Since the 2000 (S)election where 5 Republican Judges illegitimately installed a Republican President, progressive discontent with the direction of the judiciary has grown. Stung by decisions by a “Liberal” court during the Civil Rights era which ruled in favor of Civil Rights for Minorities and tore down much of the Jim Crow System, the conservative’s obsession with stacking the courts and the Judicial System reached fevered peaks. The result after three Republican Presidencies in the last 30 years has produced a Judicial nightmare where minorities have no hope of receiving justice or respect for their Civil Rights in courts dominated by conservative sycophants and conservative minority appointments whose singular qualification is to share skin color…
And to have the same respect for other minorities as a KKK Grand Wizard at a lynching.
The Supreme Court of the land, and it’s 5 member conservative majority has become a joke, not because of issues with strict constitutionalism or contructionalism – but their complete and entirely a whore of the Republican Party even to the extent of bending and breaking their own strict constitutional standards.
Kickback?
President Obama finally got the “party” going at the SOTU, at the SCUMUS 5 decision to prostitute our Democracy to the highest bidder, whether that bidder be domestic or foreign.
Democrats Declare Rhetorical War on the Supreme Court
President Obama’s public undressing of the robed Supreme Court justices seated in front of him at the State of the Union address turned heads and drew rebukes from Republicans.
But his words were downright genteel compared with what’s been said on the Senate floor the past two days. Democrats on Capitol Hill accused conservative court members of deciding cases specifically to benefit the Republican Party.
Criticism of the court by lawmakers is nothing new, and those tensions are exactly why the American system of government enshrines a separation of powers between the three branches of government. But Democratic senators seem to have declared political war on the Supreme Court.
Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I., for instance, said on the Senate floor Friday that he sees the court’s recent decision to allow unfettered corporate and union spending on elections (though not as direct aid to candidates) as an overt bid by the majority conservative bloc to pursue “Republican political goals.”
Whitehouse pointed to the recent decision recognizing corporations as having the same right to free speech as individuals.
//“Connect the dots,” said Whitehouse. “Republicans are the party of the corporations. The judges are the appointees of the Republicans, and the judges just delivered for the corporations. It is being done in plain view.”
In the wake of that decision, Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said, “The Supreme Court just predetermined the winners of next November’s elections.”
Schumer, who was in charge of Democrats’ successful Senate election strategy in 2006 and 2008, has teamed with Rep. Chris van Hollen, who ran a similar effort for House Democrats in 2008 and is still in charge of their election efforts, to write legislation to essentially undo the court’s decision.
Whitehouse also described recent interpretations of the 2nd Amendment inventing “a new individual constitutional right to bear arms that no previous Supreme Court had noticed for more than 200 years…”
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid will more obliquely demonstrate liberal frustration with the Supreme Court at a photo op Friday. He plans to appear with Lilly Ledbetter, an icon of liberal frustration with the Supreme Court. She is the former Goodyear Tire employee whose discrimination suit was not factually disputed, but overturned by the Supreme Court on a technicality about when exactly the statute of limitations should run out on her case. Democrats in Congress passed The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act in 2009 to counter that decision. It was the first piece of legislation President Obama signed into law.
“There can be little doubt that the conservative bloc is laying the foundation for future right-wing activism in a seemingly deliberate and concerted effort to expand its political philosophy into our law,” said Whitehouse on the Senate floor, adding, “and, of course, always, always, always the dramatic changes observably fall in the direction of the Republican Party’s current political doctrine.”
//He was more direct in his speech: “One bedrock principle in our democracy is that the will of the people should be supreme, except in very limited circumstances. In the judicial context, this means that courts should hesitate before striking down statutes enacted by congress, but it seems that that’s not so when core tenets of the Republican platform are involved. And it’s not just this one case. There is a pattern that is discernible when these five men get together to strike down laws of congress they don’t like and make new law more to their liking. The pattern is not just discernible, it is unmistakable, it is undeniable. It appears, indeed, to be without exception.”
On Thursday, Sen. Patrick Leahy, the Vermont Democrat who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, called the ruling on corporate election spending a “threat to the rule of law” and said it is one example of “a willingness of a narrow majority of the Supreme Court to render decisions from the bench to suit their own ideological agenda.”
Two interesting things about the Constitution. First, there is no set size for the Supreme Court. The president may appoint as many members as he pleases. There is absolutely no Constitutional reason additional justices cannot be appointed at this time to eliminate the 5-4 majority.
Second, while Associate Justices are indeed appointed to their position for life, it’s ambiguous as to whether the role of Chief Justice is a lifetime appointment. What I mean by that isn’t that the appointee can be removed from the court – only that it’s unclear whether he can be removed from the Chief Justice position, wherein he would become an Associate Justice just like the other members of the court.
Filed under: Stupid Republican Tricks Tagged: | 5-4, conservative judiciary, conservative racism, democrats, ideologue, idiots, Racism, Republican, SCOTUS, SCUMUS 5, Supreme Court






It would appear the battle has finally been joined.
Being a Constitutional Prof, I hope Obama acts on your observations of unlimited Judicial size and Associate Justice status. The blow-back he’s gotten from the recent party line vote on spending and his far less than receptive appearance at the House Republicans conference has been a wake-up call (or rather loosing Kennedy’s seat has, and these other events are just a continuation).
I’m looking forward to what’s in store.