FBI Had to Slap Down CBS News Over This Fake News Piece About...
A Dance Team Did Not Just Do This Regarding the ICE Shooting in...
Ilhan Omar Just Called on Democrats to Abolish This Agency
The Deplorable Treatment of Afghan Women Is a Glimpse Into Our Future
In Record Time, Voters Are Regretting Electing Socialist Mamdani
Steven Spielberg Flees California Before Its Billionaire Wealth Tax Fleeces Him
Oklahoma Bill Would Mandate Gun Safety Training in Public Schools
Here Is the Silver Lining to the Supreme Court's Tariff Ruling
CA Bends The Knee, Newsom Will Now Mandate English Proficiency Tests for Truck...
Will The Trump Administration Be Forced to Pay Back Billions in Tariff Revenue?
Justice Thomas Blasts The Supreme Court Majority for Striking Down Trump’s Tariffs
DOJ Probes Three Michigan School Districts That Allegedly Teach Gender Ideology
5th Circuit Vacates Ruling That Blocked Louisiana's Mandate to Display 10 Commandments in...
Kansas Engineer Gets 29 Months for $1.2M Kickback Scheme on Nuclear Weapons Projects
DOJ Files Antitrust Lawsuit Against Ohio Healthcare Company
OPINION

Court-Packing Controversy Reveals How Terrified Biden Is of His Left-Wing Base

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Court-Packing Controversy Reveals How Terrified Biden Is of His Left-Wing Base
AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden doesn’t want to pack the Supreme Court. He really doesn’t. In fact, he’s said so for the past 40 years. 

“President [Franklin D.] Roosevelt clearly had the right to send to the United States Senate and the United States Congress a proposal to pack the court [in 1937],” then-Senator Biden said during a Judiciary Committee hearing in 1983.  “It was totally within his right to do that. He violated no law. He was legalistically, absolutely correct. But it was a bonehead idea. It was a terrible, terrible mistake to make.” 

Advertisement

Biden believed Roosevelt’s attempt to add justices to the Court who would vote to uphold his New Deal legislation “put in question, if for an entire decade, the independence of the most-significant body...in this country, the Supreme Court of the United States of America.”

This belief prompted Biden to reiterate his deep-seated opposition to court packing in 2005 and praise Democratic senators who blocked what Biden called Roosevelt’s “power grab.”

“Remember this old adage about power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely,” Biden said.  “[Roosevelt], corrupted by power in my view, unveiled his court-packing plan.  He wanted to increase the number of justices to 15, allowing himself to nominate those additional judges. It took an act of courage on the part of his own party institutionally to stand up against this power grab.” 

As recently as last July, Biden expressed his disdain for court-packing, telling the Iowa Starting Line that he “is not prepared to go on and try to pack the court, because we’ll live to rue that day.”  Three months later, he said in a Democratic primary debate that he “would not get into court-packing.”  

Almost exactly one year later, though, Biden is steadfastly refusing to answer the same question he has spent four decades answering; even going so far as to tell a local news reporter in Las Vegas that voters “don’t deserve” to know his stance on the issue before Election Day.

Advertisement

Related:

COURT PACKING

The controversy over his repeated refusal to say what he has said for almost his entire life in politics belies an uncomfortable truth about Biden’s candidacy: He is so beholden to and terrified of alienating the radical left-wing of his party that he can no longer articulate what he clearly believes to be both constitutionally and morally wrong.

The radical base of voters he needs to appease harbor no such sentimentality about the independence of the judiciary; they are so furious that the Senate is on the verge of confirming President Trump’s third Supreme Court nominee that they are all but demanding that Democrats abandon the Separation of Powers doctrine and seize the Court as a spoil of victory if they win next month’s election.

A full 60 percent of Democrats told a Washington Examiner/YouGov poll last week that their party should indeed expand the Court, and Biden’s own running mate —the far more radical Kamala Harris—said the same in an interview with the New York Times last year.

“Are you open to expanding the size of the Supreme Court?” a reporter asked her.

“I am open to that discussion,” Harris flatly answered.

Biden, meanwhile, is terrified of it because he knows that any definitive answer he gives will either spook moderates who sort of like the independence of the judiciary or cause a mutiny among leftists who demand the immediate seizure of absolute power. 

Biden (and most Democrats) may have once thought that it absolutely corrupted President Roosevelt, but that view can no longer be publicly expressed. Biden’s comical dithering, then, isn’t merely standard election-year obfuscation; it’s a veiled cry for help from a candidate held hostage by a radicalized Democratic Party that is now hellbent on seizing the very sort of absolute power that it had once feared (or at least pretended to). 

Advertisement

Biden is merely the kindly, grandfatherly puppet who doesn’t dare tug on his strings, and his court-packing controversy proves it.  He appears to know how unconstitutional, unethical, and dangerous to a free republic such a power grab would be, but he doesn’t dare say it, because if he does his party will dump him just as quickly as they’ll dump the Separation of Powers doctrine and even the Constitution itself.   

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement