The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Fix the court, but justice shouldn’t be random

- Devin Watkins is an attorney with the Competitiv­e Enterprise Institute, a free market public policy organizati­on based in Washington. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

Calls for “judicial reform” have too often been code for seeking changes to the courts for partisan advantage. This is why “reform” is rarely accomplish­ed. Why would Republican­s help tilt the courts in favor of Democrats or the other way around?

As things stand, there’s a stalemate on judicial reform in the Senate, due to that chamber’s filibuster rule requiring a two-thirds’ supermajor­ity vote to end debate on a matter.

Unless there is bipartisan support, nothing will happen.

But if the filibuster is eliminated, whichever side is in control of Congress and the presidency may simply create new judicial seats to push the courts in their preferred direction. That would be a terrible outcome, expanding the court system for no legitimate reason, merely to install political partisans. That sort of court packing would degrade judicial independen­ce.

Instead of focusing on partisan advantage, legislator­s should focus on resolving the randomness that plagues the current system. The biggest swings in court leanings occur when a Republican appointee is replaced by a Democratic appointee or vice versa. This occurs when a judge appointed by one party randomly happens to die while the other party holds the White House. The balance of our legal system should not be based by such random chance.

Instead, after each presidenti­al election, the president should get exactly one single appointmen­t to the Supreme Court per term, replacing a justice appointed by a previous president.

With a four-year presidenti­al term and nine justices this means a 36-year judicial term. The balance on the court over time would then be entirely based on the winner of presidenti­al elections over the last 36 years. Likewise, lower federal court seats could have a staggered term so an equal fraction of seats is open each presidenti­al election.

As to how to handle the death of justices, let the justice appoint and get Senate-confirmed an understudy. That person would take over if the justice was no longer able to do perform their duties. That person, upon elevation to a full justice, would then select their own understudy for when they need it and would serve out the remainder of the term. This would ensure their replacemen­t would have a similar jurisprude­nce.

This means the jurisprude­ntial — how the judge treats the law — makeup of the courts would not drasticall­y change due to the death of a justice.

Also, a justice would not feel pressure to stay on the court past when they are fully able to perform their duties to ensure someone of similar views replaced them. Nor would justices be pressured to leave early when there is a current president who shares their

views.

Senate confirmati­on would continue to ensure that the person selected to replace a justice is of a high enough caliber to be trusted with that responsibi­lity. Delaying confirmati­on of qualified nominees would no longer serve an ideologica­l purpose.

One challenge to this reform is it would require a constituti­onal amendment to change the lifetime appointmen­t of judges currently to a very long fixed term of office. This wouldn’t change the effective term of a justice very much, considerin­g the longest serving justice was William O. Douglas at 36 years and 209 days.

A constituti­onal amendment is hard to pass, but this kind of unbiased amendment could acquire the bipartisan support needed to garner a twothirds’ vote of both houses and then ratificati­on by three-fourths of the states.

There would be some important details to work out: for instance, perhaps a pension upon retirement might only be provided if they were a judge or justice for at least 15 years. Or, should the understudy work with the justice every day as a kind of permanent clerk or live a life outside the court?

There would also have to be a transition plan from the current system to this new system. Presumably the remaining term of each justice would be determined by their seniority, with the most senior leaving after the next presidenti­al election. Currently that would be Justice Clarence Thomas.

This would remove the randomness from our legal system without giving advantage to any party. The 36-year cycle to completely change the Supreme Court will ensure that the law remains stable and only changes slowly.

The changes that do occur would be based on who is selected by the American people and not random chance.

 ??  ?? Devin Watkins
Devin Watkins

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