Newsweek - USA (2019-11-08)

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Periscope THE NEWSWEEK INTERVIEW


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Is it a code word for court-packing?
You’d have to ask the pollsters, but I
don’t see it that way. The right wing

wanted to see it that way, but they
have a machine for pushing back on
things that trespass into delicate areas

they want to protect. [After the brief
was filed, more than 50 opinion pieces

were published attacking it as a threat
to pack the Court.]
We’ve been through this routine

before, where there’s kind of an auto-
mated response where all the usual
suspects jump in and basically say

what they’ve been told to say, and it
propagates like a little virus through
the right-wing media. They were the

ones who wanted to say that this was
about court-packing, which is some-

thing that (a) if they’d read the brief
and (b) if they’d read stuff I said before,
they’d know I’ve never supported.

What I have supported is: The
Supreme Court should have a code
of ethics. The Supreme Court should

report hospitality, travel and other
emoluments for the judges, much

more clearly than they do. [White-
house is co-sponsoring a bill to
require such reporting.] I think the

Supreme Court should steer away
from 5-to-4 decisions and try to seek
more inclusive—even if narrower—

decisions. When the 5-to-4 decision
is one that is distinguished by the
party of who appointed the judge,

that is even a greater hazard. That’s
something the Court should do on

its own account. They worked very
hard to make sure they were 9-to-
in Brown v. Board of Education.

I think there should be a lot more
transparency around the Court. I
think it’s very dangerous when the

Court is having its justices selected
through a process that the Federalist

Society has such an enormous role
in. [The Federalist Society does not
take positions in judicial selections,

So you’re still hopeful that—
We’ll see. 

In the legislative arena he seems
to have almost absolute power in
the Senate.

The Senate majority leader has the
absolute power to decide what does

and does not come to the Senate floor.


Does he have the same power in an


impeachment proceeding? Without
him, is the effort dead in the water?
He has conceded that he does not have

the power to keep articles of impeach-
ment from coming to the Senate floor.
He does [however] have the power to

craft the procedure through which
they are considered.

Nothing speciɿc has ɿltered down
to you yet about procedures?b

No, and actually I’d be surprised if
anything were filtering. Because the
mini-bombshells that emerge daily

about the Ukraine scheme suggest
that the view of this thing at the end

of the day may be very different than
what Republicans are being asked to
sell right now. And I think McCon-

nell is too wily a cat to box his mem-
bers in before they even know what
the evidence looks like and where

the public is. Mitch treads carefully
through uncertainty. 

If Senate Republicans could hold a
secret ballot, what would they do?

There is very conceivably enough hor-
ror and resentment in the Republican
Senate caucus to get us to 67 for con-

viction on the impeachment articles,
given a secret ballot. With a huge sigh
of relief, and a muttered utterance of

“good riddance.” 


Let’s turn to the Supreme Court. It
looks like it’s going to be a block-
buster term. There are cases on C

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NOVEMBER 15, 2019


abortion, LGBTQ discrimination,
gun control, DACA, executive pow-
er and public funding of religious

education. Before the term started,
you wrote a ɿrecracker friend-of-
the-Court brief in the gun case.b

I’ve written several, but this is the one
that lit up the right-wing counter-re-

sponse machine. 


The money line was: “The Supreme


Court is not well. And the people
know it. Perhaps the Court can
heal itself before the public de-

mands it be ‘restructured in order
to reduce the inʀuence of politics.’Ť
When you said “restructured,Ť

what did you mean by that?
So you know that that word was in

quotes and referred back to a poll that
was taken that used that word? That’s
what I meant. [In May, a Quinnipiac

University National Poll found that a
growing majority of Americans believed
that the Supreme Court’s rulings were

“mainly based on politics” rather than
law, and that a majority now felt the

Court should be “restructured in order
to reduce the influence of politics.”] 

But I don’t know what the poll
meant by the term “restructured.Ť
Nor do I. But it’s a fairly strong word,

and the people polled responded to it
very positively. So that’s the point.

“M cConnell is too


wily a cat to box his


members in before


they even know


what the evidence


looks like and where


the public is.Ť

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