Ponnuru: Biden's commission will make sure court-packing goes nowhere

FILE - In this March 21, 2021, file photo security fencing surrounds the Supreme Court building on Capitol Hill in Washington. Biden on Friday, April 9, ordered a study of adding seats to the Supreme Court, creating a bipartisan commission that will spend the next 180 days examining the incendiary political issues of expanding the court and instituting term limits for justices on the highest bench. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)
FILE - In this March 21, 2021, file photo security fencing surrounds the Supreme Court building on Capitol Hill in Washington. Biden on Friday, April 9, ordered a study of adding seats to the Supreme Court, creating a bipartisan commission that will spend the next 180 days examining the incendiary political issues of expanding the court and instituting term limits for justices on the highest bench. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File)

By appointing a commission to study changes to the Supreme Court, President Joe Biden has alarmed the opponents of court-packing while disappointing the supporters.

Mitch McConnell, the Kentuckian who leads Senate Republicans, said the establishment of the commission is "a direct assault on our nation's independent judiciary and yet another sign of the Far Left's influence over the Biden Administration."

Left-wing publications were less impressed. In the Nation, Elie Mystal wrote that the commission showed that Biden "doesn't want a solution; he wants an excuse to do nothing." Brian Fallon, head of the activist group Demand Justice, said it was "hard to disagree."

Their complaints: The commission has not been asked to make any recommendations. It has too many conservatives. And Fallon and Mystal aren't on it.

Congressional advocates of court-packing are moving ahead as though the commission doesn't exist. They have introduced legislation to add four justices, just enough to give the court a majority of Democratic appointees instead of Republican ones.

The progressives are right to see the commission as a way for Biden to shelve the idea of packing the court. They're wrong, though, to think the idea ever had a realistic path to fruition.

The court has had nine justices since 1869. Biden knows that when Franklin Roosevelt tried to get a Congress with large Democratic majorities to expand it so he could make more appointments, it handed him a rare crushing defeat. He knows that Justice Stephen Breyer, one of the Democratic appointees on the court, has opposed the idea, just as Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg did. The president is probably also aware that the idea polls abysmally.

So is everyone else in politics. Republicans would love to hold a floor vote on court-packing, so that Democrats in Congress would have to choose between angering their party's hard core and looking like an extremist to everyone else.

As soon as the legislation was introduced, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said any action would have to wait on the commission. She is using the panel to serve one of its intended functions: letting Democrats tell the most gullible progressives they are working on far-reaching changes to the courts while avoiding taking the heat that would come from doing anything real.

Some progressives hope that the mere talk of court-packing will cause conservative justices to show restraint in overturning liberal precedents and invalidating liberal laws. Most conservatives think this pressure campaign is an illegitimate threat to judicial independence.

Chief Justice John Roberts, is widely thought to tailor his decisions to minimize political controversy around the court. But his political antennae, and those of the other justices, may be fine enough to detect that the message of the commission is that the threat of court-packing is empty.

In a best-case scenario, the new commission would not obsess about court-packing but look more deeply at some of the other issues within its purview. It would address some specific, related problems, such as the lack of transparency in the Supreme Court's "shadow docket" and the overreaching national injunctions too many district courts are issuing.

It could also help to build a consensus that the courts have assumed a dangerous level of power in our system.

Whatever it says, though, the commission is not going to have a big impact. The most likely result is what Nebraska Republican Sen. Ben Sasse predicts: "This commission's report is just going to be a taxpayer-funded door stopper."

Bloomberg

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