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Ted Cruz Vows to Put Hard-Core Conservatives on the Supreme Court

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CrazyDude

Member
Ted Cruz believes Republicans have "an abysmal record" when it comes to picking Supreme Court justices, and it is something the Texas senator promises to rectify if he's elected president.

Cruz, who argued cases before the Supreme Court as the solicitor general of his state and has taught law school classes on the art of presenting cases to the high court, told Bloomberg in an exclusive interview in Iowa on Monday that his party has a knack for picking eventual heretics who side with liberals on divisive issues.

As examples, he cited Chief Justice John Roberts, an appointee of President George W. Bush, who rejected a challenge to President Barack Obama's health care law in 2012, and Justice Anthony Kennedy, a Ronald Reagan appointee, who voted in 2015 to make same-sex marriage a constitutional right.

"Unlike many of the other candidates, I will be willing to spend the capital to ensure that every Supreme Court nominee that I put on the court is a principled judicial conservative," Cruz said.

The Supreme Court is poised for vacancies in the years ahead. Come Election Day, three out of nine justices (Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Antonin Scalia and Anthony Kennedy) will be over 80 years old. A fourth, Stephen Breyer, will be 78. The average Supreme Court retirement age is 78.7, according to a 2006 Harvard study. The next president could end up nominating several justices, making the high court stakes enormous in the 2016 election, particularly given the now familiar 5 to 4 split on monumental issues like voting rights, campaign finance, gun rights and the role of religion in public life.'We bat about .500'

While the stark divisions between the types of justices preferred by modern Democratic and Republican presidents are well-known, Cruz argued that within the GOP, some candidates (namely: him) would fight for more conservative nominees than others.

His goal? To match Democrats' "nearly perfect record" of picking justices who vote reliably with their movement. "The Republicans have an abysmal record. We bat about .500," he said. "About half of the nominees Republicans have put on the court have not just occasionally disappointed but have turned into absolute disasters."

As examples he cited Justices William Brennan, Earl Warren, John Paul Stevens, David Souter and Harry Blackmun. All were appointed by Republican presidents and sided with liberal justices on some important issues; Warren and Stevens went on to become leaders of the court's liberal wing.

Driving east in his car after a campaign stop near Iowa City, the accomplished Supreme Court litigator and former Texas solicitor general said he'd only settle for "rock-ribbed conservatives" who have "a long paper trail as principled conservative jurists." His ideal contender would be someone who has refused to bow to pressure, rather than a "stealth candidate" without a demonstrable conservative record.

Cruz cited Souter and Chief Justice Roberts (whom Cruz praised at the time he was appointed and has since called the appointment a mistake) as examples of "stealth" Republican- selected nominees without a proven conservative record. If more conservative judges like Edith Jones and Mike Luttig were picked, he argued, Obamacare would have been struck down in 2012 and states wouldn't have lost their authority to ban same-sex marriage. (Both cases were decided by a 5 to 4 margin.)

Presidents Bush took the "easy way out" by picking Souter and Roberts, Cruz said. "They didn't want to spend the political capital trying to confirm a proven conservative." As examples of principled conservative justices he'd model his nominees after, Cruz cited Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, William Rehnquist and Samuel Alito.Judicial philosophy

In the interview, Cruz revealed his aggressive brand of legal conservatism. Yet when it comes to one century-old monumental decision regarding the scope of federal power, Cruz showed himself to be not quite as radical as some on the right.

Unlike some prominent conservatives like syndicated columnist George Will and Texas Supreme Court Justice Don Willett, Cruz said he believes the landmark 1905 ruling in Lochner v. New Yorkwas wrongly decided. The decision, which ruled unconstitutional a state law establishing maximum working hours for bakers, led to the "Lochner era," a period lasting more than three decades in which progressive economic laws such as a minimum wage were invalidated as a breach of the right to contract freely under the 14th Amendment. The Lochner decision was eventually overturned in 1937.

"I am not a supporter of Lochner," Cruz said. "I believe that minimum wage laws harm the most vulnerable in our society, that they are bad policy. As a legislator, I would vote against those laws. But I do not believe it is the role of the courts to strike them down. The states have the constitutional authority to impose foolish laws... So I disagree with some conservatives who argue, à la Lochner, that the courts should impose conservative policy."

On Lochner, Cruz is aligned with Chief Justice Roberts(as well as former judge Robert Bork), who kicked off a debate about jurisprudential doctrine by criticizing the ruling as "judicial policymaking" in a dissent earlier this year.

A second landmark case, Wickard v. Filburn in 1942—which established broad federal authority to regulate economic activity under the Constitution's Commerce Clause, and has served as the linchpin of the modern regulatory state from environmental to public health laws—has in recent years faced renewed conservative ire for purportedly stretching the meaning of Constitution. Cruz shares those conservative concerns, saying Wickard wasn't correctly decided.

"No," he said. "It was not."

Asked if Social Security is unconstitutional, as some of Cruz's fellow Texans including ex-Governor Rick Perry and ex- Representative Ron Paul have suggested, Cruz wouldn't bite. "I am a strong defender of Social Security," he said, steering into a discussion of his policy proposal to trim Social Security benefits "for younger workers."

Before ending the interview, Bloomberg asked Cruz if he'd accept a hypothetical nomination to the Supreme Court by a future president.

He paused for three seconds, revealing a sense of intrigue behind his smile.

"One step at a time," he said. "Time will tell if I'm in a position to assess that offer."

http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/cruz-scotus-conservative-appointments/2015/12/02/id/704173/

Read latest Breaki.......!!!
 

Ogodei

Member
He's not wrong. As gridlock becomes more of a thing, having the right SC justices become crucial. Also because "unconstitutional" could strike down a lot of stuff if you spun it wrong, like how a new "Lochner v New York" could invalidate all labor laws on the books in the US. "Adults have absolute right of contract," boom, no more unions or labor laws.

It's rather scary when you think about it.
 

Dali

Member
How much of a hard core racist, homophobic, unrepentant, general piece of shit would you have to be to keep going hard even after you've been elevated above politics and have a guaranteed job for life?
 

Cerium

Member
John Roberts is an extremely conservative Justice except for that one time he changed his mind and saved Obamacare at the last minute.
 
How much of a hard core racist, homophobic, unrepentant, general piece of shit would you have to be to keep going hard even after you've been elevated above politics and have a guaranteed job for life?

I don't know. Ask Scalia.
 

shem935

Banned
I seem to remember cruz crying from the high heavens about a politicized supreme court a couple months ago.
 
At some point, Republicans forgot that there's supposed to be a body of American constitutional law against which cases should be weighed.
 

Korigama

Member
Ted Cruz has as about as much of a chance of becoming president as the Lions have of going to and winning the Super Bowl.
 
Even a Ted Cruz-appointed hardcore conservative justice would eventually start drifting leftward over the course of his/her tenure.
 

LCGeek

formerly sane
I so hope dems take advantage of him bringing this up to ram it down the democratic party throat this means something in an election. This is one of the few areas a presidential election counts but fuck me if I've ever noticed dems trotting this out be it kerry or obama nominations cycle.
 

Muzy72

Banned
Even a Ted Cruz-appointed hardcore conservative justice would eventually start drifting leftward over the course of his/her tenure.
Antonin_Scalia_Official_SCOTUS_Portrait.jpg
 
Probably too much to hope for that Scalia goes willingly under a Democratic president, but Ginsburg seems almost certain and hopefully Kennedy will follow. If Clinton got to appoint the justices that would at least give Democrats a 5-4 majority.
 
If the odds are greater than zero, then is a horror story in the making for either scenario.

You are more likely to be murdered by one of the people called Fred Kruger living today than Ted Cruz is of winning the presidency. Better?

The odds of Cruz becoming president aren't zero, because it's not impossible given that some disaster could conceivably wipe out everyone on the planet but Ted Cruz and his supporters.

It's not worth worrying about, however scary the scenario might be. The 'anything but Cruz' number of likely voters is well above the people who would vote for him. Put him on the ticket against a potato, and the potato wins.
 
RBG and Breyer should take their leave as soon as the next president (assuming Democratic) takes office. It would also be symbolic, since Clinton was the one to appoint those two back in the 90s. This will restock the liberal branch for at least a good twenty years. Then you just play the waiting game for Scalia and Kennedy.

Scalia will never retire under a Democratic president, so as morbid as it sounds, we would have to wait until he passes until he gets replaced. I'm not sure about Kennedy. He wouldn't want to be replaced by a liberal judge, but I bet he wouldn't want another Alito taking his spot either. He'll probably retire when he feels like it, or ride it out until the end. Nonetheless, we will see two judges step down within the next ten years, four at the max, and we especially need a Democratic president in to filter the crazy.
 

Misha

Banned
It'd going to be hilarious when Hillary appoints Obama to the Supreme Court.

is there a specific reason people bring this up or is it just more of a wishlist type of thing? I've been curious if thats something he wants or something (like Taft)
 

Cerium

Member
Doesn't he have to serve as a federal judge before that happens?
I honestly don't know how the American system works compared to the Canadian

No. A President could technically nominate whoever they want. William Howard Taft was both the 27th President and Chief Justice.
 
It kind of sounds like he just wants someone who will automatically vote no on everything that the liberal judges vote yes on.
 

Monocle

Member
I just want a balanced supreme court. Not too left, not too right.
Not too left = far left in the US. The balance you refer to would have a heavy conservative bias if the justices had evenly split party affiliations.

Unless we want to act like "women, gays, and minorities are filth" is the proportional complement of "support and promote basic human rights and equality for all."

It'd going to be hilarious when Hillary appoints Obama to the Supreme Court.
That's the dream.
 

Lubricus

Member
Anyone but Cruz: That’s the leitmotif of his life, stretching back to college at Princeton. His freshman roommate, Craig Mazin, told Patricia Murphy of The Daily Beast: “I would rather have anybody else be the president of the United States. Anyone. I would rather pick somebody from the phone book.”

The political strategist Matthew Dowd, who worked for Bush back then, tweeted that “if truth serum was given to the staff of the 2000 Bush campaign,” an enormous percentage of them “would vote for Trump over Cruz.”

Another Bush 2000 alumnus said to me: “Why do people take such an instant dislike to Ted Cruz? It just saves time.”

Asked about Cruz at a fund-raiser last spring, John Boehner responded by raising a lone finger — the middle one.

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/02/opinion/anyone-but-ted-cruz.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-left-region&region=opinion-c-col-left-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-left-region

I think a lot of folks will be working against him.
 

ChaosXVI

Member
I so cannot wait for the (probable landslide) defeat for the Republicans next year for the presidency.

As for the retiring judges...I really can't believe that none of the ones approaching their 80's would want to stay on the bench, waiting for their near death, rather than spending their last days with family...but I guess some people are just like that.

It's going to be interesting to see what laws might get passed/get overturned in the United States once the Supreme Court finally gets a hard-left bent again. It's been far too long.
 
The two most important contributions the next President is going to make to the country is foreign policy direction and supreme court appointments. Everything else is going to be gridlocked even worse than now by Congress.

Although its interesting to think about how the gridlock may work for/against any SC nominees. Its entirely within the rulebook to filibuster any nominee, and its unlikely either party will have the super majority needed to shut down filibusters. So we could totally see all SC nominees never get past confirmation hearings, no matter which party holds the white house.
 
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