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Home Front: Politix
WaPo calls Obumble's Attack on the Supremes "Unsettling"
2012-04-03
Obama's assault on "an unelected group of people" stopped me cold. Because, as the former constitutional law professor certainly understands, it is the essence of our governmental system to vest in the court the ultimate power to decide the meaning of the constitution. Even if, as the president said, it means overturning "a duly constituted and passed law."

But the president went too far in asserting that it "would be an unprecedented, extraordinary step" for the court to overturn "a law that was passed by a strong majority of a democratically elected Congress." That's what courts have done since Marbury v. Madison. The size of the congressional majority is of no constitutional significance. We give the ultimate authority to decide constitutional questions to "a group of unelected people" precisely to insulate them from public opinion.
And just in case you think this might be an Obamanaut --
I would lament a ruling striking down the individual mandate, but I would not denounce it as conservative justices run amok.
In fact, he's stolen a page from the despicable conservative play book --
Worse, the president's critique, and in particular the reference to "unelected" judges, buys into an unfortunate and largely unwarranted conservative critique of judicial power. We want our judges unelected. We want them to have the final constitutional say. The president should be arguing for a second term to prevent the court from tipping in an even more conservative direction, not channeling tired critiques from the right about activist judges legislating from the bench.
Right. Only Progressives get to legislate from the bench.
Posted by:Bobby

#11  Spent time crafting an unconstitutional boondoggle instead of the economy. Only a fool couldn't use that to advantage.
Posted by: Rjschwarz   2012-04-03 23:59  

#10  Actually, if Zero loses the case, it's a big win for Romney, in that his past problems with the issue get taken out of his hands, more or less.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2012-04-03 23:40  

#9  Agree w/ Besoeker's logic. The consesus among the adults at work today was that if Bambi wanted to insult the SCOTUS he could have done it anytime after last Wednesday, but he waited until Monday. That's a trail of bread crumbs so obvious even Wile E. Coyote couldn't phuque it up.
Posted by: USN, Ret.   2012-04-03 23:27  

#8  Unelected group of people?

First of all, Supremes must be confirmed, is that not an election by elected officials?

Second, Richard Cordray.

Third, czars.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2012-04-03 23:15  

#7  "Obama had a choice between framing the question dishonestly and in an intimidating manner or framing it honestly"

Oh, don't be silly, lord garth - in his mind (and I use the term loosely), Bambi never has the choice of being honest.
Posted by: Barbara   2012-04-03 22:39  

#6  "an unelected group of people"

So, he supports those who used the same point about Roe vs Wade. Of course not. It's not and never has been about principle. It's been about POWER.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2012-04-03 21:41  

#5  Losing is different from the perception of being a loser.

Losing this case will help Bammo. What can hurt him is the perception of being a losing. So he will frame this as an attack by a radical, right-win court, then run against that court. Now he's not a loser--he's a fighter for justice! Meanwhile, the SCT will helpfully remove the Obamacare straightjacket from the economy so the markets can recover in time for November. It's win-win.

Oh yeah, and since this was Romney's baby in the first place, that helps Bammo too.
Posted by: Iblis   2012-04-03 21:23  

#4  Obama had a choice between framing the question dishonestly and in an intimidating manner or framing it honestly, e.g., "the SCourt has acquiesced in greater and greater federal power at the expense of the vanishing 10th amendment and it would be unprecedented in the past few decades for the 10th amendment to win one."

Of course presenting it that honestly would give the game away somewhat.
Posted by: lord garth   2012-04-03 21:19  

#3  There are few real secrets in Washington. Obama could have made the statement weeks ago. He did not. I would put my money on a staffer leak. The timing of his statement is quite revealing. He is a desperate man. Perhaps he will issue an Executive Order and have the SC decision "sealed" similar to personal and professional records until some unspecified future date.
Posted by: Besoeker   2012-04-03 20:34  

#2  The questions posed on the SG showed the lack of faith in an overarching Commerce Clause constitutional right to do anything Congress wants. That said - a leak from Kagan's or Sotomayor's staff is not an unlikely event. I particularly like the prevalent spin from lbtard "experts" that a partisan 5-4 split shows the Republican-leaning justices are radical partisans, while the loser side of Donk-justices voting lockstep is judicial excellence
Posted by: Frank G   2012-04-03 20:14  

#1  The speculation around the web has been that Champ got some leak from the USSC and is trying to pressure them back before a decision is formally announced.

I think it's more basic: he sees that he's going to lose, and he doesn't like losing. Champ is going to do what all progressive thugs do; when confronted with a losing political situation they're going to look for a way to delegitimize the politics, the players, and the situation.
Posted by: Steve White   2012-04-03 20:11  

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