President Joe Biden is preparing to endorse a new package of Supreme Court reforms, a major shift for someone who has been wary about taking on the third branch of government. It’s a welcome move that could finally help rein in a court that has attempted to place itself above the other two branches.
It’s also a tacit acknowledgement from Biden that the conservative supermajority isn’t about to temper itself, even as Chief Justice John Roberts publicly frets about the court’s reputation.
It’s long past time for Democrats to accept that the justices are political figures and the Supreme Court is a political arena.
The changes Biden is considering include “legislation to establish term limits for justices and establishing an updated code of ethics that would be binding and enforceable,” according to NBC News. These are both strong ideas that I wish Biden had endorsed sooner — but they still fall short of what would be the most effective way to transform the court’s workings. It’s long past time for Democrats to accept that the justices are political figures and the Supreme Court is a political arena. Accordingly, rather than run from GOP outrage about “packing the court,” it is in their best interest to campaign on the promise to increase the number of seats on the court.
Despite the backlash against President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s failed effort to add Supreme Court seats in 1937 that has kept such proposals at bay, history is well on the side of court expansionists.
The size of the court has been nowhere near static over its lifetime. The only requirement on that front under the Constitution is that it have one chief justice. Beyond that, the number of seats has fluctuated over the years, first as the country grew, then as political parties began vying for control over the judiciary.
Under the Judiciary Act of 1789, the Supreme Court was established with five associate justices alongside the chief. The act also set up a federal judiciary with three “circuits” that each had two justices assigned to it, along with a district judge. The justices would then “ride circuit,” traveling within their jurisdiction to hear cases, a practice that many early justices absolutely loathed. The number of circuits was soon expanded to six in 1802, requiring a single justice to travel to a smaller area, but only slightly muffling the grumbling from the jurists.
Over the next several decades, with the country growing as it expanded westward, so too did the court. By 1807, a seventh circuit was added to encompass Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee. Another justice was added as well, for the first time tying Supreme Court seats to geographical regions, as the justice was required to reside within one of the three states in the circuit. At its biggest, the Supreme Court consisted of 10 justices to preside over 10 geographical circuits — but in the aftermath of the Civil War, congressional Republicans eliminated the 10th Circuit. Congress also dropped the number of justices to seven to reduce the number of Southerners serving, another point in favor of the size of the court being inherently wrapped up in politics.
The court didn’t shrink that much though, as the reduction was meant to take effect as vacancies opened and were left unfilled. Instead, before that could happen, Congress boosted the number into the current total of nine justices in 1869 to align with the nine circuits. That may have been the last major reorganization of the circuit system, but since then two of them have been split in half, giving us the present 11 numbered circuits. Plus, there are two additional unnumbered circuits: the District of Columbia Circuit, which handles cases within the federal capital’s jurisdiction, and the Federal Circuit, a special appeals court that hears cases related to certain administrative areas.
The number of seats has fluctuated over the years, first as the country grew, then as political parties began vying for control over the judiciary.
At present, each of the nine justices is assigned to at least one of these circuits — Brett Kavanaugh oversees both the 6th and 8th circuits, while Samuel Alito sits over the 3rd and 5th circuits. (Roberts himself sits over the D.C. Circuit and the Federal Circuit.) While justices are no longer required to travel to hear cases within their given territory, they are responsible for handling things like emergency requests and other administrative matters for appeals that come up from their circuits. That’s why you see, for example, Alito’s name on orders to allow an execution to go through in Louisiana.








