I'm assuming that when you allude to other hope, you're referring to other solutions that don't involve tinkering with the judiciary.batmagadanleadoff wrote: ↑Thu Oct 22, 2020 1:29 pmOh, a little good-natured snarkiness never hurt anybody. But fair enough. So, like what?Edgy MD wrote: ↑Thu Oct 22, 2020 1:09 pmPlease don't ask questions and then answer them yourself and then tell me to "get real" because you reject the answer that I didn't give.batmagadanleadoff wrote: ↑Thu Oct 22, 2020 12:22 pm
Like what? Neil Gorsuch and Bret Kavanaugh's car falling from a 300 feet cliff during a Dem administration? Get real.
Because there are plenty other things the Dems can do to the judiciary, besides pack it. And if they sweep into power, they won't need bipartisan cooperation.
The Constitution establishes and delineates very few of the Supreme and lower Court's functions. The Constitution establishes the courts, and lists a few kinds of cases that the court must, or may, hear. And very little else beyond that. Most of the court's functions and rules are determined by Congress and legislation, not just the size of the Court. So Congress can, for example, limit the jurisdiction, or the kinds of cases that the courts may hear. It can limit the length of the terms of judges and justices, including the judges and justices already on the bench.
But the Dems should expand the SCOTUS. Otherwise, they won't be able to legislate their way out of their predicaments. Because the Trump court will simply strike down whatever legislation Dems pass. And if you have doubts about this, look no farther than the ACA, which didn't even survive Trump's lower courts after he polluted the lower courts by filling almost 200 vacancies. And this from a legal theory that is widely viewed by a consensus of academics and legal experts and scholars as totally crackpot. As crackpot as the Trump judges.