U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Defends Judicial Independence

U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Defends Judicial Independence
U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Defends Judicial Independence

(Washington) U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts on Tuesday defended judicial independence, which he said is threatened by intimidation, misinformation and the potential for officials to defy rulings. of justice.

Lindsay Whitehurst

Associated Press

Mr. Roberts raised his concerns in an annual report released after a year in which the nation’s justice system was unusually enmeshed in a hotly contested presidential race, with then-Republican candidate Donald Trump attacking its integrity then that he was facing criminal charges for which he denied any wrongdoing.

Donald Trump won the election following a landmark Supreme Court ruling on immunity authored by Mr Roberts that drew criticism from Democrats like President Joe Biden.

Donald Trump is now preparing for a second presidential term with an ambitious program, elements of which risk being legally contested and ending up before the Court whose conservative majority includes three judges appointed by Donald Trump during his first term.

Mr. Roberts did not mention Donald Trump. Yet he wrote that even if court rulings are unpopular or mark a defeat for the presidential administration, other branches of government must be prepared to enforce them to ensure the rule of law.

He stressed that the decision Brown v. School Board which disaggregated schools in 1954 was to be enforced by the federal government in the face of resistance from Southern governors.

“It is not the nature of judicial work to make everyone happy,” he wrote.

The chief justice also denounced elected officials from across the political spectrum who have “raised the specter of open defiance of Federal Court decisions.”

“Attempts to intimidate judges about their decisions are inappropriate and must be vigorously opposed,” he wrote. While public officials have the right to criticize decisions, they must also be aware that their statements can “elicit dangerous reactions from others.”

He also stressed that misinformation about court decisions poses a threat to the independence of judges, saying social media can amplify distortions and even be exploited by “hostile foreign state actors” to exacerbate divisions.

Threats of violence against judges across the country have increased in recent years, which Mr. Roberts called “completely unacceptable.”

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