[Mb-civic] Supreme Court term limits - Jeff Jacoby - Boston Globe
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Sep 8 03:55:20 PDT 2005
Supreme Court term limits
By Jeff Jacoby | September 7, 2005
LESS THAN two months before he died, Chief Justice William Rehnquist
issued a statement firmly denying the ''rumors of my imminent
retirement" and announcing that he would remain on the job ''as long as
my health permits." That July 14 statement included no information about
his medical condition. It was something he didn't talk about -- not to
the country and apparently not even to his colleagues.
Justice David Souter told The New York Times he had thought Rehnquist's
health was improving and was shocked when he died. But he acknowledged
the ''unconscious anxiety" that had been hanging over the Supreme Court
since Rehnquist was diagnosed with thyroid cancer last fall and spent
more than four months undergoing surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy.
''Even after he returned to the court," the Times reported, ''the chief
justice did not discuss his condition or prognosis with his colleagues."
By all accounts, Rehnquist was a very private man, not given to
unburdening himself for public consumption. Certainly no reasonable
person would have wanted to see the reserve of a very sick man
thoughtlessly violated. But Rehnquist was also a public official, and
issues of legitimate public concern were riding on his mental and
physical abilities. Wasn't the nation entitled to know something about
his medical situation and how it might be affecting the work of the court?
The Constitution grants life tenure to federal judges, and Rehnquist was
under no legal obligation to step down because of illness -- not even an
incurable cancer that was visibly robbing him of his strength. But there
is growing support, both public and academic, for abolishing life tenure
on the high court, and cases like Rehnquist's are part of the reason
why. Charles Evans Hughes, chief justice from 1930 to 1941, found it
''extraordinary how reluctant aged judges are to retire." In the
intervening 70 years, the problem has only grown worse.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/09/07/supreme_court_term_limits/
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