Many commentators are tweeting & tooting that we need to expand the SCOTUS. That is not the answer to everything. Unless you just want a larger Court, not bound by ethics rules, engaging in the kind of behavior described in the NYT piece. What we need are guardrails - an understanding that the Court sits w/i our democracy. Our job us to strengthen it by creating the processes that promote impartiality & insulation from lobbying, not crossing our fingers & hoping for the best.
@_silversmith @ifilljustice How would that work without an objective measurement for "left", "right", or center? Not to mention how many justices were seen as a different alignment by the end of their tenure.
@glennpeters @ifilljustice Under #RuleOf18, new justices are coming into their positions regularly, and others are leaving. Every time there's an opening, there can be a re-evaluation. So yes - a POTUS could still *slightly* shape the Court. But they could not rig the Court, as it has been now.
Think of it as the difference between putting "english" on a pinball and tilting the machine.
@glennpeters @ifilljustice As noted elsewhere, someone who is more familiar with those inner workings than I could tell you how judges are measured that way within the legal profession.
Also, remember, Supreme Court justices do not have to be judges - and frankly, I think it might help to have one or two who were not.
As for movement along alignment? That's easier than you might think…