government (no government pre-viable).
Holy crap; Pro-Lifers are so full of BS on the subject.
Now that it's gone; State's pretends they own people.
As-if the after affects wasn't 100% obvious.
The Democrats getting salty about the SCOTUS majority requiring them to abide by the Constitution as written, time to change the rules governing how the Court is constituted, because following the law is so inconvenient to progressivism.
Presidential immunity is no where in the constitution. And they made up the requirement for Congress to implement 14A3.
What law was broken? Sharing voting information with the public?
And they made up the requirement for Congress to implement 14A3.
Maybe they read the amendment all the way to 14A5?
A5: Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.
Leave it to Democrats to take issue with the most diverse Supreme Court in American history.
Biden is an idiot, more at 11:00.
Please stop insulting...idiots.
What about a code of ethics for the legislature and executive?
"WE BEAT BIG PHARMA!!!" (By giving them 70 years to release Covid vaccine data and making them immune to liability. You sure beat them goodly!)
Hey Congress, got any good stock tips?
Stock tips?
Ask Nazi Pelosi.
She's the best member of Congress when it comes to investing.
What's her secret? Just women's intuition?
That's birthing person's intuition, you biggot!
Nice to hear a logical, fact-based viewpoint from a Reason writer about Biden's proposed reforms.
Somin is off his rocker...
Paid clinger mouthpiece approves of right-wing court's abandonment of stare decisis; doesn't worry much about concealed "gifts" to justices; and endorses statist womb management, absolute immunity for government officials, race-targeting voter suppression, etc.
Another rousing meeting of Libertarians for Social Conservatism and Unaccountable Government Officials, convened at a "libertarian" site whose junior varsity writers outsource heavy lifting to right-wing advocacy shops.
So sorry your Nazi ideas aren't working out Herr Kirkland.
Stare Decisis: Women do NOT have bodily autonomy.
What other muddled bullshit did you discover orbiting the dregs in your fruit wine, Reverend? Perhaps less shit would fall out of your face were you occasionally sober.
Good riddance to stare decisis. For too long it has been an excuse to perpetuate obviously flawed rulings. The text of the Constitution must take precedence, or what's the point of having one?
The right-wing court endorsed no womb management at all. They merely returned to the plain meaning of the constitution that such a power was not delegated to the federal government by the states.
How does a "living Constitution" but "dead (progressive) precedent" make any sense?
Another pile of worthless letters from the asshole bigot
FOAD.
For an opposing view, Steven Mazie says what the conservative court is doing is significant and sweeping legal change. At 26:20 in the NCC video linked below:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WuaQCoRkTwY
Probably neither what Mazie says, nor what this Anastasia person says here, is exactly correct. But probably no conservatives could possibly be very unpleased with the opinions rendered by this court. They don’t mind the grift, and they welcome the court behaving as some sort of religious institution. Maybe this will work out well when Vance is president in 2029 and the religious majority on the court is even larger than it is now.
D-
Nice article, Anastasia Boden. Nice first name, your parents have good taste. Too bid, I mean bod, I mean bad about the last name, but it must raise a few chuckles.
but the Court maintained an ample sphere of liability for presidential acts. All nine justices agreed that presidents have absolutely no immunity for unofficial acts. While the majority ruled that absolute immunity applies to core, official acts, it emphasized that noncore duties are only presumptively immune.
So basically the Supreme Court took on the Constitutional authority to pardon Presidents. Where in the Constitution is that authority granted to the Supreme Court? And if it was granted to the SC, what is the legal basis for President Ford pre-empting the SC authority to pardon Nixon?
The SC invented their rationale for the immunity decision out of thin air – with no originalist basis – and with 250 years of Presidents acting with the knowledge that they were liable for even ‘core official acts’. As Thomas Jefferson wrote:
The question you propose, whether circumstances do not sometimes occur which make it a duty in officers of high trust to assume authorities beyond the law, is easy of solution in principle, but sometimes embarrassing in practice. A strict observance of the written laws is doubtless one of the high duties of a good citizen: but it is not the highest. The laws of necessity, of self-preservation, of saving our country when in danger, are of higher obligation. To lose our country by a scrupulous adherence to written law, would be to lose the law itself, with life, liberty, property and all those who are enjoying them with us; thus absurdly sacrificing the end to the means…
The officer who is called to act on this superior ground, does indeed risk himself on the justice of the controlling powers of the Constitution, and his station makes it his duty to incur the risk. But those controlling powers, and his fellow citizens generally, are bound to judge according to the circumstances under which he acted…
It is incumbent on those only who accept of great charges, to risk themselves on great occasions, when the safety of the nation, or some of its very high interests are at stake. An officer is bound to obey orders: yet he would be a bad one who should do it in cases for which they were not intended, and which involved the most important consequences. The line of discrimination between cases may be difficult; but the good officer is bound to draw it at his own peril, and throw himself on the justice of his country and the rectitude of his motives.
Answer – You’re totally full of shit. As is the SC majority in Trump v US.
bolstering the public's faith in the judiciary
The public deserves no faith in the judiciary. The SC majority has conspired to undermine 250 years of well-understood Presidential authority and liability/risk. In order to impose a monarchy. That smells to me of domestic enemy of the Constitution.
The SC invented their rationale for the immunity decision out of thin air – with no originalist basis – and with 250 years of Presidents acting with the knowledge that they were liable for even ‘core official acts’.
So a pardon could be criminalized merely by a prosecutor arguing it constitutes obstruction of justice?
What example are you talking about
Any pardon. Could a prosecutor charge a president with obstruction of justice for pardoning someone who was under investigation?
I’m not interested in playing hypotheticals that Trump supporters want to throw out there because they want Trump to commit crimes and finagle immunity.
Give me examples of where this has occurred by a real president.
It is notable that Ford pardoned Nixon (and later some Watergate people). Nixon did NOT pardon Watergate conspirators for the purpose of shielding himself.
Oh - and I suspect one reason such stuff hasn't occurred is because two clauses - 'take care that the laws be faithfully executed' (Art2 Sec3) keeps prez legal when complied with and puts him in impeachment territory (and/or post-presidency legal risk) if violated - and 'except in cases of Impeachment' (where pardons are unconstitutional).
The very fact Nixon was pardoned in the first place pretty clearly indicates that there are limits to immunity. If the President was immune from breaking the law with the CIA, then a pardon simply wouldn't have been needed. For what it's worth, it is obvious that using the CIA on American soil to spy on domestic targets is outside the law. More recently, the DNC has used the FBI for that task and it has apparently been fine and dandy since the FBI is authorized to operate on American soil. They seem to have learned that lesson.
One imagines the FedGov didn't want a decision there on the books, and it's left to the reader to determine why that might be.
I also don't think you actually read the quote you posted, or it's meaning escapes you. The question Jefferson poses (and answers) is whether circumstances do not sometimes occur which make it a duty in officers of high trust to assume authorities beyond the law.
Authorities beyond the law, one might note, are A) not for the government to assume and B) could be interpreted as violations of law depending on circumstances, which Jefferson himself notes would risk the penalties thereof.
He's basically saying in times of trouble the Government has a moral duty to do what is required, the law be damned, which may risk the politicians career, life, or liberty as they are notably outside the law as written. I have no idea what point you are trying to make with that, but it's not supporting the notion that Presidents, Congress, and the Senate have immunity from being taken to court for acts they might take that personally harm you or your business as long as those actions are legal and within their authority. If they could be taken to court for that kind of thing, one notes the Prohibition would not have occurred as just one glaring example.
it’s not supporting the notion that Presidents, Congress, and the Senate have immunity from being taken to court for acts they might take that personally harm you or your business as long as those actions are legal and within their authority.
I agree. His letter is completely against that notion of immunity. AGAINST what the SC majority opinion invents and asserts. My restatement of that Jefferson letter is:
That while the President's duty is always to - faithfully execute the laws as specified in the Constitution - that does not always mean he can do that. Sometimes violating the law will be necessary to perform a more important duty of his office [meaning specifically the sort of situation where the SC invented their immunity bs]. And in that circumstance he will not have immunity to protect his ass from risk. Rather he will have to take the risk and then later if necessary explain his motives and the context of his decision. IOW - he will remain fully accountable under the law and will have to (basically) plead jury nullification.
Jefferson himself was taken to court after his Presidency by a landowner in Louisiana re land titles or somesuch. Jefferson won before the trial even started - with Chief Justice Marshall deciding. But he WAS at legal risk.
'As Biden points out, Trump v. United States (regarding presidential immunity) and Dobbs v. Jackson (regarding abortion) represent two such cases. But just because these opinions were divisive doesn't make them radical. For example, Biden chided the Court for imposing "virtually no limits on what a president can do" in the immunity case'
So, limits on Presidents, good, but limits on reluctant mothers, bad.
How about yearly IQ and l/or other mental tests - yearly? At least one of the justices couldn't out perform a chimpanzee on an IQ test.
There's still the term limits issue, and it's not going away. The consequences of lifetime appointment have changed since ratification, for the same reason Social Security and Medicare are strapped. Average life expectancy at birth for US males in 1790 can be (roughly) estimated at 40 years. By 1900 this was about 45-60 for males and females and rising rapidly. In 2020 average life expectancy at birth is 75 for males and 80 for females. As far as I know Congress didn't take this into account when the original Social Security and Medicare were legislated.
I'm more than somewhat convinced that when Article III was ratified, no one could have predicted the improvements in the health and longevity of the American people that were just over the horizon. Soon there will be only 2.5 workers paying the payroll tax to support each retiree receiving S.S. and Medicare benefits. This is currently a cohort effect, to be sure. Still, this leg of the oft-invoked three-legged stool analogy has grown shorter, and increasing the minimum retirement age is only one way to address the underlying problem--longevity and stagnant birth rates.
So it's certainly conceivable that some day we might have, to coin a phrase, a Geronto-Court consisting of all nine Justices over the age of 90. Time moves on. The Framers' conception of lifetime appointment may well have been appropriate in 1790. It's not appropriate now. If a sitting president can be judged too old and infirm to serve at age 80, we can vote him out (directly or indirectly). Who is there to affirm that a sitting Justice of any age is entirely fit to serve? What is the mechanism for removal of a Justice widely seen as infirm/unfit but not convicted of anything? The idea of amending Article III (or anything else) makes me shiver too. But life tables and demographic shifts cannot be ignored.
That’s not how life expectancy and old age work.
Jeff Jacoby made a similar point to Daddyhill. He used Ruth Bader Ginsburg as an example of a geriatric justice.
Term limits can only be imposed by amending the Constitution.
Furthermore, politically there is no way such an amendment can pass, let alone be ratified, without exempting justice appointed prior to the ratification of the amendment.
The first 10 chief justices appointed lived to an average age of 73.
This kinda like, "The Framers didn't take into account high-powered rifles and large-capacity magazines!"
It's insulting, really, how stupid you think they all were.
Listen Joe Biden maybe doing this for all the wrong reasons and is certainly seeking to do this in an unconstitutional manner but I'm not exactly opposed with an amendment setting term limits for the judiciary and legislative branches and throw in there a max age limit for all 3 branches.
Uh-oh, that makes you a Biden cultist now. Or so I've been told.
But seriously, I broadly agree with you. We should at least be open to having a conversation on the matter of term limits for all branches of government.
I think there is a stronger argument for judges having term limits than Congresscritters, because judges, once appointed, are only minimally accountable to the people after that (only via the impeachment process, really), while Congresscritters, despite the high incumbency rate, do actually have to stand for election.
I would not mind seeing these ideas discussed within the larger context of governmental reform broadly - increasing the size of the House, getting rid of gerrymandering once and for all, exploration of alternative methods of voting such as RCV, and so forth. It would be nice if there was a party out there willing to boldly stand on a platform like this. Unfortunately it's a bit boring and doesn't have any sexy culture war elements to exploit.
It’s only been working for 250 years, time to do something different!
President Joe Biden's new op-ed in…According to Biden, the Court's "extreme" decisions and…If Biden cares about bolstering the public's faith in the judiciary…
OMFG, are we back to pretending Brandon has any agency whatsoever, and isn’t just some vacant stand-in for whoever is really running the country?
How the fuck did that happen so fast?
He's out of the way for the election, have no fear about his ability to lead the free world for the next 6 months. It's not like WW3 could break out at any minute.
If Biden and Democrats weren't such filthy creatures they'd be straight about their intentions.
"Having a Supreme Law threatens [our] democracy!", is what all leftards think anyways.
An ethics code is fine. Who could be against that?
Rotating 18-year terms seems like an improvement over the current random distribution of appointments. The Court has become much more political than originally intended, causing both sides to scramble for the youngest nominee they can find who will vote reliably for one side or the other, with enough academic brainpower to explain the vote away, without having too much of a track record to endanger his or her confirmation.
A fixed term would allow for the appointment of older and wiser legal minds, and elections would still have consequences, but they would be distributed systematically rather than at the reaper’s whim. The proposals don’t seem to favor either side, and seem like an improvement over the current system. They should, of course, be implemented properly, with a Constitutional amendment, and the sitting justices should continue to serve out their lifetime appointments, perhaps mapping them to 18-year rotating terms, but not limiting them to those years.
This is an "improvement" that would have as bad consequences to our system of checks and balances similar to the direct election of Senators.
Term limits may be an improvement, or they may not. One thing it would do is allow for predictions of which way the court will swing, at least for the 4 years following a presidential election, so plaintiffs would time their cases to get them in front of a favorable court. If you think the court has too little regard for stare decisis now, wait until it shifts ideological majorities every 4-8 years.
I have to say I like Glenn Reynolds' solution.
Since we are talking about fantasies of fiction that will never happen, let's go with a court of 50 justices- one justice for each state, appointed by that State's Governor. Judges for an individual case would be selected by random lot to get some number (3/5/7) that would then write the opinion.
The importance of each judge would be drastically reduced.
It would give some measure of Power back to the states
It would remove yet another odd power of the President that makes every election "the most important ever".
It would also ensure that the decisions are more likely to represent the will of the public, as a couple activist judges would be unable to make major lasting changes to the nation.
So, the one thing few people ever talk about when broaching this subject is why the Justices have lifetime appointments.
Does anyone know? Anybody here take a civics class, or look into the rationale for this in the first place? Or, better yet, maybe have a little jurisprudence under their belt?
One thing that the Founders really counted on when setting up the American system of government was citizen participation. A government of the people, by the people, and for the people could demand nothing less. The reason the Legislature and the Presidency have terms is because the Founders expected an engaged citizenry to be in a constant state of evaluation and re-evaluation when it came to American policy and public interest. It was also a check on both branches, to ensure political accountability when the people’s representatives started coloring outside the lines. (Now, at risk of opening a tangent, I think it goes without saying that citizen participation has gone completely out the window, and most Americans are now on partisan autopilot; having been conditioned to default voting instead of representative voting. And the only reason I mention this is it helps explain their contempt for SCOTUS – at least, when they don’t get their way – and its lifetime appointments.)
Thing about the Court is, they’re not a representative branch. SCOTUS was always made to be completely independent of the people and their fickle policy desires. They represent The Constitution. They don’t answer to ANY of us – they answer solely and strictly to the Constitution and its derivative jurisprudence. In the context of checks and balances, they’re a check on the people – vis a vis their representatives – to make sure that their desired policy is not an affront to the Constitution.
The greatest betrayal SCOTUS ever perpetrated in that regard was, of course, in West Coast Hotel vs Parrish which effectively gave Justice Holmes (and FDR) what he originally wanted in Lochner v New York. If you’re a student of American history, you’ll see that Parrish was the first truly consequential case where SCOTUS started coloring outside the lines, engaged in judicial activism, and took this “evolved with society” tack – which you might know better the “living breathing document” canard – instead of strict originalism. (More contemporary examples would later manifest in the form of Brown vs Board of Education and, of course, Roe vs Wade and Obergefell vs Hodges.)
So, going back to term limits then, the reason SCOTUS doesn’t have them is A) the standards for being appointed a Justice are among the highest there are – and knowing that, why would we ever want to throw away the wisdom and experience that we deemed worthy of this position in the first place? (YMMV with Jackson, but don’t be a dick. To her credit – which she’s earned, despite her laughable appointment hearings – she’s doing the job right. By all reasonable accounts she’s been a neutral arbiter so far; as have been the Trump appointees. Certainly better than Sotomayor on both counts, sorry not sorry.)
B) With lifetime appointments, Justices are released from political pressure. They don’t have to feel like their job is on the line if they don’t sail the winds of the current political opinion, nor do they feel the pressure of “accomplishing” something with their position before their time is up. This frees them to focus NOT on the Court of Public Opinion, but exclusively on the Constitution and its direct application to the questions in controversy.
C) Judicial stability and consistency is an important thing. The wisdom of the Court is something to be respected, because they’re detached from the social/political implications of their decisions; and those decisions are made from a lifetime of dedication to jurisprudence and commitment to impartiality. If we go rocking the boat for the sake of rocking it, which is what Tapioca Joe is advocating, we undermine that. And the only reason one would ever want to undermine that, is to undermine the Court itself – as the representative of the Constitution.
The people who talk of term limits for SCOTUS are ultimately people who want to politicize the branch of government that is always supposed to remain UNpoliticized. This branch is to remain independent of the whims of the President, Congress, and the People. They are steadfastly devoted to the Constitution. Those who seek to change this ultimately aim to make them subject to those whims.
They’re the “living breathing document” types who don’t actually want Constitutional Law and Constitutional Authority – just an abuse of it to serve their current needs/wants.
I, for one, will never – EVER – vote for anyone who advocates term limits for SCOTUS. That’s a massive glaring red-flag, evidencing someone who despises the greatest legal document ever written.
"the Founders expected an engaged citizenry to be in a constant state of evaluation and re-evaluation when it came to American policy and public interest"
If this be true, why did Ben Franklin famously say, "A republic, if you can keep it?" Although the Founders may have done the best they could do at the time, I doubt that they EXPECTED the citizenry to keep the republic they crafted. They built as many safeguards into the system because, I suspect, they did NOT expect the citizens to stay engaged for very long.
If this be true, why did Ben Franklin famously say, “A republic, if you can keep it?”
He's talking about precisely what you quoted. If the citizen body abandoned its duty to remain engaged and hold their representatives accountable, the State would grow and eventually no longer answer to the People. Which, arguably, is precisely where we are now.
They built as many safeguards into the system because, I suspect, they did NOT expect the citizens to stay engaged for very long.
Especially not when they learned they could vote themselves money. Another Franklin quote, I might add.
Very well said, AT.
>Biden's Supreme Court Reforms Are Unnecessary and Wrong
You should probably run this article by Sullum.
"It's taking fewer cases than ever (just 59 this year, compared to 82 a decade ago)"
Do you really think that this is a good thing?
Is there a reason it might be bad?
A douche in Congress and Executive for 51 years is complaining about term limits?
Change starts at home scum bag. Start with Congress, or better 18 years total elected service. Then we can talk about SCOTUS.