Has Court-Packing Worked Before?

Political News

My Bloomberg Opinion column is about President Biden’s new “Supreme Court reform” commission. One of the topics I take up is whether FDR’s attempt to pack the Court succeeded in intimidating the justices.

The story goes that in 1937 Justice Owen Roberts stopped blocking New Deal legislation because he feared court-packing. He had voted to strike down minimum-wage laws, but joined a majority that upheld a minimum wage weeks after Roosevelt announced his plan to expand the court. It was “the switch in time that saved nine,” a paraphrase of a comment that columnist Cal Tinney made at the time.

There are, however, reasons to doubt this popular account. Most historians agree that the minimum-wage decision was reached before FDR’s announcement, and that opposition to the court-packing effort was unmistakably building before the decision came down.

I go on to address whether today’s justices are likely to be intimidated by the Court-packers.

Articles You May Like

Here Comes World War III: NATO Chief Confirms Ukraine Will Become a Member of NATO — Pushing US Closer to Nuclear War with Russia (VIDEO)
Biden Campaign Lies, Claims Trump Will Target “Americans Who Oppose Him” Just Like He Did After Trump Issues Warning to Democrats: “It Comes Back to Bite”
Sony and Apollo send letter expressing interest in $26 billion Paramount buyout as company mulls Skydance bid
Watch: Bill Maher’s awkward exchange with Don Lemon prompts Caitlyn Jenner to blast ex-CNN anchor as privileged, wealthy, entitled
Red States Sue Biden Admin Over New Title IX Rules

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *