By Charles C. W. Cooke
Wednesday, December 15, 2021
In the Boston Globe, Elizabeth Warren writes that she now supports destroying the Supreme
Court:
To restore balance and integrity to
a broken institution, Congress must expand the Supreme Court by four or more
seats.
Some oppose the idea of court expansion. They have
argued that expansion is “court-packing,” that it would start a never-ending
cycle of adding justices to the bench, and that it would undermine the court’s
integrity.
They are wrong. And their concerns
do not reflect the gravity of the Republican hijacking of the Supreme Court.
Why “four or more”? Because Elizabeth Warren likes three
of the current justices and dislikes six of the current justices (one of whom
has been there for more than thirty years; two of whom have been there for more
than 15 years), and because adding four or more new justices would ensure that
the people she likes would have a majority.
That’s it. That’s the case.
Warren’s apologists will explain that this is just a
“messaging bill.” And they’ll be right. It is a messaging bill. And Warren’s
message is that she’s a tyrant.
When this idea was last mooted — by FDR in 1937 — a
Congress filled with supermajorities from the president’s own party chose
emphatically to reject it. The Chair of the House Rules Committee described the
plan as “the most terrible threat to constitutional government that has arisen
in the entire history of the country,” while Joseph O’Mahoney, who never met a
plank of the New Deal that he disliked, told a friend that it “smells of
Machiavelli and Machiavelli stinks.”
The Senate Judiciary Committee, meanwhile, proposed that
the idea “violates every sacred tradition of American democracy” and “all
precedents in the history of our government,” and runs “in direct violation of
the spirit of the American Constitution.” Such a move, it submitted, would
represent “an invasion of judicial power such as has never before been
attempted in this country” and “make this government one of men rather than one
of law.”
In conclusion, the Senate insisted that the measure
“should be so emphatically rejected that its parallel will never again be
presented to the free representatives of the free people of America.” By
presenting its parallel, Senator Warren is telling us something about herself.
We should listen.
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