Roberts' record suggests belief in restrained judi

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Bookworm
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Joined: Tue Aug 24, 2004 12:04 am

Roberts' record suggests belief in restrained judi

Post by Bookworm »

WASHINGTON - At his appeals court confirmation hearings in 2003, John G. Roberts described federal courts as having to strike a delicate balance as the only unelected branch of government in a nation that cherishes democracy.

Courts shouldn't be so inactive that they abdicate responsibility to interpret the Constitution, he said. But they have to resist overreaching judicial activism.

His own approach?

A look at his 2003 testimony and the opinions he's issued as a judge since then suggests he embraces a conservative judicial restraint that evokes an approach that has largely been absent from the Supreme Court for decades. If Roberts employs a restrained judicial outlook once he's confirmed, he'll probably disappoint both liberals and conservatives who look to the court for consistently favorable political results.

Read the ful story here.


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Stasi
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Roberts' record suggests belief in restrained judi

Post by Stasi »

I think this country could use a more restrained judiciary. It seems that various groups, when they fail to inspire Congress to legislate in a manner that goes along with their pet cause, they campaign in the courts to try and get an interpretation of the Constitution that they like. I have always wondered how either the Dems or Reps could support the idea of an 'impartial Supreme Court' when every time a nominee comes up, it becomes a big political battle between the so-called liberals and conservatives. Both sides seem to want a Court that will back their own agenda when they come calling.

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