Biden Creates Commission to Study Supreme Court Reform, Report States
During the election, Joe Biden refused to address whether he would pack the court, insisting that he would not provide such an answer until after he had received a recommendation from a bipartisan commission on changing the Supreme Court. (Photo: Geoff Livingston/Getty Images)
President Joe Biden’s administration is creating a commission to study Supreme Court reform, Politico reported Wednesday.
The new bipartisan commission will be under the purview of the White House Counsel, according to Politico. Multiple members have already been selected, sources familiar with the discussions told Politico, including Yale Law School professor Cristina Rodríguez, former President of the American Constitution Society Caroline Fredrickson, and Harvard Law School professor Jack Goldsmith.
Cherry Hill Courier-Post
While growing up in a tiny South Jersey town, Keywuan Caulk was fully aware of his sexual orientation at the age of 12 but buried those thoughts way down.
Caulk was a devout member of a Black Pentecostal church and his church life meant everything to him, so he stayed quiet and hid his sexual identity until he was 26.
The Penns Grove native is 34 now and since June has served as the director of the Rutgers Center for Social Justice Education and LGBT Communities, the first Black queer male in that role.
Caulk took the reins at the Center, which was founded in 1992, less than a month after George Floyd died when a Minneapolis police officer restrained him by putting his knee on his neck, igniting protests around the globe.
Have you seen the news? Joe Biden Nope, that s not some opinion presented by a pro-Biden pundit on cable news or in an op-ed near you. Instead, it comes from the news section – not the opinion section – of the New York Times in a story that might as well have been written by the president s communications team: There are myriad changes with the incoming Biden administration. One of the most significant: a president who has spent a lifetime steeped in Christian rituals and practices, the Jan. 24 story reads. Mr. Biden, perhaps the most religiously observant commander in chief in half a century, regularly attends Mass and speaks of how his Catholic faith grounds his life and his policies.
Follow RT on Democrats have chosen Patrick Leahy, known as one of the most partisan members of the Senate, to preside over Donald Trump s impeachment trial after Chief Justice John Roberts declined a role not called for in the Constitution.
The job fell to Leahy (D-Vermont), president pro tempore of the Senate, on Monday because the US Constitution provides for the chief justice to serve as judge only when a sitting president or vice president is impeached. In fact, the Constitution doesn t specifically make provision for a former president at all – an omission that critics such as former representative Bob Barr (R-Georgia) have argued means the Senate has no standing to convict Trump.
While growing up in a tiny South Jersey town, Keywuan Caulk was fully aware of his sexual orientation at the age of 12 but buried those thoughts way down.
Caulk was a devout member of a Black Pentecostal church and his church life meant everything to him, so he stayed quiet and hid his sexual identity until he was 26.
The Penns Grove native is 34 now and since June has served as the director of the Rutgers Center for Social Justice Education and LGBT Communities, the first Black queer male in that role.
Caulk took the reins at the Center, which was founded in 1992, less than a month after George Floyd died when a Minneapolis police officer restrained him by putting his knee on his neck, igniting protests around the globe.