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Indebta > News > Kamala Harris backs call for Supreme Court reform
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Kamala Harris backs call for Supreme Court reform

News Room
Last updated: 2024/07/29 at 12:25 PM
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Kamala Harris has backed a sweeping set of reforms to the Supreme Court proposed by President Joe Biden as the standing of America’s highest judicial institution emerges as a key flashpoint in the November presidential election.

“In the course of our Nation’s history, trust in the Supreme Court of the United States has been critical to achieving equal justice under law,” Harris said in a statement on Monday.

“Yet today, there is a clear crisis of confidence facing the Supreme Court as its fairness has been called into question after numerous ethics scandals and decision after decision overturning long-standing precedent,” she added.

Her comments came as Biden was travelling to Texas to announce the reforms at the Lyndon B Johnson presidential library in Austin, the state capital, while commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Civil Rights Act.

The White House said the proposed reforms would include setting term limits for justices, who currently enjoy lifetime appointments. Biden will instead propose that presidents appoint justices every two years for 18-year terms.

The president will also call for a binding code of conduct to prevent conflicts of interest, including disclosing gifts and refraining from engaging in openly political activities.

Any plans for judicial reform are unlikely to pass Congress given Republicans control the House of Representatives, but they still represent a big step for a president who has long resisted a shake-up of the Supreme Court.

Biden will also call for a constitutional amendment denying US presidents immunity from prosecution for crimes committed while in office.

The Supreme Court has come under attack, particularly from Democrats, following a series of controversial rulings by its conservative majority in recent years, including a landmark decision in 2022 that struck down nationwide abortion protections.

Biden, 81, said last week that reforms to the court would be “critical to our democracy” during an Oval Office address in which he formally announced his decision to drop out of the presidential campaign and endorsed Harris for the Democratic nomination.

Biden will not go as far as some Democrats who have called for an expansion of the Supreme Court with more justices to offset the body’s current 6-3 conservative slant.

But his move comes as a response to ethical questions that have dogged staunchly conservative justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, who have accepted lavish gifts and luxury trips from wealthy friends while on the bench and are closely aligned with Republican political causes.

According to a Gallup poll conducted in September last year, 58 per cent of respondents disapproved of the way the Supreme Court was handling its job, while 41 per cent approved.

The White House said Biden’s plans would force justices to recuse themselves from cases if their spouse had a financial or other related interest.

It added that Biden’s call for a constitutional amendment would seek to clarify that “no president is above the law or immune from prosecution for crimes committed while in office”.

The effort is a direct rebuke to Trump, who has insisted on his immunity for actions taken while in office, and the Supreme Court, which recently ruled that Trump could be afforded some immunity for official acts, a decision that could affect ongoing cases against him on charges of trying to overturn the 2020 election and mishandling classified documents.

“This ‘no one is above the law’ amendment will state that the Constitution does not confer any immunity from federal criminal indictment, trial, conviction or sentencing by virtue of previously serving as president,” said a White House official.

But a constitutional amendment would be even harder to pass, as it needs both a two-thirds supermajority in Congress and ratification by three-fourths of states.

Read the full article here

News Room July 29, 2024 July 29, 2024
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