Live Breaking News & Updates on ஸ்டீவன் சலபிரேசி

Stay updated with breaking news from ஸ்டீவன் சலபிரேசி. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

John Sparks: Why the Supreme Court should not be changed


TribLIVE s Daily and Weekly email newsletters deliver the news you want and information you need, right to your inbox.
Six months ago, the idea of expanding the size of the U.S. Supreme Court was side-stepped by presidential candidate Joe Biden
, and the issue seemed to wane. But now, “court packing” has surfaced once again and in two forms. The first is an executive order from President Biden creating a commission to study possible reforms of the court. The second is legislation proposed by progressive Democrats to increase the court’s size by four
new justices.
The first question to be considered is this: Can the United States Congress constitutionally change the size of the Supreme Court? The answer is yes. It has done so several times in the remote past. For 152 years, however, i.e., since 1869, the Supreme Court has remained at nine justices. ....

United States , Steven Calabresi , James Lindgren , Joe Biden , Erwin Chemerinsky , Supreme Court , Us Supreme Court , University Of California Berkeley Law School , President Biden , California Berkeley , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஸ்டீவன் சலபிரேசி , ஜேம்ஸ் லிண்ட்கிரென் , ஓஹோ பிடென் , உச்ச நீதிமன்றம் , எங்களுக்கு உச்ச நீதிமன்றம் , பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் கலிஃபோர்னியா பெர்க்லி சட்டம் பள்ளி , ப்ரெஸிடெஂட் பிடென் , கலிஃபோர்னியா பெர்க்லி ,

Institute for Faith & Freedom: Court Packing 2.0: Why the Supreme Court Should Not Be Changed — The Patriot Post


By John A. Sparks
Six months ago, the idea of expanding the size of the U.S. Supreme Court was side-stepped by presidential candidate Joe Biden, and the issue seemed to wane. But now, “court packing” has surfaced once again — and in two forms. The first is an executive order from President Biden creating a commission to study possible reforms of the Supreme Court. The second is legislation proposed by progressive Democrats to increase the court’s size by four new justices.
The first question to be considered is this: Can the United States Congress constitutionally change the size of the Supreme Court? The answer is yes. It has done so several times in the remote past. For 152 years, however, i.e., since 1869, the Supreme Court has remained at nine justices. ....

United States , Samuel Alito , James Lindgren , Steven Calabresi , John Marshall , Jimmy Carter , Georgew Bush , Joe Biden , Erwin Chemerinsky , Hugo Black , Joseph Story , William Brennan , Can The United States Congress , Supreme Court , Us Supreme Court , Electoral College , University Of California Berkeley Law School , Fix The Court , President Biden , United States Congress , California Berkeley , President Trump , President George , John Roberts , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , சாமுவேல் அளிதோ ,

Can Biden Fix the Courts That Trump Broke?


Illustration by Barry Blitt.
When President Joe Biden finally took the oath of office on January 20, he inherited not merely the White House, the nuclear codes, and the reins to the most powerful government on earth, but also a mess.1
The fact of that mess wasn’t altogether unusual. It’s become something of a trend in recent decades for Republicans, who don’t think government can work, to spend their years in power breaking it in order to fulfill their own prophecy; it then falls to Democrats to spend their years in power fixing what Republicans destroyed.2
But Biden’s mess is somewhat bigger than the messes inherited by his Democratic predecessors, Barack Obama and Bill Clinton, after other disastrous Republican administrations. The enhanced difficulty stems in part from the Covid-19 pandemic and the multiple crises it has spawned, from the enduring spread of the virus to the near-collapse of the economy. But those are fires that the Biden administration, ....

United States , New York , White House , District Of Columbia , Northern Mariana Islands , New Jersey , Virgin Islands , Orange County , Steven Menashi , Darrell Issa , Marco Rubio , Donald Trump , Kristen Clarke , Dick Durbin , Deb Haaland , Ronald Reagan , Joe Biden , Kyrsten Sinema , Gavin Newsom , Georgehw Bush , Neera Tanden , Patrick Leahy , Joe Manchin , Steven Calabresi , Jimmy Carter , Barack Obama ,