Justice of the Supreme Court Stephen BreyerStephen Breyer will interview justice on Fox News Sunday, amid demands for the reversal of the Supreme Court ruling on Texas abortion law, which alternates lawmakers. has issued a warning on the reformulation of the Supreme Court, stating that “what happens is that it comes out.”
Breyer made the statement in an interview with NPR published Friday to promote his book “The Authority of the Court and the Danger of Politics.”
“What happens is everything. And if Democrats can do it, Republicans can do it,” Breyer told reporters.
Currently, the Conservatives have a supermajority between the 6th and 3rd generation in the High Court, which makes some progressives call for its expansion.
President BidenKentucky State Lawmakers Vote to Reject School Mask Warrant Arkansas Governor Turns Back Against Biden Vaccine Warrant RNC vows to sue for Biden vaccine, proving warrant MORE signed an executive order in April establishing a commission to study whether to add seats to the Supreme Court, an idea on which Biden himself has remained neutral.
Breyer has previously warned against judicial packaging.
In comments to Harvard Law School in April, Breyer warned that changing the court could hurt public confidence in the institution.
Breyer’s book argues that public acceptance of the High Court’s views has strengthened the rule of law as essential to democracy, according to the newspaper.
In the NPR interview, Breyer noted the comments of the former Senate leader Harry ReidHarry Mason Reid: Harry Reid renews filibuster abolition bill: “We need to get the Senate working again” White House says ball is in Congressional court on voting rights, abortion Biden faces two MORE crises (D-Nev.) After the 2000 election, when the high court ruled essentially that President George W. Bush would win the race.
“He said the highlight of this case is that even though they probably didn’t like it at all in the middle of the country, and he was totally wrong, in my opinion and mine, people followed him and didn’t throwing batsmen. between them and they had no riots, “Breyer said.
Breyer also said he welcomes the resumption of face-to-face oral arguments after the court was virtualized due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“I think it’s better to be where you can really see the lawyer and see your colleagues and get a more humane interaction,” he told NPR.