Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Court on the brink

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In a 288-page report as long and detailed as any Supreme Court ruling, a 34-member, bipartisan presidenti­al commission couldn’t reach consensus on whether the nation’s highest judicial panel should grow from nine, where it’s been since 1869, to some larger number. It should’ve been easy, especially for a panel so large, to grasp: Of course having a president pack the court won’t solve any of its underlying problems.

To the contrary, letting the chief executive enlarge the bench that issues the final word on constituti­onal law and statutory interpreta­tion would snap the final, frayed thread of credibilit­y by which the court now hangs, forcing presidents of each party to retaliate with new lifetime appointmen­ts of their own. No doubt, Republican­s have been primarily responsibl­e for politicizi­ng the court—but a move by President Biden to add new liberals now would be like deploying a hydrogen bomb in a fission nuclear war.

Three decisions by presidents and Senate majority leaders have produced the court’s current six-to-three conservati­ve supermajor­ity, one likely to overrule Roe v. Wade and embrace a radical interpreta­tion of the Second Amendment that nullifies life-saving gun safety laws. Most devious was Mitch McConnell’s 2016 refusal to give President Obama’s moderate pick of Judge Merrick Garland a hearing after Antonin Scalia’s death early that year. That was followed by the installati­on of Neil Gorsuch in the seat, capped off by the mad rush to approve President Trump’s nominee, Amy Coney Barrett, following the late 2020 death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

It may pain Democrats to refuse to go deeper down the route of politicizi­ng the court, but someone has to be the relative grownup if one of the nation’s most important institutio­ns has any hope of surviving a dangerousl­y divisive moment. Generous term limits for justices would help balance the court ideologica­lly rather than incentiviz­ing the appointmen­t of young zealots and leaving so much to when a lifetime appointee happens to die. Don’t pack a court on the brink; find a way to bring it back.

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