Even if Joe Biden wins, Trump and Mitch McConnell’s judges could block U.S. progress for decades | Will Bunch
When a precocious high school kid named William Stickman IV wrote letters to the
Less than 14 months after Stickman -- now 41, who’d been a
On Monday, Stickman stunned many legal scholars in siding with Republican lawmakers and GOP-led counties in striking down Gov. Wolf’s strict spring lockdown orders over the coronavirus as unconstitutional, even as some health experts have hailed for saving thousands of
Never mind that constitutional experts found the legal foundation for Stickman’s ruling more than a little shaky. The ruling relied heavily on a much-maligned 115-year-old pro-business ruling that’s been largely undercut and arguably overturned over the last century, and even leaned on a dissent (i.e., a losing argument) by conservative
And perhaps more importantly, Stickman’s controversial ruling also offered an early and arguably frightening window into how more than 200 conservative federal judges confirmed during Trump’s term -- nearly 70% of them white men, many in their 30s or early 40s -- could rule deep into the 21st century on issues such as climate change, workers' rights, expanded government health care, and women’s reproductive rights.
. “US District Judge
-- HD Awareness (@HDAwareness)
Indeed, with the polls currently predicting that Trump would lose to Democrat
What’s more, Trump and McConnell’s judicial makeover -- including 53 new appellate judges, none of them Black, with only one Latinx -- could lead to rulings on voting issues between now and November that could help the president win a second term, during which he’d have a chance to name scores of additional jurists. Arguably that’s already happened in
Mitch McConnell’s democracy-crushing smirk is why just getting rid of Trump isn’t enough | Will BunchAll of this raises two big questions for
The second revolves around policy and is a lot more complicated. If Biden and the
The issue has been simmering below the surface for the last year. During the Democratic primaries, candidate
But while the number of justices isn’t fixed in the
Also, those ideas do nothing about the increasingly dense thicket of right-wing justices such as Stickman in the district and appellate courts. Here, the
Throughout
“This 30-year drought has been our longest period of time without comprehensive lower court expansion, which is necessary for good government,” Kang -- a former top
WATCH:
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Biden, for his part, has promised to name the first-ever Black woman to the
In today’s warped political atmosphere, a Democratic push for what once would have been a routine bill to expand the lower courts would surely be greeted with howls of “partisan power grab!” from the far-right punditocracy -- that same voices that were silent when McConnell went to unprecedented lengths to deny even a public hearing to a
That’s assuming the party can win this fall -- an effort that might be helped if they remind voters of the stakes around who’ll be picking our judges between now and 2025, when it may be too late to save American democracy if Trump and
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