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Ian D. Volner's avatar

Many of us agree with Professor Vladeck that Congressional power to curtail the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and of Federal Courts grenerally is not "plenary." Unless there is a Court so radical, as to overrule Marbury, the Court will always insist that thst precedent is inviolable. By the same token, Gorsuch's urging that Congress needs to "be careful" in exercising its own Constitutional powers is a bit rich---This is after all the same Jujstice who declared that the Immunity Rule it pronounced is a "Rule for the Ages" a conclusion and a principle that finds not a single word in the Constitution. It is also the same Court that has essentially gutted the Civil Rights Act on the apparent ground that, according to Gorsuch, "there is too much regulation" of innocent citizens; while I cdertainly will read Gorsuch's book when it comes out, I do hope that it will be closely examined by serious scholars who do not vbelieve that the Court should be engaged in partisan politics and pretending not to be.

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Joe From the Bronx's avatar

Schumer more generally said the Senate is going to look into court reform bills, so it is fine to argue that the No Kings Act alone is not the correct path. The concern is that this decision is noticeably horrible on principle, which critics like Prof. Vladeck seem to agree. So specific action is deemed warranted as compared to justice service as circuit justices or something.

I think the "essential functions" argument is interesting. I think it's a reach that the "one Supreme Court" itself does the trick. Nations can have "one Supreme Court" -- the supreme court in the federal courts -- without it being supreme on every matter of constitutional interpretation.

So, it appears to be some sort of separation of powers balancing test.

Also, interpretation of federal statutes is a basic function of the Supreme Court. Completely, leaving them to 50 competing state interpretations to me strips an "essential" function too.

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