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Biden Creates Commission To Study Expanding Supreme Court

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(TJVNEWS.COM) President Biden refused to answer the question of whether a Biden administration would expand the Supreme Court (so-called ‘court-packing) in mid-October, at one point literally saying the public does not have to know his position on this important issue. 

Conservatives repeatedly pointed out during the election season that Biden was not the “moderate” that he has been portrayed as by the heavily Democratic supportive media, but rather a puppet of the progressive and Democratic Socialist wing of his party, determined to radically change American government in ways even former President Obama never imagined.

Republicans cautioned that the Democrat party is determined to create a one-party system by stacking the courts with liberal judges and granting D.C and Puerto Rico statehood.

President Biden on Friday ordered a 180-day study of adding seats to the Supreme Court, making good on a campaign-year promise to establish a bipartisan commission to examine the potentially explosive subjects of expanding the court or setting term limits for justices, White House officials said.

In his executive order on Friday, the president will create a 36-member commission charged with examining the history of the court, past changes to the process of nominating justices, and the potential consequences to altering the size of the nation’s highest court.

The panel will be led by Bob Bauer, who served as White House counsel for former President Barack Obama, and Cristina Rodriguez, a Yale Law School professor who served as deputy assistant attorney general in the Office of Legal Counsel under Mr. Obama, Zero Hedge explained.

The good news for constitutionalists, Republicans, and moderate Democrats is that this entire commission may be an effort to placate the sizable radical left Democrat voting base, and might not result in any major changes

The New York Times admits that activists who say a larger court would give Mr. Biden the chance to appoint a number of liberal justices may be disappointed by his commission. Additionally, Justice Breyer, 82, is the oldest member of the court and the senior member of its three-justice liberal wing, warned this week that efforts to expand the court for political reasons could undermine the trust that the public has in the court and the decisions that it makes on important issues.

 

 

 

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