Posted on 07/09/2018 12:47:18 PM PDT by jazusamo
Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer launched a preemptive attack Monday on President Trumps looming Supreme Court pick, saying the nominee must share their personal views on abortion in order to be confirmed.
Mr. Schumer, New York Democrat, said senators should no longer accept general promises of fealty to precedent, and will instead demand...
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtontimes.com ...
“fealty to precedent.” YES~! Let ALL DEMOCRATS SWEAR FEALTYTO THE DRED SCOTT DECISION!
Senator, I’m not going to render an opinion for any issue that I may be asked to rule on. Next question.
It's been a while since his smirking puss has been in the news - he's trying to correct that.......hope Mad Max(ine) weighs in and ruins his day....
I believe you are right.
The whole controversy is ridiculous.
SCOTUS is not going to overturn Roe v. Wade. AFAIK the court has never taken one of its own previous decisions up as a case to re-decide as a new case. The court doesn’t work that way.
It’s up to the legislature to make a law that negates it. Only then could the court look back to R v. W and then only as it relates to the new law. R v. W could become irrelevant through legislation but I don’t believe there is any such mechanism as “overturning” previous court decisions.
Check Brown vs. Board of Education as a “for instance”.
Precisely.
But he sure does issue a lot of "warnings" and "demands" for a loser, doesn't he?
Liberals, no one is coming for your abortions. We just want common sense abortion control.
Precedent is so important to these people until it isn’t.
He sure does, he has to get his camera time in. What a turkey.
That wasn’t the court reviewing one of its old decisions. It came about as the result of a class action lawsuit that worked its way up through the lower courts. It did negate Plessy v. Ferguson but it wasn’t brought to the court as a direct challenge to that previous decision.
There is nothing in Brown vs. Board of Education that states that Plessy v. Ferguson is “overturned” nor is there any mechanism for a court decision to do that. It would more accurate to say that the more recent decision ‘overrides’ the previous one.
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