Times-Call (Longmont)

Biden names panel to weigh expanded Supreme Court

- BY GREG STOHR BLOOMBERG NEWS

President Joe Biden on Friday named a panel to study reforms to the U.S. Supreme Court, such as adding justices or institutin­g term limits, fulfilling a campaign vow as progressiv­es push to add more liberals to the conservati­ve leaning court.

Liberal activists have been urging an expansion of the Supreme Court to offset the 6-3 conservati­ve majority created by three appointmen­ts by former President Donald Trump. The right-wing tilt has opened the possibilit­y the court could overturn the constituti­onal right to abor tion and roll back gay rights, though so far the justices have moved slowly on those issues.

The White House announced Friday that Biden will sign an executive order to form the Presidenti­al Commission on the Supreme Court. Biden named a bipartisan group of law professors, former judges and others familiar with the legal system and asked them to issue a report within 180 days of first meeting.

Chairing the panel are Bob Bauer, a New York University law school professor and former White House counsel and Yale Law School Professor Cristina Rodriguez, former deputy assistant attorney general at the Justice Department.

Among the issues the commission will look at are “the court’s role in the Constituti­onal system,” turnover and length of service, and how the cour t selects cases.

The Constituti­on doesn’t say how many justices the cour t must have, but Congress has left the number at nine since 1869. The idea of adding justices hasn’t been seriously discussed since President Franklin Roosevelt unsuccessf­ully pitched a courtpacki­ng plan to Congress in 1937.

On Tuesday, Justice Stephen Breyer said that packing the court could undermine public trust. Breyer, a Democratic appointee and the oldest justice, has become the center of speculatio­n that he might retire in the coming months and give Biden his first highcour t vacancy to fill.

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