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Electing Justice Fixing The Supreme Court Nomination Process Richard Davis

  • SKU: BELL-4686782
Electing Justice Fixing The Supreme Court Nomination Process Richard Davis
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Electing Justice Fixing The Supreme Court Nomination Process Richard Davis instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.2 MB
Pages: 222
Author: Richard Davis
ISBN: 9780195181098, 0195181093
Language: English
Year: 2005

Product desciption

Electing Justice Fixing The Supreme Court Nomination Process Richard Davis by Richard Davis 9780195181098, 0195181093 instant download after payment.

The nomination and confirmation of Supreme Court justices has, in recent years, become a battleground like no other. Bruising Senate confirmation hearings for failed nominee Robert Bork and successful nominee Clarence Thomas left the reputation of all branches of government in disarray and the participants - and the nation - exhausted. Even uncontroversial nominations such as those of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen Breyer have faced a protracted process. The Senate's constitutional prerogative to provide advice and consent to the president's nominations to the highest court in the land has given rise to political grandstanding and ideological battles. Less well known is how other players - interest groups, the news media, and, through their involvement, the general public - also affect the conduct and outcome of the Supreme Court nomination process. In Electing Justice, Richard Davis reveals how from the late 1960s on, the role of these other players grew in intensity to the point that the nomination process would be unrecognizable to its original devisers, the Framers of the Constitution. The path to the Supreme Court now includes live television coverage of Senate hearings, "murder boards" in preparation for those hearings, a flood of press releases, television and radio advertisements, and public opinion polls. Unlike earlier, more elite-governed processes, the involvement of outside groups has become highly public and their impact is now widely accepted. The general public too has become involved, as through the public campaigns waged by outside groups voters increasingly follow Supreme Court nominations and hold opinions about confirmation. How should we respond to this informal democratization of the selection process? The genie, Davis contends, cannot be put back into the bottle and we cannot return to a nonpolitical, elite-driven ideal.
Content: Traditional versus new players --
The politics of judicial selection --
How the process broke : the transformation of the Supreme Court appointment process --
New roles for external players --
Today's nomination process : the battle over image --
Reforming the process.
Abstract: Discusses the increasing role of interest groups, the press, and the public, whose role is not prescribed in the Constitution in the selection and confirmation of Supreme Court justices and how it affects the process. The author first examines the history and nature of the process, then he looks at the role and impact of other players.

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