Las Vegas Review-Journal

Term limits for high court

For U.S. Supreme Court justices, 18 years enough

- By Ben Feuer Los Angeles Times

RUMORS are swirling that U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, the Republican-appointed judge whose swing vote has preserved detente between the court’s left and right for a generation, may announce his retirement in the next year.

The mere idea that Kennedy’s seat could get filled by President Donald Trump and the conservati­ve Republican Senate has sent many on the left into a tailspin of anxiety and despair. In the 29 years Kennedy has served on the court, he has authored opinions or cast tie-breaking votes in major, divisive cases, including decisions that preserved a constituti­onal right to abortion, recognized social and sexual liberties for gays and lesbians, granted habeas corpus protection­s to Guantanamo Bay prisoners, confirmed a Second Amendment right to own a handgun in the home, and applied the First Amendment to corporatio­ns engaged in political speech.

To many liberals, Kennedy’s replacemen­t with a strict originalis­t like Justice Neil Gorsuch would feel downright apocalypti­c. Indeed, Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-utah, told reporters in April that the battle to replace Kennedy will be “Armageddon.”

Liberals aren’t the only ones who get anxious over Supreme Court appointmen­ts, of course. When it seemed Antonin Scalia’s seat would go to Merrick Garland, which would have created a more liberal majority on the court, the Republican-led Senate refused to give Garland any hearings or votes for an unpreceden­t- ed 293 days — until Barack Obama was no longer president — a maneuver that led to bitter resentment and set a worrisome precedent for future vacancies. Meanwhile, some liberals are so worried about the health of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who is 84, that they’re sending her kale recipes. Things are clearly out of hand.

This level of speculatio­n, fear and suspense over when any single public official retires is a sign that the stakes of Supreme Court appointmen­ts are too high. Both parties should consider a scheme put forward by two Northweste­rn University law professors.

In a 2006 paper for the Harvard Law Review, Steven Calabresi and James Lindgren proposed that Supreme Court justices should serve 18-year terms, with a new judge appointed every two years. Each president would in effect get to nominate two justices for every term in office, and the Senate would agree to promptly consider them on a regular schedule.

The sitting court would be composed of the nine most recent appointees.

Of course, a justice might unexpected­ly die, retire, resign or be impeached. But for the most part, Supreme Court appointmen­ts would become more quotidian, like other executive or judicial nomination­s. The public, the press and Congress would know what to expect and when to expect it.

With a new justice always around the corner and a built-in limit to the length of any one person’s influence, the Senate could more easily accept an opposing president’s nomination, breaking the go-nowhere titfor-tat cycle of congressio­nal partisansh­ip that stalled the appointmen­t of Garland.

Such a system would also eliminate the “tyranny of the young,” whereby presidents seek to appoint the youngest possible justices in a calculated effort to further their legacies for the greatest number of decades. It might also encourage minority parties and interest groups to limit their cries of impending doom.

The Constituti­on’s Article III has long been interprete­d to grant judges life tenure. But the text actually has some leeway. It states that judges “shall hold their offices during good behaviour” and receive “a compensati­on, which shall not be diminished,” while in office. The rest of the Supreme Court’s structure, and what it means to “hold” the “office” of a Supreme Court justice, is left to Congress.

The benefits of life tenure are clear. By eliminatin­g the ability of political actors to remove judges, the Constituti­on frees judges to make decisions based on reason and their honest understand­ing of law, rather than to protect their positions by pleasing a political patron.

But life expectancy today is a full 30 years greater than it was in 1789. In the country’s first 200 years, the average Supreme Court justice served for 15 years; Kennedy is creeping up on 30. Gorsuch, fit and 49 years old, could serve for the next 35 years or more.

That’s a very long time for an unelected official to exercise such vast public authority.

Ben Feuer is chairman of the California Appellate Law Group, a law firm that practices in the U.S. Supreme Court. He wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.

 ?? Clay Jones ?? Creators Syndicate
Clay Jones Creators Syndicate

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