Posted on 12/19/2011 10:54:45 AM PST by indianrightwinger
There Is No Power and No Reason to Subpoena Federal Judges
December 19, 2011 12:21 P.M. By Andrew C. McCarthy I was surprised that the usually excellent Megyn Kellys debate question to Newt Gingrich about his proposal for reining in the judiciary intimated that former Bush administration attorneys general Michael Mukasey and Alberto Gonzales had panned the proposal as dangerous, ridiculous, totally irresponseible, outrageous, etc. To be sure, thats what they said about some aspects of Gingrichs proposal; but not the overall plan. In fact, as Megyns report states, Judge Mukasey said of Gingrichs plan, Theres a lot in there thats good. Take a red pen to the parts that are bad, stick with the parts that are good, and run on it.
For now, though, I just want to address a bad part that is getting most of the attention as Kates post from yesterday indicates. Thats the business about issuing congressional subpoenas to federal judges to coerce them into explaining themselves before lawmakers. As many commentators have suggested, this proposal would violate separation-of-powers principles. The judiciary is a peer of the political branches. It would be no more appropriate for Congress to subpoena a federal judge (or that judges clerks) about the reasoning of one of the judges rulings than it would be for Congress to subpoena the president (or his top advisors) about a controversial decision that was within the presidents constitutional authority, or for a judge or the Justice Department to issue a subpoena to a member of Congress (or the lawmakers staff) to question that member about the deliberations over some legislative act that arguably went beyond Congresss enumerated powers.
Put aside the constitutional problem, though. What I find most difficult to understand is the pointlessness
(Excerpt) Read more at nationalreview.com ...
Newt is in the first stages of Altzheimer`s.
An excellent example of the necessity of this oversight is that Kagan ought to be questioned before Congress for refusing to recuse herself in the Obamacare case.
One question here. If a judge continually violates the Constitution and is not impeached, who has control of this judge?
It is a simple matter of accountability.
The northeastern elitists, which is why the establishment Republicans at NRO are opposing Newt's idea.
Subpoena Newt and see what he knows about the disappearance of Judge Crater.
Don't believe it?
Tell any judge what he can and can't do and see for your self...
At which point, the judges would simply issue a court order that funded the judicial branch, something they've been doing for years that is blatantly unconstitutional.
Satan?
Granted, everyone will eventually look at the 'facts' and make an unpopular decision. That goes with the job.
However, some activist judges have opted to whole-sale make laws without a shred of authority (granted by the Constitution). I offer the polarizing "Abortion" as an example. I oppose Abortion (convenience murder) ethically; however what I find even more offensive is the upsurping of authority across the US without so much as a vote. In frank honesty, this policy should be set by the "State". Some states will have constituents who support Abortion, while others states will opt to oppose this practice. According to the Constitution, powers not enumerated by the Constitution, belong to the states - this is such an example.
The judges that "upsurped" this, need to be replaced. They had no legal grounds for implimenting this - and this set a precident that has since been further encroached. Why pass a law through the complicated Legislative branch, when the Judicial branch can arbitrarily decree it? Those bums gotta go.
Um, Congress did exactly that to Nixon and GW Bush (re the perfectly Constitutional firing of 8 DOiJ attorneys). And the courts upheld it.
This author is clearly ignorant of the law and history...
It is the lack thereof which frustrates me. Consider the entire illegal alien problem right now? We have US courts ruling to ignore their own laws, punishing states and officers for enforcing those laws, and filing injunctions to prevent the application of their own laws.
Dunno. It seems that the courts have slipped the reins and that there is no longer a check on them, or at least none that Congress is willing to apply.
Now I know this is an actual thought and as such it is likely to simply rattle around in that vacuum box atop your shoulders... but it was suggested that judicial authority is limited under the constitution and that Congress finally start fulfilling its mandated authority to remove judges when they over reach that authority.
I know, I know, that is too simple and clear a thought for your mind, and you will continue to launch into this thread attacking Newt (who really is an unstable and crappy candidate) whether he was right on this or not.
Flame on.
That’s what I was afraid of.
There never was a check on them. It’s a fundamental flaw in the Constitution:
http://www.constitution.org/afp/brutus11.htm
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