White House Floats New Media Color Code Psaki Confirms Joe Biden’s Panel Is Considering Court Packing… | Weasel Zippers |
EXCERPT:
"PSAKI: "Well, first, he's -- the panel's being asked to do a number -- take a number of steps, including the pros and cons on exactly that issue. But they will also be looking at the court's role in the constitutional system, the length of service and turnover of justice on the court -- justices on the court, the membership and size of the court, and the court's case selection, rules, and practices. And the makeup of this commission, which was vital for the president is, there are progressives on the court, there are conservatives on the court, people will present different opinions and different points of view and then they'll have the report at the end of 180 days.' "
Watch Joe Biden in 2005 and 1987 Destroy Joe Biden Today on Court-Packing – RedState . . . "This position he’s taking now is completely antithetical to that he has taken for years.
"Let’s also remind folks about the position of that great hero to many on the left, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. But what they often like to forget was how much she believed in not further politicizing the Court and how much she was against such schemes as court-packing, even if it was proposed or pushed by Democrats." . . .
WATCH: Trump Hammered Biden on Packing SCOTUS with 'Radical Left Justices' During 2020 Debate (trendingpolitics.com) "Future president Joe Biden misled the American people and deflected numerous times on the campaign trail about packing the U.S. Supreme Court with radical justices.
On Friday, however the White House is expected to issue an executive order to form a commission in a first step towards potentially packing the Supreme Court.
Biden’s track record of opposing court-packing, a partisan practice that was widely rebuked under the Roosevelt administration, runs directly contrary to even exploring the measure.
In October, while in Cincinatti, Ohio, Biden told a WKRC reporter that he “not a fan” of the practice." . . .