| January 1, 2022 
 
 “Inappropriate Political Influence”: Chief Justice John Roberts Responds to Threats Against the Court
 
 
  
 Chief Justice John Roberts used his year-end report on New Year’s Eve  to denounce the threats being made against the Court and its members by  Democratic politicians and groups, including threats to pack the Court  to force an immediate liberal majority. Roberts referred to such threats  as efforts to exercise “inappropriate political influence” on the Court  in contravention of our constitutional values and traditions.
 
 We have been discussing the ramped up threats from Democratic leaders  that the Court will either vote with the liberal justices on key issues  or face “consequences,” including court packing.  Recently, Sen.  Elizabeth Warren (D., Mass.), a former law professor, became the  latest to voice such reckless views.
 
 What Democratic members are demanding is raw court packing to add  four members to the Court to give liberals an instant majority — a  movement denounced by figures like the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Justice Stephen Breyer.
 
 Last year, House Judiciary Committee Chair Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., Sen.  Ed Markey, D-Mass, and others stood in front of the Supreme Court to  announce a court packing bill to give liberals a one-justice majority.   This follows threats from various Democratic members that conservative  justices had better vote with liberal colleagues . . . or else.
 
 Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H.,  recently issued a warning to the Supreme Court: reaffirm Roe v. Wade or face a “revolution.”   Sen. Richard Blumenthal previously warned the  Supreme Court that, if it continued to issue conservative rulings or  “chip away at Roe v Wade,” it would trigger “a seismic movement to  reform the Supreme Court. It may not be expanding the Supreme Court, it  may be making changes to its jurisdiction, or requiring a certain  numbers of votes to strike down certain past precedents.”
 
 Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer also declared in front of the  Supreme Court “I want to tell you, Gorsuch, I want to tell you,  Kavanaugh, you have released the whirlwind, and you will pay the price.”
 
 For her part, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y.  questioned the whole institution’s value  if it is not going to vote consistently with her views and those of the  Democratic Party: “How much does the current structure benefit us? And I  don’t think it does.” Warren seems to be channeling more AOC than FDR.  Roosevelt at least tried to hide his reckless desire to pack the Court  by pushing an age-based rule. It was uniquely stupid. The bill would  have allowed Roosevelt to add up to six justices for every member who is  over 70 years old. Warren, like AOC, wants the Democratic base to know  that she is pushing a pure, outcome-changing court packing scheme  without even the pretense of a neutral rule.
 
 Despite the fact that the Court has more often voted on non-ideological lines (and  regularly issued unanimous decisions),  Warren denounced the Court as an “extremist” body that has “threatened,  or outright dismantled, fundamental rights in this country.” Those  “fundamental” values do not apparently include judicial independence.
 
 Now Roberts appears to have responded. His report is striking in its  measured and deliberative tone in comparison to the often reckless  rhetoric of these politicians. He waited to address the year in review  for his court and the 107 district and appeals courts across the  country. However, he included the following lines that are clearly  directed toward Congress and extreme Democratic groups like Demand  Justice:
 
 
  “Decisional independence is essential to  due process, promoting impartial decision-making, free from political or  other extraneous influence. The Judiciary’s power to manage its  internal affairs insulates courts from inappropriate political influence  and is crucial to preserving public trust in its work as a separate and  co-equal branch of government.”The criticism comes after new polling shows that Roberts is the most popular government official in the country, a fact that  led some on the left to express almost apocalyptic alarm.
 
 
 He is not the only justice who is speaking out to blunt the attacks on the Court. Liberal Justice Stephen Breyer  chaffed  at the claim that this is a “conservative” court and noted “The chief  justice frequently speaks on this subject as well and says, no, no: we  don’t look at our rulings from the point of view of our personal  ideology.”
 
 Justice Thomas criticized those who seem intent on diminishing the  authority or respect for the Court: “the media makes it sound as though  you are just always going right to your personal preference…They think  you become like a politician. That’s a problem. You’re going to  jeopardize any faith in the legal institutions.”
 
 Justice Amy Coney Barrett recently told an audience that “My goal  today is to convince you that this court is not comprised of a bunch of  partisan hacks.”
 
 However,  as discussed in my Hill column,  the attacks are likely to increase in this key election year with so  many major decisions ticking away on the Court docket. The type of  demagoguery denounced by Chief Justice Roberts is now going mainstream  with our leaders, the media, and various advocacy groups. Yet,  Democratic strategists are finding that selling court packing and  attacking justices is not resonating outside of the same 30 percent of  voters on the left. Instead, many view  what is “dire for democracy” is the effort to destroy one of the core institutions in our constitutional system.
 
 jonathanturley.org
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