Los Angeles Times

Newsflash: The court is political

Re “Ginsburg expresses regret for harsh remarks on Trump,” July 15

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Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.’s “efforts to keep the court separate from the poisonous partisan politics of Washington” have a long way to go if he wants the Supreme Court to move on after it voted along political lines in favor of George W. Bush in Bush vs. Gore, which decided the 2000 election.

Plus, over the years we have seen politics in many decisions coming from the high court, so let’s stop trying to make Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s recent statements on presumptiv­e Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump such an issue.

There is nothing in the code of conduct for federal judges that prevents members of the high court from actually speaking their minds. So let’s look at the bigger picture and acknowledg­e that the Supreme Court is political, and it’s no wonder the public can’t accept its more controvers­ial opinions.

Conrad Corral Cathedral City

The article says Ginsburg issued an “apology” for her comments critical of Trump.

She did not apologize to Trump; rather, she said she had been “ill-advised” to comment publicly because she is a judge.

There’s no need for Ginsburg to apologize to Trump, since what she said about him was accurate. If the other institutio­ns of our democracy had sooner and more forcefully spoken out, it is unlikely that she would have been moved to criticize Trump publicly.

That includes the media. Unfortunat­ely, far too many participan­ts in an ever-shorter news cycle speak with very little regard for the traditiona­l standards of journalism. Also unfortunat­ely, far too few citizens even consult media that conform to sound journalist­ic standards.

John C. Nangle Palm Springs

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