Judicial Independence, pt. 4: Term Limits
An episode of the Humankind on Public Radio podcast, hosted by David Freudberg, titled "Judicial Independence, pt. 4: Term Limits" was published on February 4, 2021 and runs 26 minutes.
February 4, 2021 ·26m · Humankind on Public Radio
Episode Description
The Constitution specifies that once federal judges are nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate, they can hold their office “during good behavior,” in other words for life — unless they’ve misbehaved, that is. But the average American today lives a lot longer today than in 1789, when President George Washington signed the Judiciary Act, establishing America’s court system. In a time when justices may live into their eighties and even nineties, sometimes facing ill-health, advocates of Supreme Court reform maintain there may be constitutional ways to institute term limits.
In part four of our look at the judiciary, we consider the addition of an independent body to pick cases for the Supreme Court, the role of The Federalist Society and the impact that a lack of diversity in life experience has on our federal judiciary.
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