Court packing: Don’t go there
Re “How to moderate the new Supreme Court,” Opinion, Oct. 27
UC Berkeley Law School Dean Erwin Chemerinsky argues for court packing to fix a Supreme Court that he finds ideologically disagreeable. This solution is remarkably shortsighted, as it invites Republicans to do the same when they return to power.
There is no question the Republicans have been playing hardball on court appointments, but responding with court packing sends the message that the Democrats can’t win by the rules.
The better long- term improvement would be to adopt term limits for the justices. This would address concerns beyond partisanship and provide the court with a reliable inf lux of fresh, contemporary thinkers. Bruce Bates Laguna Beach
Other than the thwarted nomination by
President Obama of Judge Merrick Garland in 2016, it is simple happenstance that Republicans have picked more justices in recent years.
I also note that Chemerinsky fails to mention that the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg decided to remain on the court, evidently assuming Hillary Clinton would be president instead of Donald Trump. She could have resigned under Obama to ensure another Democratic nomination.
Finally, Chemerinsky notes the Catholic majority on the Supreme Court. How about bemoaning all the Ivy League representation? One would think those law schools are the only ones turning out attorneys worthy of being on the court.
I do agree with having term limits because of increased life expectancy. That is the only point that did not reflect Chemerinsky’s personal bias.
Jacqueline Brady San Juan Capistrano
Chemerinsky argues that packing the Supreme Court is preferable to having a supermajority of conservatives possibly for decades.
The professor’s time would be better spent advocating for legislators to craft laws whose intent is sufficiently clear to minimize the likelihood that “interpretation” morphs into “amendment.”
“Moderating the court” by changing a legal structure that has stood the test of time is hardly a solution to sloppy lawmaking. Richard George
Woodland Hills
Expanding the Supreme Court is only a temporary solution. Civil rights and environmental issues are presently in danger because of the makeup of the court.
The latest member, whose affiliation with a conservative religious group suggests she believes that control by men is the natural order, is frightening.
The Constitution has to be brought into this century. Too many laws to protect the people and the environment are easily expunged because the Founding Fathers had no way of realizing how civilization would evolve. Lynne Okon Scholnick Long Beach
As an independent voter, I am dismayed by the gamesmanship being employed to tilt the judiciary toward the parties’ respective ideologies. Republicans displayed f lagrant hypocrisy and unjust calculation in their deliberate effort to cement a far- right majority for decades to come.
But is expanding the Supreme Court the only long- term solution?
To me, the most just resolution would be to maintain the Supreme Court as a body of nine justices, but to remove Neil M. Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett and replace them with Garland and a nominee chosen by the next president.
It is unjust to be bound for decades by the naked actions of Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to game the system. Reinstate the Senate filibuster for Supreme Court picks to promote more centrist judges, and set term limits.
The highest court in the land must be restored to legitimacy. Jonathan Breton
Mission Viejo