@LiberalLibrarian I recommend that you go back and reread article 3 of the constitution of the United States. You’ll find that the justices of article 3 courts serve as long as they maintain good behavior. In other words, it is a lifetime appointment. In order to change this we have to change the constitution. I’m perfectly fine with amending the constitution so that we can have term limits. But that’s what it’s going to take.
@J_Windrow @LiberalLibrarian There is some debate on the subject, but unfortunately I agree with you. The "good behavior" term is grounded in 18th century practice. It meant life tenure (barring impeachment and conviction). And it's embedded in Article III.
I, personally, don't see any way to change to limited terms without a constitutional amendment.
@LiberalLibrarian @J_Windrow Mind you, I *support* such an amendment. But there's no way Rs would ever allow it out of Congress or red states would ever ratify it when they have the control they craved.
@J_Windrow @LiberalLibrarian An amendment could of course specify SCOTUS only.
*Maybe* Rs could be persuaded to see advantage in term limits grandfathered in... though they're so fixated on the "we own the court now" that I'm not sure the future really figures much in their "thinking."
@J_Windrow @LiberalLibrarian It wouldn't be difficult to word an amendment to change the terms for SCOTUS justices only - Article III recognizes SCOTUS as a distinct entity already.
Getting it ratified (or indeed out of Congress in the first place) would be the real hurdle (and not, I think, a surmountable one at present).
@RationalLeft @LiberalLibrarian
That would be a heck of a change. It would require removing SCOTUS from the other Article III courts.
I'm not sure the Congress, as presently constituted, has enough brain cells between them to be able to do a successful modification like that.
After that, it could end up like the Equal Rights Amendment and not get ratified by enough states within the set time period.
If it happens it will be all or none on Art. III.