Posted on 11/07/2004 3:42:35 PM PST by RWR8189
Edited on 11/07/2004 4:25:22 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
Thomas would be a great choice, but it does mean two fights to replace the Chief Justice which is why it's usually not done I assume.
The case arose from the question of if law enforcement required a search warrant to use a laser to remotely measure the fluxuantions of a window pane (a laser listening device).
Justice Clarence Thomas is by far the youngest member of the Court. If the Chief Justice is to be a Justice already seated on the Supreme Court, Thomas is the only viable option who will survive to adjudicate over posterity.
"WHy do people love Scalia when he's never met a decision to expand government and police power that he hasn't liked?"
That is the one drawback to Scalia and Thomas. I would think that a "strict constructionist" would not allow "no knock" (AKA Kick-In) warrants. To me they appear to violate the original intent of the 4th Ammendment. Both Scalia and Thomas have let that nonsense stand.
In my way of thinking, "strict construction" means you neither add rights that are not clearly articulated or implied (i.e. right to abort), nor take away or lessen "rights" clearly articulated or implied by the constitution (i.e. the 4th ammendment) as intended by the Founding Fathers. I think the founders would freak over the court having said that abortion was a constitutional right. However, I also think they would freak over "no knock" warrants - that is exactly what the British did during colonial days.
That's right. Taft elevated Justice White, FDR elevated Justice Stone, and now there's Rehnquist.
No. | Chief Justice | Years of Service | Appointed by President |
---|---|---|---|
1 | John Jay | 1789-1795 | George Washington |
2 | John Rutledge | 1795 | George Washington |
3 | Oliver Ellsworth | 1796-1800 | George Washington |
4 | John Marshall | 1801-1835 | John Adams |
5 | Roger Brooke Taney | 1836-1864 | Andrew Jackson |
6 | Salmon Portland Chase | 1864-1873 | Abraham Lincoln |
7 | Morrison Remick Waite | 1874-1888 | Ulysses S. Grant |
8 | Melville Weston Fuller | 1888-1910 | Grover Cleveland |
9 | Edward Douglass White | 1910-1921 | William Howard Taft |
10 | William Howard Taft | 1921-1930 | Warren G. Harding |
11 | Charles Evans Hughes | 1930-1941 | Herbert Hoover |
12 | Harlan Fiske Stone | 1941-1946 | Franklin Delano Roosevelt |
13 | Frederick Moore Vinson | 1946-1953 | Harry S. Truman |
14 | Earl Warren | 1953-1969 | Dwight D. Eisenhower |
15 | Warren Earl Burger | 1969-1986 | Richard Nixon |
16 | William Hubbs Rehnquist | 1986-present | Ronald Reagan |
Certainly not. Scalia is in line for the job.
It is time to see it!
Tough cookies.
It's about time to stop letting them call all the shots. Fight 'em to the mat and let the country see how ridiculous they are. Stop giving in the them.
Did we just win another election or what?
Wow, that's cool !! Thomas is from Pinpoint, a " community " in my city of Savannah. I hope he gets the nomination, he'd be a great pick.
It shows the depth of Arlen Specter's ignorance that he names Thurgood Marshall as on eof the "giants" of the Court, when every SCOTUS historian knows that--despite his excellence in the "Brown" case, Marshall had a rather undistinguished tenure on the SCOTUS. Specter is clearly motivated only by the politics of ethnic and leftist pandering, and has no place on Judiciary at all--let along as Chairman.
Thomas is a much better choice than Scalia. Scalia is just the flip side of the Ginsburg coin. You can always count on Ginsburg voting one way, and Scalia the other. Both are idealogues first, and jurists second. Thomas on the other hand is a mindful jurist and will follow the constitution, not his own personal ideology.
I have the highest admiration of Scalia.
There is no way I would nominate him to be Chief Justice now. He's way too old, he is probably going to retire soon. He might even move on when a Democrat president takes over, as soon as 08 (sorry just being realistic). What a disaster that would be.
The only justice I would even consider nominating from the current court is Clarence Thomas. He's relatively young at 56, he's going to be there a while... That's probably who I would nominate, if he wanted it.
But most of the Chief Justices were nominated without even having been on the Supreme Court at all. So it's entirely possible to nominate someone not currently on the court... I think Clarence Thomas would have a relatively unstoppable nomination process, so that's a huge advantage. Still leaves you with a hole to fill on the court though...
Especially (God forbid) if we need a new CJ before the Court leaves for the summer. We don't need a double knock-down drag-out when there's cases that need to be heard.
What happens when a Justice leaves before cases are decided? Can a new Justice who wasn't around during oral arguments have a say on a decision? Or will we be stuck with a bunch of 4-4 decisions?
Sandy wrote:
Bad move. Why go through the hassle of two confirmations? Just bring someone from the outside. I'd take Kozinski over Thomas in a heartbeat.
_____________________________________
Interesting choice Sandy..
Do you have any others in mind?
Profile of Judge Alex Kozinski
Address:http://www.appellate-counsellor.com/profiles/kozinski.htm
;o)
Thanks for the chuckle
Clarence Thomas is at least 10 years younger than Scalia. More time, going forward, to cement a conservative as chief justice. Possible 40 years of a conservative as Chief Justice (198?-202?).
Why? Also, do you think age may play a part in this position?
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