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Constitutional Protections of Judicial Independence

Constitutional Protections of Judicial Independence. Tenure during good behavior No reductions in salary Removal only for “high Crimes and Misdemeanors”. The Elected Branches and the Judiciary. President: Appoints judges, with advice and consent of the Senate Congress:

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Constitutional Protections of Judicial Independence

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  1. Constitutional Protections of Judicial Independence • Tenure during good behavior • No reductions in salary • Removal only for “high Crimes and Misdemeanors” Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  2. The Elected Branches and the Judiciary • President: Appoints judges, with advice and consent of the Senate • Congress: – Establishes lower courts – Determines the size of the Supreme Court – Determines much of the jurisdiction of the federal courts Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  3. Constitutional Debates: The Federalists • Courts enforce the will of the people embodied in the Constitution • Judicial independence protects minority rights • Courts have no coercive power Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  4. Constitutional Debates: The Anti-Federalists • Federal courts would have unprecedented independence • Impeachment the only means of removing judges • Courts would have control over Congress Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  5. Courts and the Rise of Political Parties: Federalists • Prosecution of administration critics • Federal judges strictly enforced the Sedition Act • New courts diminished states’ authority Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  6. Courts and the Rise of Political Parties: Republicans • Abolished the circuit courts and new judgeships • Impeached judges accused of partisanship • Asserted congressional control over courts Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  7. Critics of Federal Judicial Authority • Jefferson: Fixed terms for judges • Calls to limit federal review of state court decisions • Defense of state jurisdiction over many cases Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  8. Reconstruction and the Federal Courts • Fears of a pro-Southern Supreme Court • Limiting jurisdiction over congressional acts • Reliance on courts to establish federal authority Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  9. The Courts in an Industrial Economy • Court injunctions against strikers • Court protection of private economic rights • Supreme Court rejection of economic regulation Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  10. Popular Reform Proposals • Election of judges • Limited terms of office • “Jurisdiction stripping” • Limits on judicial review Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  11. FDR’s “Court-Packing” Plan • Alleged court delays resulting from elderly judges • Need for judges with “modern” experience • Authority to add new judges to all federal courts Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  12. The Defense of the Judiciary • “Invasion of judicial power” • Democratic opposition to Roosevelt • Progressives feared executive power grab • Popular opposition to the plan Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  13. Persistence of Attacks on Judicial Independence • Proposed structural changes in response to specific decisions • Jurisdiction stripping • Challenges to judicial tenure Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  14. Institutional Independence • Judicial Conference of the U.S. Courts • Administrative, educational, and research support for the courts • Self regulation of the judiciary Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

  15. Public Trust in the Judiciary • Taft: Judges’ responsibility to ensure public faith • Failure of attempts to limit judicial independence • Resistance to wholesale reorganization of the courts Judicial Independence. Prepared by the Federal Judicial Center

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