[For this year’s post-Valentine’s non-favorites series, I wanted to continue exploding some foundational American myths. Leading up to my favorite crowd-sourced post of the year, so please share your own non-favorites—in every category—for that collective airing of grievances!]
On two myths
about the nation’s highest court, and why they might need to be challenged
together.
For the first of
the two Supreme Court myths I want to bust in this post, I’d ask you to check
out this 2016
HuffPost column of mine on why the idea that the Court was initially or
ever apolitical is entirely inaccurate. See you back here in a few, and thanks!
Welcome back! So
yes, the Supreme Court is the nation’s highest legal authority, but it’s also
part of our political and governmental systems and processes, and always has
been. Another and even more blatantly inaccurate myth is that the Court’s
current size is either foundational or Constitutional. In fact, the Constitution doesn’t
define the number of Justices, and as I described in that HuffPost column,
there were initially six Justices. The number would change six total times over
the next century, reaching a high of ten Justices in 1863, before settling at
its current total of nine in 1869—and that particular moment was especially political
and fraught, as the Judicial
Circuits Act of 1866 (passed by Congress in attempt to limit President
Andrew Johnson’s power) led to the shrinking of the Court from ten to seven
Justices (when three retirees were not replaced) before the Judiciary
Act of 1869 allowed President Ulysses S. Grant to immediately add two
Justices and return the number to nine. The fact that it has remained at nine
for the 150 years since doesn’t change the more foundational fact that the
Court’s composition is flexible and has changed with political trends and
influences.
I suspect you
know where I’m going with this, and I don’t need to dwell on it at length. None
of those histories mean that we necessarily should expand the Court here in
early 2022—but they certainly do mean that any argument against expansion based
on either of these myths (ie, “We shouldn’t embroil the Court in current
politics”; “We can’t mess with something as foundational as the size of the
Supreme Court”) is a non-starter from the jump. And I would add this: there’s
been a lot of understandable conversation in the last year about how much our
own moment seems
linked to Reconstruction. I agree, and would add that it’s far from
coincidental that that was the last time when the Court’s size changed. To my
mind, it’s long past time we made such changes once more, which will require
challenging a couple significant myths along the way.
Next
non-favorite myth tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other non-favorites, myths and everything else, you’d share?
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