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AP®︎/College US Government and Politics
Course: AP®︎/College US Government and Politics > Unit 2
Lesson 11: Checks on the judicial branch- Executive and legislative disagreements with the Supreme Court
- Checks on the judicial branch
- State checks on the judicial branch
- Senate confirmation as a check on the judicial branch
- Judicial activism and judicial restraint
- Increased politicization of the Supreme Court
- Checks on the judicial branch: lesson overview
- Checks on the judicial branch: advanced
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Increased politicization of the Supreme Court
The Supreme Court, a cornerstone of American governance, ensures alignment with founding principles. Its role has expanded due to legislative and executive branch weaknesses, leading to concerns about unelected justices making impactful decisions. The intertwining of politics and law further complicates the court's function, making justices' selections more politically influenced.
Want to join the conversation?
- how can the number of judges of the supreme court be increased?(2 votes)
- "Congress can change the number of Justices on the Court whenever it feels like it," said Levitin. "And historically it has.” In 1789, the First Judiciary Act set the number of justices to six. During the Civil War, it was raised to as high as ten justices.(1 vote)
Video transcript
- In your mind, why is the
Supreme Court important? - Well the Supreme Court is important for the original
founders' reasons or that, it was like all American institutions there were ideas the founders had and then John Marshall,
an important justice, created the office by the
practice of the office and it is important
because the court is where America's thorniest
questions go to be resolved. They haven't been resolved
in the executive branch and the legislative
branch and so the court has to take them up and that is where the court goes back to
those first principles. Again, why we study American history. What exactly was the
outline for how the country is supposed to behave and are
we staying within that outline and those series of ideals? It goes back to the very
beginning ingredients of America. So, the court is a test always
of whether what we're doing now is in keeping with
what we were supposed to do at the founding of the country. The reason it has become
so important recently is that the court ends up
doing a lot more than it was ever supposed to do because of weakness in the executive branch
and the legislative branch and so a lot of people are
now looking to the court to solve problems that
should actually be handled by the people's representatives. The judges are not elected. They are in there for
life at the Supreme Court through the process of
the president with advice and consent by the Senate
but they are not elected and this was supposed to
be a republic in which the elected representatives
were the ones making the laws. But we've shifted away from that and so the court is now making decisions that can affect people's
lives and a generation and not be changed as easily
as say a piece of legislation which can be vetoed, amended,
superseded by another piece of legislation. It's really permanent
changes in the American life. - So my understanding is
that the Supreme Court should be above politics. To what degree is that actually the case? - Well the Supreme Court had lots of... There have been times
where the Supreme Court when Andrew Jackson was president he tried to use the Supreme
Court to do what he wanted it to do and Franklin Delano Roosevelt tried to change the
functioning of the court because it kept knocking
down all the things he wanted to do. We've had moments where
there have been these spasms where presidents have
tried to get the court to do what they wanted. But in general, it was
the American tradition that the justices were
supposed to be picked if they were of good character and if they were of sound legal mind. If they had views on the manners related to the Constitution that
were sort of sound legally. But their politics weren't
supposed to be so important. What has happened is like so
much in modern American life is there has been an
intertwining of politics and the legal profession
so that now when presidents run for office they say, elect me so that I can put
in our kinds of judges. Which means that the
kind of judge you pick helps you with your
voters and if your voters want a very specific kind
of ideological judge, then the more ideological
the judge that you pick, the greater your voters
will be happy about you and that'll keep you in office. And that is true of the
senators advising and consenting on these decisions and
true of the presidents who pick them. Well that means that the
people who go into the office into the Supreme Court I should say end up being more
political than in the past. There was a period where
when an American president would pick a justice, that justice very often
would rule in a way that was totally the opposite of what the members of that president's party wanted. It happened repeatedly in American life and that was a symbol people thought of the idea that these
issues before the court were being weighed on their merits and had nothing to do
with the ideological views of the judge weighing them. Now, where you sit on a particular issue is often determined by where
you came from politically.