Judicial Branch. US Circuit Courts US Supreme Court.

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Judicial Branch

US Circuit Courts

US Supreme Court

Supreme Court Justices

John RobertsAppointed

2005(Bush)Chief Justice

(conservative)

Antonin Scalia 1982

(Reagan)very

Conservative

Anthony Kennedy

1988(Reagan)Centrist

Clarence Thomas

1991(Bush Sr.)

very Conservative

Ruth Bader

Ginsburg1993

(Clinton)liberal

Stephen Breyer1994

(Clinton)leans liberal

Samuel Alito2006 (Bush)

Likely conservative

Sonia Sotomayor

2009 (Obama)

Elena Kagen

2010 (Obama)

Conservative leaning judges

Likely Liberal leaning judges after 2010

Swing Judge (Kennedy)

• Judicial Review– The power of the federal courts to declare

laws or executive actions void and unenforceable if they are judged to be in conflict with the Constitution

– Established with “Marbury v Madison”– Since 1789 the Supreme Court has declared

over 160 federal laws unconstitutional– The chief weapon the Supreme Court has in

Checks and Balances

• The Supreme Court protects and interprets the Constitution

Structure of the Federal Courts

• Constitutional Court– On exercising the judicial powers found in

Article 3. – Judges are appointed by the President and

confirmed by a majority vote of the senate.– They can’t be fired or have their salaries

reduced.– Can be impeached for treason, bribery, high

crimes or misdemeanors.

Nominating a Judge• Of 145 Supreme Court nominations the

Senate has on rejected 9 (5 in the 20th Century)

• Senatorial Courtesy– (Doesn’t apply to Supreme Court)– The practice of the senior Senator from the

state that the judge will preside in, to suggest a judge

– IF a Senator is in the President’s party and he opposes a judge, the judge will most likely by rejected by the Senate.

• The “litmus” test– This is when a President appoints a judge that

reflects political and philosophical beliefs of the President.

– Party membership does make a difference on how judges vote on cases.

– A review of 84 studies show that Democratic judges are more liberal than Republican judges.

Jurisdiction of Federal Courts

• We have a dual court system in the USA

• Both state and federal courts have jurisdiction over different types of cases

• Some cases can be tried in both or either– (Drugs are the best example)

Hearing a case• Writ of Certiorari • Pronunciation

– This is when 4 or more justices agree to hear a case petitioned to it.

– They get around 7000 requests each year and hear about 100 cases

– 96% of all requests get turned down– How do they decide which cases to hear?

• If two or more federal courts have decided the same issue in different ways.

• If a state Supreme Court has ruled a state or federal law unconstitutional

• Other reason

Supreme Court in action• In session 36 weeks a year (October –

June)• Lawyers file a brief

– A document filed by lawyers that outline the case, precedents, etc.

– Justices read this prior to hearing oral arguments

• Oral arguments– Court hears oral arguments Monday-

Wednesday mornings– Lawyers typically have a 30 minutes to

present their case and answer questions

• “amicus curiae” (Friend of the Court)– Pronunciation – A written brief or oral argument by a person or party

not directly related to the case.– Both parties and the court must grant permission

• Each Friday the justices meet in their conference room and debate the cases heard that week.

• The chief justice speaks first followed by the others in order of seniority

• They will then vote traditionally in the opposite order

• It takes a majority ruling.• If it ends in a tie the lower courts ruling stands

• Majority opinion• Dissenting opinion• Concurring opinion• Precedents

– Case that sets standard for future similar cases– This gives the court consistency and guidance

• Stare demises (Let the decision stand)• Pronunciation • Judicial review• Remedy

– A judicial order setting forth what must be done to correct a situation

Checks on the Judicial System• A judge doesn’t have a police force or army• Impeachment

– 15 federal judges have been impeached (4 convicted) and 9 others stepped down when it looked like they would be impeached.

• President appoint and Senate confirms• Congress can alter the number of judges on the

Supreme Court and create other courts• Congress can try to change the Constitution to

allow what court refused (Income tax)• Re pass a law with minor changes

Public opinion of the court

• Supreme Court approval rating• Obama approval rating• Congress approval rating

• The court must be aware of popular opinion– If they make very unpopular decisions they

risk that people will simply disregard them– If they know they have popular opinion they

may take a more activist stance.