Posted on 07/07/2013 6:03:01 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Reuters landed the inside track on a question which has been quietly simmering on the back burner since the unpleasant events of last November. Given four more years in office, and given the ages and states of health of various members of the Supreme Court, would Barack Obama be making any more appointments to the bench? In an interview with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the answer to at least one of the seats under discussion would seem to be no.
At age 80, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, leader of the Supreme Court’s liberal wing, says she is in excellent health, even lifting weights despite having cracked a pair of ribs again, and plans to stay several more years on the bench.
In a Reuters interview late on Tuesday, she vowed to resist any pressure to retire that might come from liberals who want to ensure that Democratic President Barack Obama can pick her successor before the November 2016 presidential election…
The justice, who survived two serious bouts with cancer, in 1999 and 2009, is keeping up a typically busy summer of travel, at home and abroad, beginning next week with a trip to Paris. Ginsburg said she was back to her usual weight-lifting routine and recently had good results from a bone density scan.
Later in the article, she repeats a previous goal of matching the 23 year tenure of Justice Louis Brandeis, which would take her to April of 2016. (And that close to a presidential election, it seems highly unlikely that the confirmation of a replacement could be managed the same year.) But she also went further, noting that Justice Stevens stayed until the age of 90, giving her a full decade to shoot for.
These sorts of ugly considerations have been made public before, and as Dr. James Joyner notes, they rather deflate the image of the non-political high court assured by lifetime appointments.
If I had my druthers, Justices would serve 20-year terms rather than indefinitely. A long, fixed term would both assure for an independent judiciary and solve several problems with lifetime appointments. Its absurd to have 90-year-olds deciding the most important public policy issues and makes an already undemocratic institution even moreso to have people appointed by Gerald Ford still on the bench decades later; we had both until John Paul Stevens finally retired in 2010. Further, wed end the incentive for presidents to appoint too-young Justices in order to extend their legacies and reduce the sort of pressures Ginsburg is now facing.
The twenty year term idea is intriguing, but absent a change to Article III, it would likely be problematic to implement. But the “undemocratic nature” of the institution, as Joyner calls it, does seem to come to light more and more as time goes on. Rather than completely independent agents, free from the constraints of election pressure, we wind up with the the most ideological candidates which presidents think they can get through. And, as James also notes, there is pressure to put in increasingly young ones so they can place the longest lasting stamp on the bench possible.
So in a way, Ginsburg is to be credited for shrugging off the concerned “liberal leaders” pushing her to step down while Obama is still in office. Of course, if she stepped down now, the end effect wouldn’t be much, at least in the short term. Obama would replace her with someone of like ideology and the balance of power wouldn’t really shift much, even though it would cement one block in place for much longer. The real fireworks would be if we lost one of the four conservative justices for any reason. The fight over that seat would be epic to say the least.
I read the suggestion that Ginsburg suspects that were she to resign, Obama would appoint someone repugnant to her. In what way is indeterminate.
She’s EIGHTY????? She’s looked like she’s been in her 90’s for years now!!!!!
Nothing will matter if the country elects another dumbed down leftist or allows tens of millions of illegal aliens a pass.
nothing
Wasn’t she diagnosed with pancreatic cancer?
She’s getting excellent care. I want the names of her doctors.
Better stay away from Ft. Marcy Park. Sockpuppet Zero’s manipulators would love to put a younger, more radical justice in her place before Zero gets sacrificed for the cause...
RE: Perfect choice to replace Ruth...
What’s her full name?
No, a female should replace Ruth!
Debra Nelson.
SOURCE:
http://judgepedia.org/index.php/Debra_Steinberg_Nelson
Debra Steinberg Nelson is a Seminole County judge of the 18th Judicial Circuit Court in Florida. She was appointed by then-Governor Jeb Bush in May of 1999 (effective in June). Her current term expires in January of 2019.
Nelson began her career in 1980 at the Broward County State Attorney’s Office. She served as the Chief Prosecutor of that office prior to leaving it in July of 1983 for the state Dept. of Agriculture and Consumer Services. She served there as staff counsel until March of 1986, when she joined the law firm of Borroughs, Grimm, Bennett & Griffin, P.A. She became a partner of the firm in 1988 and became head of the litigation department the following year. In August of 1992, she started her own practice, Debra Steinberg Nelson, P.A. She worked in that capacity until she became a Circuit Court judge in June of 1999. She was also an arbitrator for the U.S. District Court, Middle District of Florida from 1992 to 1999.
Judge Nelson was assigned to the trial of George Zimmerman in August of 2012, after Judge Kenneth R. Lester, Jr. was removed at the request of the defense. Zimmerman is charged with shooting 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, a case that has gained national attention.
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