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My Key Issue: Federal Judge Appointments

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by Mulder, Sep 27, 2004.

  1. Mulder

    Mulder Member

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    I may be particularly keyed into this issue since I just started law school, but for me it is the most important. The next President will, by appointing key judge positions, set standards for the next few DECADES. Check the article where it talks about how long some of the Supreme Court Justices have been there. Some have been on the bench longer than some of us have been alive!

    Who would you rather have appointing these judges?

    Next President Will Pick Scores of Judges

    By ANNE GEARAN, Associated Press Writer

    WASHINGTON - The next president's most enduring legacy may be in an area little mentioned in the campaign so far: the federal courts, where rulings on such hot-button issues as abortion, gay marriage and the death penalty could have lasting impact.

    With an aging Supreme Court, it's likely that over the next four years either President Bush (news - web sites) or Democrat John Kerry (news - web sites) will choose one or more new justices, along with scores or even hundreds of federal appeals court and trial judges.

    Courts can have the crucial last word on important and contentious issues, as recent rulings on affirmative action and presidential war powers attest. But chances are most voters won't hear specifics about the kind of judges either candidate favors.

    "As a campaign issue I think it's been almost invisible," said Supreme Court historian David Garrow.

    That's a departure from the 2000 campaign, when both Bush and Democratic nominee Al Gore (news - web sites) pointed to particular Supreme Court justices they admired and partisans on both sides spoke with certainty about an expected Supreme Court retirement.

    Four years later, not one Supreme Court justice has left the bench. That makes it even more likely there will be an opening sometime soon, law professors and activists said.

    Next month the current court begins its 10th term without a vacancy. Only one justice, Clarence Thomas (news - web sites), is younger than 65. Speculation about retirements has focused on Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist, who will turn 80 in October, and Justices John Paul Stevens (news - web sites), 84, and Sandra Day O'Connor (news - web sites), 74.

    "It's not that people were crying wolf last time, it's just that it didn't play out the way we expected," said Duke University constitutional law professor Erwin Chemerinsky.

    The candidates may be wary of predicting any vacancies this time, and other more immediate issues are crowding out larger discussion of the court and judges, scholars said.

    Bush did mention the issue in his acceptance speech at the Republican convention, criticizing judges he contends have gone too far in rulings declaring gay marriage legal and a ban on certain abortions unconstitutional.

    "I support the protection of marriage against activist judges," the president said, "and I will continue to appoint federal judges who know the difference between personal opinion and the strict interpretation of the law."

    For his part, Kerry promises on his campaign Web site that as president he would try to "reverse damage done to civil rights laws by right-wing judges" and would "only appoint judges with a record of enforcing the nation's civil rights and anti-discrimination laws."

    If Bush wins a second term, he could be on his way to naming more federal trial and appeals judges than either of the last two-term presidents. Bill Clinton (news - web sites) appointed 367 judges, including two Supreme Court justices, and Ronald Reagan (news - web sites) chose 357 judges, including three Supreme Court justices. Reagan also elevated Rehnquist from associate to chief justice.

    With 201 judges appointed so far, Bush is already ahead of the 187 his father chose during his one-term presidency — though many of the current president's nominees have had to weather a rocky confirmation process in the highly partisan Senate.

    Picking a Supreme Court justice would be a bigger prize.

    Supreme Court justices, like other federal judges, can remain on the job decades after the president who chose them. They serve for life or until they choose to retire.

    Rehnquist is the longest-serving member of the high court, chosen 32 years ago by Richard Nixon. Stevens is still there 29 years after he was Gerald Ford's lone Supreme Court pick.

    The nine-member high court is divided basically into three camps — conservative, middle-of-the-road and moderately liberal — and frequently lines up 5-4 on the most difficult cases. Depending on who is counting, the court is one vote or two away from overturning Roe v. Wade (news - web sites), the 3-decade-old ruling that affirmed the legality of abortion.

    In an AP-Ipsos poll taken last week, 56 percent of those surveyed said they wanted the president to nominate a Supreme Court justice with conservative political views if a vacancy occurs; 37 percent said they preferred a justice with liberal views.

    Both sides in the presidential campaign have raised the ideological issue among their own strongest supporters. A recent Democratic fund-raising letter on behalf of Democrats, for example, warned of the dangers of re-electing Bush.

    "Are you ready for Chief Justice Antonin Scalia (news - web sites)?" the letter said. Scalia and fellow conservative Thomas are the justices Bush cited in 2000 as models for future picks.

    Voters should be aware of the importance of Supreme Court vacancies, said Elliot Mincberg, legal director of People for the American Way, a liberal group that has opposed several of Bush's lower-court picks.

    "It's not the next four years that is the issue," Mincberg said. "It's the next 20, 30 or 40 and what people's rights and liberties are going to look like."
     
  2. Deckard

    Deckard Blade Runner
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    Mulder, as I bet you've noticed, I've brought this up as reason enough to vote George W. Bush out of office everytime a discussion of "reasons for a new President" came up. I can't believe Kerry isn't running on this issue. Oh, I'm sure it's come up from time to time, and maybe it's on his website (and who really thinks the American people who remain unsure about who to vote for, or whether it's worth voting, are flocking to the candidate's websites?? Sure! (insert rolleyes here)), but he should be hammering Bush about this in every speech.

    Hell, run against Clarence Thomas! Scalia! Point out how many votes have been 5-4 over serious issues. Bush's supporters will say that that is a good reason to vote for their guy, but the average American is moderate, in my opinion, and Scalia/Thomas are anything but. Point it out!

    Kerry, RUN FOR PRESIDENT, you idiot! Get off your butt and make your case!
    The American people want a change. Give them reasons to vote for you!


    Keep D&D Civil!!
     
  3. giddyup

    giddyup Member

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    Let's not even have an election-- just let Deckard decide! He already knows....

    :)
     
  4. JPM0016

    JPM0016 Member

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    This jumped out at me. I expected a much closer percentage, since we are split right down the middle.
     
  5. GladiatoRowdy

    GladiatoRowdy Member

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    If you ask Americans if they lean liberal or conservative, more choose conservative. If you ask about the issues, more people choose liberal stances. Somehow, the word "liberal" has become a no-no.
     
  6. bamaslammer

    bamaslammer Member

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    If you want judges who interpret the law.....not make new law out of whole cloth, vote GWB.
     
  7. Deckard

    Deckard Blade Runner
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    Thank you, giddy!
    Sadly, I wasn't nominated. ;)


    Keep D&D Civil!!
     
  8. giddyup

    giddyup Member

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    It's "high" time to start going with neo-liberal... :D
     
  9. nyquil82

    nyquil82 Member

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    that makes two of us who've just started law school
     

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