High Court anxiety.As I write this in mid-May, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) is threatening to use the "nuclear option" to push for up-or-down votes on President George W. Bush's judicial nominees. That means he might jigger jigger: see chigoe. Senate rules to end the Democrats' filibuster filibuster, term used to designate obstructionist tactics in legislative assemblies. It has particular reference to the U.S. Senate, where the tradition of unlimited debate is very strong. It was not until 1917 that the Senate provided for cloture (i.e. of Bush's picks for the federal bench. Given that Senate rules governing debate have been changed repeatedly over the years--the last time was in 1975, when the number of senators needed to end a filibuster was reduced from 67 to 60--invoking atomic bombs and mushroom clouds strikes me as hyperbolic hy·per·bol·ic also hy·per·bol·i·cal adj. 1. Of, relating to, or employing hyperbole. 2. Mathematics a. Of, relating to, or having the form of a hyperbola. b. . Then again, senators--and senators alone, it seems--insist on calling their legislative chamber "the world's greatest deliberative de·lib·er·a·tive adj. 1. Assembled or organized for deliberation or debate: a deliberative legislature. 2. Characterized by or for use in deliberation or debate. body." While it's not clear whether Frist and the Republicans actually will go nuclear, this much seems more certain than a cost overrun on a federal contract: The political fighting will get really nasty when the president gets to pick a nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court. Given Chief Justice William Rehnquist's flagging health, Justice John Paul Stevens' advanced age, and Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's reported interest in retiring, that day will come--and sooner rather than later. Indeed, Bush, who has signalled he'll pick judges who think like controversial justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, may well get to pick a High Court majority that will last another 20 years or more. With that in mind, we've asked legal experts to tell us whom they would like to see get the nod ("Who Should Reign Supreme?," page 24). As you might expect from a pack of lawyers, there's not a lot of agreement, though there is a dreary consensus that first-rate thinkers need not apply. The confirmation process has seen to that. As Contributing Editor Michael McMenamin puts it,"The last three decades have seen an almost unprecedented parade of compromise choices of undistinguished un·dis·tin·guished adj. 1. a. Marked by no peculiar quality; not distinguished; ordinary: an undistinguished appearance. b. jurists The following lists are of prominent jurists, including judges, listed in alphabetical order by jurisdiction. See also list of lawyers. Antiquity
Other Supreme Court-related pieces in this issue include two interviews with legal historians. In "Not So Supreme" (page 41), Mark Tushnet argues that the Supreme Court's influence on American society is generally overrated Overrated was a Horde World of Warcraft guild, based on the US Black Dragonflight Realm. On November 2 2006, the majority of the guild members were indefinitely banned from the game for use of (or directly benefiting from) a third-party "wall-hack", used to bypass content ; he also sums up the legacy of the Rehnquist Court as one of "instrumental federalism." In "Supreme Court Senility senility (sənil`ətē), deterioration of body and mind associated with old age. Indications of old age vary in the time of their appearance. " (page 44), David J. Garrow discusses the troubling history of High Court judges who stay on the bench long after they are no longer up to the job. Then there's Damon W. Root's provocative polemic "Unleash the Judges" (page 34), which makes "the libertarian case for judicial activism." As a package, these stories may allay some of the High Court anxiety many of us are feeling these days. At the very least, they'll provide a useful map if and when the political nukes are really launched. |
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