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Why Joe Biden changed his mind about Supreme Court reforms

Heading into the final months of his presidency, Joe Biden has called for three profound reforms to U.S. constitutional democracy.

In an announcement Monday, President Biden advocated for a constitutional amendment that would effectively reverse a July U.S. Supreme Court decision granting broad criminal immunity to former presidents. He asked Congress to pass a binding code of conduct for the Supreme Court. And he called for the justices to be subject to 18-year term limits.

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President Joe Biden had resisted calls to reform the Supreme Court. Then came the July decision offering former presidents immunity for any official act.

The president’s demands are unlikely to be realized before he leaves office, most experts agree. Critics have hit back at the proposals as an effort by President Biden to destroy a court he disagrees with while energizing Democratic voters ahead of the November presidential election.

But public confidence in the high court is hovering near record lows – a result of both unpopular decisions and ethics scandals. A sizable majority of Americans support the reforms Mr. Biden is asking for, according to recent polls, and court-curbing efforts have led to changes in the past.

“Court reform has historically been very difficult to enact,” says law professor Tara Leigh Grove. But it “can be changed over time through the system we have.”

Heading into the final months of his presidency, Joe Biden has called for three profound reforms to U.S. constitutional democracy.

In an announcement Monday, he advocated for a constitutional amendment that would effectively reverse a July U.S. Supreme Court decision granting broad criminal immunity to former presidents. He has asked Congress to pass a binding code of conduct for the Supreme Court. And he called for the justices to be subject to 18-year term limits.

President Biden’s demands are unlikely to be realized before he leaves office, most experts agree. Critics have, meanwhile, hit back at the proposals as an effort by President Biden to destroy a court he disagrees with while energizing Democratic voters ahead of the November presidential election.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

President Joe Biden had resisted calls to reform the Supreme Court. Then came the July decision offering former presidents immunity for any official act.

But public confidence in the high court is hovering near record lows – a result of both unpopular decisions and ethics scandals surrounding several justices. A sizable majority of Americans support the reforms Mr. Biden is asking for, according to recent polls, and court-curbing efforts have led to changes in the past.

The Supreme Court, as much as any other institution, naturally shifts with America’s changing political tides – just much, much more slowly, experts say. Mr. Biden is trying to accelerate that process, and while he likely won’t succeed during his tenure as president, he may be laying the groundwork for more gradual changes.

“Court reform has historically been very difficult to enact,” says Tara Leigh Grove, a professor at the University of Texas School of Law. But “it’s by design a politically constructed court, and [it] can be changed over time through the system we have.”

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