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A 10 year term for all Federal Judges makes more sense.
I disagree. We don't need to have essentially every year this type of crap bogging down the senate. Furthermore, the lengthy terms make the federal judges beyond the reach of those that appointed them and makes them less susceptible to the whims of the day. In other words, you have a much more stable body of law.
If there were to be term limits, it would make more sense to have 18 year terms for the reasons described above. Have the appointments on SCOTUS expire every other year. Therefore each term of a presidency a president will make 2 appointments. The issue comes in when you have 3 consecutive terms of one party, that party will have 6 justices of the 9. This issue is even more pronounced with a 10 year term.
I prefer the lifetime appointments that put these men and women beyond the reach of those that appointed them.
I disagree. We don't need to have essentially every year this type of crap bogging down the senate. Furthermore, the lengthy terms make the federal judges beyond the reach of those that appointed them and makes them less susceptible to the whims of the day. In other words, you have a much more stable body of law.
If there were to be term limits, it would make more sense to have 18 year terms for the reasons described above. Have the appointments on SCOTUS expire every other year. Therefore each term of a presidency a president will make 2 appointments. The issue comes in when you have 3 consecutive terms of one party, that party will have 6 justices of the 9. This issue is even more pronounced with a 10 year term.
I prefer the lifetime appointments that put these men and women beyond the reach of those that appointed them.
I could go with 12 year terms but lifetime appointments leave a judge wholly unaccountable and it's virtually impossible to remove them.
I also don't see how a judge with a 10 year term would be "in reach" of the one who appointed him. When I say a 10 year term that's 10 years and out, no reappointment to the same bench.
What does that fix?
In my opinion, it gets rid of lifetime politicians who aren't challenged in elections and simply get fat in DC. The intent of the framers was for people to perform a civic duty and serve the public in some capacity for a limited period of time and then return home to their true occupation. Plus we should, from an economic standpoint, get rid of the absurd pensions and benefits earned by congressmen in a very short period of time.
In my opinion, it gets rid of lifetime politicians who aren't challenged in elections and simply get fat in DC. The intent of the framers was for people to perform a civic duty and serve the public in some capacity for a limited period of time and then return home to their true occupation. Plus we should, from an economic standpoint, get rid of the absurd pensions and benefits earned by congressmen in a very short period of time.
No but really why do all our compromises end up acceding to bigger government? Even the so called conservative compromises? Always.
It's pretty simple. Fiscal conservatism is a fringe movement in modern America.
The Democrats want increased spending for entitlements. The Republicans want increased spending for the military. "Compromise" gets us both.
It's pretty simple. Fiscal conservatism is a fringe movement in modern America.
The Democrats want increased spending for entitlements. The Republicans want increased spending for the military. "Compromise" gets us both.
