Some Conservatives think they are above the law

by YankeeJim | October 17, 2011 at 07:37 am
128 views | 4 Recommendations | 5 comments

Photos

Like the Court?

Like the Court?

see larger image

uploaded by YankeeJim

If Newt Gingrich becomes president (never happen in my lifetime) he would instruct that his administration in National Security ignore the Supreme Court. Somewhere, lost in history, Professor Gingrich missed a chapter.

In our system, there are ample opportunities to modify the direction of justice beginning with Congress changing and modifying laws with the President’s approval. Ultimately, the Justices employ their training and education and their process to make decisions and determinations in a fine way, I think.

“If everyone is unhappy with the Supreme Court, has it found the right spot?

By Robert Barnes, Published: October 16

Newt Gingrich says the Supreme Court is so far off base that its decisions would be practically non grata in his White House.

“I would instruct the national security official in a Gingrich administration to ignore the Supreme Court on issues of national security,” he told the conservatives gathering at theValues Voter Summit.

At the opposite end of the political spectrum, the liberal Alliance for Justice last week excoriated the “Corporate Court” for its decisions upholding big business’ increasing use of arbitration to settle disputes with consumers.

“The Roberts Court has willfully undermined the fundamental principle that all Americans should have access to the courts, ensuring that all parties stand equal before the law,” the group said in releasing a report called Arbitration Activism: How the Corporate Court Helps Business Evade Our Civil Justice System.

And Gallup has announced that only 46 percent of Americans approve of the institution, a drop of 5 percentage points in the past year and 15 points in the past two years.

“The same forces that have caused Americans to lose trust in the presidency and Congress appear to be affecting the way Americans view the Supreme Court,” Gallup said in a report accompanying the poll. “In addition to the public’s lower level of trust in the judicial branch of the federal government today than in recent years, the Supreme Court’s approval ratings — like those of Congress and the president — are in the lower range historically.”

The court always receives more attention in election years, when presidential candidates joust over who is best to nominate future justices, and rulings are scrutinized though the lens of the current political debate.

But somewhat surprisingly for a court that is moving to the right and where Republican appointees hold sway, the heavy fire is coming from those who want the GOP nomination.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry devoted a chapter of his book “Fed Up!” to a rant about the high court: “Nine Unelected Judges Tell Us How to Live.”

“Any student of American history, or even the casual observer of the news,” Perry writes, knows that the justices look for a “single nugget around which the Court can marginally justify its policy choice to keep up the pretense of actually caring one iota about the Constitution in the first place.”

Reps. Michele Bachmann and Ron Paul, businessman Herman Cain and former Sen. Rick Santorum have all denounced the court and offered solutions, such as banning it from reviewing certain topics and allowing Congress to cast aside its rulings.

Mitt Romney and Jon Huntsman have stayed out of the fray.

James Gibson, a political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis who has extensively studied public perception of the Supreme Court, says such attacks “are useful only in the primaries, if at all.”

He said the public overwhelmingly supports the court as the final arbiter of the nation’s laws, despite what might be temporary dips in the polls.

“Anti-government sentiment has grown so strong that it’s poisoning all kinds of public issues,” Gibson said. “But what I find is that the kind of basic loyalty to the legitimacy of the institution has changed very little.”

In fact, he said, “public attitudes toward the Supreme Court are remarkably resistant to alteration by the decisions of the court.”

A forthcoming study based on polling completed in the summer, Gibson said, reinforces the notion that any dimunition of the court’s reputation is relative.

“First and foremost, the Supreme Court enjoys a great deal more confidence than does Congress and the federal government,” Gibson found.

And even controversial (Bush v. Goreor unpopular ( Citizens United v. Federal Elections Commission) decisions have little impact on the public’s belief that the court is the place where such decisions should be made, Gibson said.

“Policy dissatisfaction with the court’s rulings does not necessarily or even ordinarily translate into threats to the legitimacy of the institution,” he said.

If those on the right and the left are unhappy, Gibson said, that might not be the worst place for the court to be.

The court is known for being ideologically split on many controversial issues, with four consistent conservatives, four reliable liberals, and Justice Anthony M. Kennedy casting a deciding vote.

That he most often votes with conservatives might make the court’s decisions reflective of the country’s prevailing political mood. And that he often gives the liberal side a significant victory provides something of a balance.

“Perhaps a court closely divided on ideology cannot produce the consistent decisional fuel needed to ignite a threat to the institution’s legitimacy,” Gibson said.”

Advertisement
recommend Sign In or Join to post comments
1
The 1

"If Newt Gingrich becomes president (never happen in my lifetime) he would instruct that his administration in National Security to ignore the Supreme Court. Somewhere, lost in history, Professor Gingrich missed a chapter."

Saw that..crazy Newt ! lol

1
YankeeJim

From the Alexander Haig school

0
"thirty-aught-six"

Liberals. Always making grand assumptions about someone else's future intent -while doing everything possible to obscure their own gangs immediate circumnavigation of the Constitution and the rule of law. The only consistency from liberals is their hypocrisy. 

0
YankeeJim

For instnace?

1
"thirty-aught-six"

LOL. For one, like Robert Barnes article -which says absolutely nothing but, offers opportunity to dis a couple of Republicans and suggest that it is they that have the agenda to diminish the SC. Not the Democratic Party and Obama who have worked around every legal safeguard and taken every political measure to circumnavigate the rule of law, circumventing Congressional oversight through use of Czars and super-committees while obstructing House and Senate debate on policy passage and approval through democratic vote.

BUT, that is the usual smoke and mirrors stuff of the Obama administration and the liberal media. What this article really is, is misdirection, to distract gullible liberals like you while Obama attempts to load the SC in favor of his Obama Care, and who will be deciding it's Constitutionality, it's future as law.

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

liamssoft
First Flagged at 8:41 AM, Oct 17, 2011 by liamssoft
These members have powered this story:

Related Stories

Recommendations (4)

Most recently recommended by:
 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from