Condemning
the right-wing majority on the U.S. Supreme Court as corrupt and "heavily
politicized," U.S. Reps. Ro Khanna and Don Beyer on Friday
reintroduced legislation to impose term limits for the nine justices in order
to "restore judicial independence."
Hours
after the court ruled that businesses can refuse
services to LGBTQ+ people and struck
down President Joe Biden's student loan debt relief program,
Khanna (D-Calif.) said that the framers of the Constitution established
lifetime appointments for justices on the nation's highest court in order
"to ensure impartiality," but recent rulings by the six right-wing
members of the panel's supermajority have not held up that standard.
"The
Supreme Court's decision to block student debt relief will put many
hardworking Americans at risk of default and will be a disaster for our
economy," said Rep.
Ro Khanna. "Our Founding Fathers intended for lifetime appointments to
ensure impartiality. The decision today demonstrates how justices have become
partisan and out of step with the American public. I'm proud to reintroduce the
Supreme Court Term Limits and Regular Appointments Act to implement term limits
to rebalance the court and stop extreme partisanship."
The
legislation would create an 18-year term limit for justices appointed after the
law was enacted. Justices would be permitted to serve on lower courts after
their term was up.
Beyer
(D-Va.) said the time has come to impose term limits following numerous
partisan decisions by the Supreme Court, including its overturning of Roe v. Wade last
year, and revelations about undisclosed financial ties that right-wing Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, and Neil Gorsuch have had
to Republican megadonors and operatives who have had business before the court.
"For
many Americans, the Supreme Court is a distant, secretive, unelected body that
can make drastic changes in their lives without any accountability," said
Beyer. "Recent partisan decisions by the Supreme Court that destroyed
historic protections for reproductive rights, voting rights, and more have
undermined public trust in the Court—even as inappropriate financial relationships
between justices and conservative donors raised new questions about its
integrity."
Currently,
said Rep. Rashida Tlaib (D-Mich.), "six
extremist, unelected activists" are doing "the bidding of billionaire
Republican donors from the bench."
"This
illegitimate Supreme Court has become a cesspool of corruption and is in urgent
need of reform," she said. "It's time to end lifetime appointments to
the Supreme Court."
A
poll by Marist College in April found that 68% of
Americans back term limits for Supreme Court justices while just 37% of
respondents said they had confidence in the high court.
The
judicial watchdog group Fix the Court endorsed Khanna and Beyer's proposal, noting that
from the nation's founding until 1970, Supreme Court justices served 15 years
on average.
"That
number has nearly doubled in the last few decades, as the power the court has
abrogated to itself has also increased exponentially," said the
group.
The current system has
allowed Supreme Court justices to "possess unchecked power for
life," said Gabe Roth,
executive director of Fix the Court. "Luckily, there's a popular,
apolitical way to fix this: by requiring future justices to take 'senior
status' after 18 years, at which point they'd fill in at SCOTUS when needed, rotate
down to a lower court, or retire."
"This idea forms
the basis of Rep. Khanna's bill," he said, "and I'm pleased to
support his work to establish fundamental guardrails for the most powerful,
least accountable part of our government."
Licensed under Creative
Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely. Julia
Conley is a staff writer for Common Dreams.
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