Mexico will amend its constitution this weekend to require all judges to be elected (apnews.com)
from MicroWave@lemmy.world to world@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 10:42
https://lemmy.world/post/19722582

Mexico is poised to amend its constitution this weekend to require all judges to be elected as part of a judicial overhaul championed by the outgoing president but slammed by critics as a blow to the country’s rule of law.

The amendment passed Mexico’s Congress on Wednesday, and by Thursday it already had been ratified by the required majority of the country’s 32 state legislatures. President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said he would sign and publish the constitutional change on Sunday.

Legal experts and international observers have said the move could endanger Mexico’s democracy by stacking courts with judges loyal to the ruling Morena party, which has a strong grip on both Congress and the presidency after big electoral wins in June.

#world

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KillerTofu@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 10:54 next collapse

Is it worse than having judges appointed for life?

paf0@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 10:59 next collapse

I would prefer appointments approved by Congress with both term limits and a maximum age. Judges should have minimal political incentive.

Cosmonauticus@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 11:15 collapse

Wouldn’t that just make it partisan? The only way any system of appointing judges can work is if its all done in good faith. Considering the corruption in Mexico you seem fucked either way. Not that America is any better.

paf0@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 14:04 collapse

I think it’s going to be partisan regardless. Unfortunately, from this article, it’s not clear to me the length of their term. If they constantly have to seek reelection then I believe it would be even more partisan than being appointed for a set term.

unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de on 13 Sep 10:59 next collapse

Depends on who will elect them and how the voting process works.

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 11:01 next collapse

You can have judges appointed and term limit them. It’s not an either/or.

Jaderick@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 13:15 collapse

IIRC before these changes take affect, Mexico’s President appoints (at least supreme) court judges who have tenure for 15 years. The ruling party is arguing for these changes to combat corruption. Rumor is that the Mexican legal system is corrupt af, and I haven’t seen any alternatives proposed by the opposition in (English) coverage of the protests, but we’ll see how electing judges goes I guess.

Stern@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 11:02 next collapse

No system is 100% resistant to shitters.

Life appointment was supposed to get judges to focus on issues and not make decisions with re-election in mind. Supreme court in the U.S. has shown us how that is going.

Womble@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 11:30 next collapse

Thats a problem with political appointments by the president not life terms.

Stern@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 11:44 collapse

Federal appointments still have to be approved, and even with SCOTUS they can still get rejected, e.g. Bork

en.wikipedia.org/…/Robert_Bork_Supreme_Court_nomi…

Thomas was close to rejection too owing to Anita Hill’s testimony

en.wikipedia.org/…/Clarence_Thomas_Supreme_Court_…

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 13 Sep 12:00 next collapse

Hehehe, Bork

moody@lemmings.world on 13 Sep 14:14 collapse

My son is also named Bork.

Kecessa@sh.itjust.works on 13 Sep 14:16 collapse

My condolences to him

Womble@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 12:03 next collapse

But the vast majority of the time they are approved, and the nomination begins with politicians. Contrast this to the way the UK does it where the appointments come from the senior judges with politicians then approving or rejecting the proposed new member.

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 13:18 collapse

Bork was nothing compared to Harriet Miers. Probably the least qualified person ever nominated to SCOUTS.

en.wikipedia.org/…/Harriet_Miers_Supreme_Court_no…

wjrii@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 14:18 collapse

And yet very possibly not the worst person nominated for that specific vacancy.

Samuel Alito, a federal judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, was nominated four days after her withdrawal and subsequently confirmed.

FlyingSquid@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 14:20 collapse

Oh nowhere near the worst. Just the least qualified.

[deleted] on 13 Sep 11:30 next collapse
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MicroWave@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 11:40 collapse

Huh? All federal judges in the US (Supreme Court justices, court of appeals judges, and district court judges) are nominated.

Even at the state level, it’s a mix of election and nomination based on the vacancy.

girlfreddy@lemmy.ca on 13 Sep 12:26 collapse

My mistake. Sorry for that. I should have looked into it further.

Mereo@lemmy.ca on 13 Sep 11:57 collapse

Not necessarily. In Canada, an independent advisory board reviews applications and provides a shortlist of candidates. The Prime Minister selects a nominee from this list. The nominee may participate in a public hearing before being officially appointed.

That is why it has not been a partisan issue so far.

FrostyTheDoo@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 13:29 collapse

The way US politics has gone the last 30 years, the advisory board would be politicized and polarized within 3 election cycles, no matter how the board itself is selected.

atzanteol@sh.itjust.works on 13 Sep 11:18 next collapse

Probably. You’re now going to have judges raising money to campaign. And the average on-the-street voter knows fuck-all about what qualifies somebody to be a judge, so they’re unlikely to pick better candidates.

Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works on 13 Sep 13:58 next collapse

What qualifies someone to be a judge is simply redefined to be what is popular. A judge should therefore no longer follow the law, but make the ruling most in line with what is popular. Under a voting system that is the sole qualifier.

atzanteol@sh.itjust.works on 13 Sep 15:19 next collapse

Which is what the legislature is for.

prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 13 Sep 17:58 collapse

Yikes. That’s an insanely misguided worldview.

Do you know what was real popular for centuries? Fucking slavery.

Popularity, like legality, is independent of morality. We should be striving to better understand how to improve the well-being of everyone, and use that information to legislate what is moral based on that ultimate goal. Popularity should not figure into this at all.

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 17:24 collapse

Slavery looks a lot more popular when you don’t let the slaves vote. If the slaves could vote – i.e. if there was a greater degree of democracy – there would surely be no slavery. It was the repression of the political power of a large segment of the population that enabled slavery.

Surely, if we educate people on class consciousness, they will generally act in alignment with the common interest, right prole? Certainly it’s not a better solution to dictate morality to them unilaterally through some technocratic institution (that’s rather like what the aristocracy was), because we have no particular way of ensuring that they will act in the common interest – which is not especially their interest – unlike the common people, for whom the common interest is their interest.

[deleted] on 13 Sep 15:46 collapse
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Saleh@feddit.org on 13 Sep 16:20 collapse

Judges without elections have a pretty free hand to be racist or misogynist pieces of trash.

So do judges that oppose these. Meanwhile in a racist or misogynist electorate judges will be compelled to cater to those “values”

[deleted] on 13 Sep 16:52 collapse
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Artyom@lemm.ee on 13 Sep 15:53 collapse

Limited term appointments is the best tool you can have to get rid of cartel-friendly judges.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 19:18 collapse

Until the next one steps into place like a cartel vending machine.

nevemsenki@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 11:08 next collapse

Speedrunning populism, let’s see how that goes. Cartels electing judges is my bet.

WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 11:54 collapse

If that’s the case then the Cartels already elect/make most of the politicians — whom select the judges — so there’s not really much of a difference, is there?

Saleh@feddit.org on 13 Sep 16:18 collapse

Yes there is. You need the entire country for national elections and there is one government from one parliament. You might have the same on state level, where interference is easier. But you need thousands of judges in thousands of districts. That will become very easy to interfere with.

But a corrupted muncipal parliament does not have the saem effect, like a corrupted judge, who can let his buddies off free, while imprisoning journalists and other critical dissidents against the cartels.

Asafum@feddit.nl on 13 Sep 16:20 collapse

like a corrupted judge, who can let his buddies off free

US “judge” Cannon enters the chat.

FrowingFostek@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 02:41 collapse

I just like the idea of a corrupt judge, in the US, getting primaried by a working class person. Obviously, with the correct counsil, if elected.

I want to believe those are the kinds of people this legislation is designed to support, in a perfect system.

If not, its just more fluff to jam up and backlog the beurocracy.

How it will play out is another story. Maybe Mexico will try it out.

Triasha@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 02:33 collapse

I can say that unqualified judges generally cause the corruption more than the qualified ones.

psycho_driver@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 11:34 next collapse

Hey it’s like me and my older brother. I avoided all sorts of trouble by watching him make dumb mistakes and learning from them.

ryven@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 13 Sep 14:28 next collapse

There seems to be something contradictory about the idea that letting people elect judges endangers democracy. If you don’t trust the people to elect judges, how can you trust them to elect the people who appoint judges?

Lesrid@lemm.ee on 13 Sep 14:38 next collapse

What many democracies around the world are missing is greater recallability in offices. Citizens need to be able to easily oust people nonviolently.

Belgdore@lemm.ee on 13 Sep 15:27 collapse

Short terms of office should have the same effect. If you want to stay in power you should have fight for it.

[deleted] on 13 Sep 16:45 next collapse
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Belgdore@lemm.ee on 13 Sep 19:12 collapse

Elected Judges still get their jobs done. They have clerks who do a lot of their drafting and grunt work in the office.

For large elections, there are staffers and volunteers who do a lot of the electioneering. For small elections, campaign events only occur on weekends and at other times when court is not in session.

prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 13 Sep 17:57 collapse

Terrible idea

x00za@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 13 Sep 15:10 next collapse

Electing judges is stupid. Judges should be neutral and uphold the current laws. It is up to the elected parties / president / groups to make sure all Judges are neutral. If you can vote on Judges that mean they have a political power that has nothing to do with their job.

Belgdore@lemm.ee on 13 Sep 15:30 next collapse

US Supreme Court Justices are not elected. They make a lot of political decisions beyond just upholding the status quo. There are a lot of US states that have judicial elections and they don’t have major crises because of it.

Tja@programming.dev on 13 Sep 17:39 next collapse

Almost a lot? So a big few?

Belgdore@lemm.ee on 13 Sep 19:05 collapse

Typo fixed. Pedantry is fun isn’t it.?

Tja@programming.dev on 13 Sep 19:53 collapse

It’s my favorite.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 19:16 collapse

Don’t kid yourself, the US Supreme Court is balls deep in politics. The situation where political parties can essentially buy a Supreme Court result for life is a disgraceful situation. That’s why the US is in such a terrible mess. Justice is not served, politics is.

Belgdore@lemm.ee on 13 Sep 19:23 collapse

My point is precisely that the US Supreme Court is embroiled in politics. The notion that being appointed somehow insulates the justices from politics is absurd.

Elections at least create some semblance of accountability to the voters.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 19:31 collapse

I’ve made this point elsewhere. In Australia the Chief justices are appointed by the government based on a shortlist presented by the legal establishment. They are preeminently qualified and are above politics. Both sides of the political spectrum are fine with this system and it is not gamed.

It is utterly non-controversial and the Australian people respect the institution. Tell me again how it is absurd to remove politics from a judicial system?

Belgdore@lemm.ee on 13 Sep 21:41 next collapse

If you believe anyone is above politics I have a bridge to sell you.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 22:48 collapse

Well, there are degrees, aren’t there? Some judicial systems ban individual reproductive rights, allow corporations to be people and give criminal immunity to presidents, and some don’t.

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 17:17 collapse

Not doing that is also political

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 17:25 collapse

Sure, then breathing is political. So is farting.

However, certain things are actively political and dangerous to people.

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 17:35 collapse

If making a given ruling is political, it stands to reason that a contrary ruling would also be political. It’s not like slavery is political and abolition is apolitical, it’s just that one has a positive character and one has a negative character (in the mathematical sense).

Some things are dangerous to the people and political, some things are beneficial to the people and political. We should support a system that encourages judges to do promote the latter.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 17:56 collapse

That’s hard to argue against, and I’m not going to try. It is the nature of human discourse to navigate social constructs in order to do the least damage.

It is also self-evident that the US justice system is a burning dumpster fire. It is suffering from a set of horrific issues that it largely created by the simple fact that it allows political parties to select SCOTUS judges who then directly deliver political decisions.

The only other option that keeps regularly coming up is electing judges, which is equally problematic in that popular contests soon get co-opted by politicians and dark money. Once again, how does this serve justice?

A third option that actually and demonstratively works around the world is to have a bipartisan system where a professional judicial panel creates a short list of suitable and qualified candidates from which the government makes a selection. Dark money nor naked political favouritism gets a look in and no decisions can be bought.

Now, some Americans will come at me saying that such a selection will only work in theory. But that is wrong. It works in practise right around the world in democratic countries. It is utterly non-controversial. That it is very possible to pick judges in a bipartisan way for the benefit of justice and the people.

Or, just keep doing it your own way and everything is sweet and dandy. I’m a foreigner, so what do I know?

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 18:28 collapse

It seems to me like all it’s accomplishing is another layer of abstraction rather than a real mechanistic distinction, but I’ve seen what “bipartisan” action looks like in the US, and the billions in arms given to Israel are a decent start. Republicans and Democrats absolutely have the capacity to collaborate and, when they do, it’s monstrous.

Voting at least gives the people a chance to resist the machinations of the bipartisan consensus and get progressives installed.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 21:36 collapse

Voting also brings people like Trump into play. How do you think that will play out with Palestine should he get in again?

Look, it does actually work in Western Europe, the UK, Australia and NZ. All this talk that it can’t work is plainly wrong.

What is impossible to get around is American exceptionalism. People just can’t conceive that other systems might be better. Fine. I apologise for suggesting otherwise. Enjoy.

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 22:54 collapse

How do you think that will play out with Palestine should he get in again?

Liberals keeps saying that Trump will do genocide x 2, but they have no evidence, nor any indication of how.

Look, it does actually work in Western Europe, the UK, Australia and NZ. All this talk that it can’t work is plainly wrong.

Your courts are mostly more professional than America’s but I don’t find that to be a compelling argument when every country you listed is a reactionary shithole, Australia especially. NZ is the only one that I’d give kind of a pass to there.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 00:23 collapse

You must have missed the bit where Trump constantly says that he’s the best friend Israel ever had. I mean constantly.

I’m sure that won’t translate to arms supply. Possibly fruit baskets?

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 15 Sep 00:36 collapse

Biden is already supplying arms and Harris has vowed to do the same and gone on endlessly about Israel’s “right to defend itself” and how anti-genocide protesters are pro terrorism and so on. I’m not saying Trump won’t fully support Israel, I’m saying there is no light between that and the Biden-Harris position.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 00:58 collapse

You are free to vote for Trump then. I’m told many are.

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 15 Sep 01:10 collapse

When did I ever say I would do that? I am plainly not advocating for such a thing.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 04:24 collapse

Well, I think those is your options? Or not vote at all.

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 15 Sep 04:27 collapse

Vote third party, put actual pressure on the Dems to make concessions. If they have your vote no matter what, they have no reason to listen to you.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 04:43 collapse

You might as well vote for Trump and do it clean, because that’s all you are helping.

Look, I’m on your side. I’ve been against US shitty dealings forever. Iraq, Palestine, favoured treatment towards Israel, meddling in elections, overturned democratic governments, proxy wars… All of it. But Trump is an existential threat. If the house is burning down you don’t worry about weeds in the fricken garden. If Trump gets in again Palestine is going to turn into a Walmart carpark. It will probably become Israeli territory, officially, and Arab blood will flow accordingly.

It’s a shitty choice, but the real world is not like the movies. Voting for a third candidate and making Trump president won’t help anyone.

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 15 Sep 05:17 collapse

There’s no evidence Trump will be worse on Palestine than the Dems. The idea that Trump is worse than any future frontrunner is myopic alarmism, you’ll be whipped into a new frenzy just the same with most or perhaps all future candidates (some of whom will be substantially worse). Furthermore, most people live in states where their vote doesn’t have any impact on the winner of the election, sothem voting blue only serves to legitimate the popular mandate of the genocidal dems. I don’t know, this is all very obvious but it’s like my 50th time saying it in this stupid thread.

You say we’re on the same side, but your ideology is one of supporting perpetrators into perpetuity because the tautology you’ve been talked into has no off-ramp, no point in the future where you stop taking “emergency” “temporary” “provisional” “compromises” to “reduce harm” and instead make actual positive progress. There will always be a new election, there will always be a new Republican platform that declares an interest in doing heinous shit, and very frequently there will be more sincere fascists than Trump, like if Tom Cotton ever runs, and there will never be some demon democrat you won’t vote for because they are running against someone who is 1% more reactionary, and that thereby necessitates everyone giving them unconditional support.

It’s an unserious strategy based on the panicked mindset of people who are stuck in an abusive relationship with liberal media.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 05:20 collapse

Jesus, man, where have you been hiding the last nine years?

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 15 Sep 05:43 collapse

This does not read to me as a response

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 05:45 collapse

Sorry Feller, you lost me. Enjoy your vote.

Cethin@lemmy.zip on 13 Sep 22:28 collapse

The same was said about the SCOTUS until recently, where it’s become very obvious it is political and has a ton of power to enact their political goals.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 22:59 collapse

I’m afraid that how the US chooses SCOTUS is vastly different from ike countries, and that’s how you end up with the US having ‘unique’ judicial situations.

theconversation.com/unlike-us-europe-picks-top-ju…

WanderingVentra@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 18:08 collapse

That’s just because your conservatives haven’t discovered not confirming justices. We used to have bipartisan consensus on judicial picks as well. Give it time as the other capitalist countries continue to decay and get more fascist. Relying on these moral codes and gentleman’s agreements doesn’t work once a party learns to disrupt the system.

Obama literally picked a judge the opposition said was the only one they would pick and then they still didn’t. You can’t remove politics from these systems.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 20:51 collapse

Your reply assumes that the rest of the world must follow the US example. That’s not necessarily true, although there is a bit of flirtation going on here and there with fascist populism, Western countries with Western values have managed to put a choke hold on the worst.

Also, loading the SCOTUS benches with partisan picks is not exactly a new thing. FDR was doing it for the Dems in the 1930s.

Someonelol@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 13 Sep 19:27 collapse

Just look at the US Supreme Court’s recent rulings and tell me that’s a healthy judicial system. I’d rather have the ability to vote for a judge, but more importantly, we need to have a system in place that can more easily impeach them should their actions not reflect the will of the people.

njm1314@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 01:09 collapse

No matter what your system is it all comes down to the real key of democracy. That is society having a respect for democracy and the rule of law. If your Society doesn’t have an innate desire for a just system you’re not going to have a justice system no matter what system you use. It’s not a tangible thing it’s something that has to be created over time. Elected judges or appointed judges, there’s deep flaws to both concepts.

young_broccoli@fedia.io on 13 Sep 18:06 next collapse

The thing is that the candidates for judges will be chosen by commitees from "the 3 powers" which are, basically, under controll of MORENA.

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 19:13 next collapse

I disagree. All that does is turn judges into politicians. The US Supreme court isn’t elected, but selected by politicians. Keep politics as far as you possibly can from people with an interest in gaming the system.

LotrOrc@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 22:12 collapse

And look what has happened to the US supreme court in the last few years… That seems to completely disagree with your point. It has been stacked with very partisan judges by politicians looking to game the system

slickgoat@lemmy.world on 13 Sep 22:55 collapse

The key word is “stacked”. Who stacked them? Political parties did.

My point is intact. Have professional judicial bodies create curated shortlist of suitability qualified candidates.

I think the difficulties that people have in appreciating this system is that they have been captured by the experience of their own failed system. To say that it wouldn’t work means that you have to fundamentally ignore all the places where is is used successfully.

fine_sandy_bottom@lemmy.federate.cc on 13 Sep 23:16 next collapse

You could say the same of any public service role.

The voting public doesn’t have the requisite experience and knowledge to make good decisions about candidates for executive or judicial roles.

Government is a different case. You’re selecting a representative. Someone to represent you in parliament. The skills required to do so are in theory less significant. It’s just a responsible person who will raise their hand at the right time.

rottingleaf@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 03:17 collapse

Judges are not supposed to work for the majority. They are supposed to work for justice.

Justice in most cases means opposing political power (formal in this case).

Thus they should be selected in some way radically different from how political power is formed.

Sortition is one way, if you don’t want some entrenched faction reproducing itself. Would be better than US too. But still sortition from the pool of qualified people, that is, judges, and not just every random bloke who applies, of course.

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 12:28 collapse

Justice in most cases means opposing political power

When has the court ever ruled in opposition to political power?

Sortition is one way, if you don’t want some entrenched faction reproducing itself.

It isn’t as though you can’t corrupt a candidate after they take office. Look at Clarence Thomas.

rottingleaf@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 12:31 collapse

Russian Supreme Court in 1993 when ruling that Yeltsin and the parliament should both resign and have new presidential and parliament elections. Yeltsin’s opposition agreed, Yeltsin said he’s the president and it’s democratic and legal that he decides everything and sent tanks.

Since the US was friendly with Yeltsin, this was considered business as usual.

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 12:44 collapse

In fairness, that was just a coup and regime change effectively at gunpoint.

rottingleaf@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 13:28 collapse

Ye-es, but nobody in the West said so. Maybe if in that one moment things went differently, Russia would be at least a very flawed democracy today.

Kusimulkku@lemm.ee on 13 Sep 15:37 next collapse

This doesn’t seem like a great idea, if you ask me

GiddyGap@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 02:54 next collapse

So, the judges will have to campaign on the issues? Doesn’t seem like the best idea if you want neutral and unbiased judges.

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 12:27 next collapse

Do you want neutral judges or do you want judges that align with the popular view?

John Roberts spent his confirmation process convincing everyone he was a “neutral” balls and strikes judge. All his opinions are phrased to imply he is taking a rational and fact based approach to the law. Yet his decisions are all in favor of hard right positions.

Do you want a judge like that? Or do you want an “activist” judge that respects unions, defends abortion rights and voting rights, and curtails the power of private industry to subvert democracy?

GiddyGap@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 12:37 collapse

I want judges who base their rulings on the law and not their political views. In theory, laws adjust to the popular view over time. Judges should not be part of that adjustment.

porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 13:06 next collapse

There’s no such thing

GiddyGap@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 13:10 collapse

Maybe, maybe not. But blatantly giving up on neutrality by electing judges based on their political views does not help promote justice.

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 17:13 collapse

Between these two options:

  1. indulging in the delusion of neutral judges and letting the elite pick the ones who do the best job of pretending to be neutral while representing their interests

  2. discarding the illusion of neutral judges and picking ones who openly state (and ideally have a record) that they will seek to pursue and enact justice as both they and the better part of the population interpret it

I think one of these is clearly superior for “promoting justice”. Do you disagree?

GiddyGap@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 18:30 collapse

Yes, I disagree. I already stated why.

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 18:37 collapse

But you yourself admitted that there may be no such thing as “neutral,” “apolitical” justices. If there aren’t, what good does pretending do?

GiddyGap@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 20:24 collapse

Where did I “admit” that? I said maybe, maybe not. Campaigning on the issues will lock judges into their biases. It will never work well.

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 20:30 collapse

I said

admitted that there may be

Which is what you said. I characterized your statement correctly.

Campaigning on the issues will lock judges into their biases.

What does this mean? Everyone has biases, I don’t see how campaigning matters for that. Do you mean, perhaps, that it prevents judges from changing for branding purposes? Because that objection has two serious problems: 1) what the public wants will change over time and 2) people should do what they’re elected to, so what does it matter if someone keeps getting elected for maintaining the same popular platform?

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 15:14 collapse

the law and not their political views

The law is a consequence of political viewpoints. The issue of Roe, for instance, is decided by the interpretation of a basket of Constitutional rights and privileges.

If laws weren’t up to ideological interpretation, we wouldn’t need judges or lawyers to begin with. They’d just be clerks administration filed paperwork with predetermined outcomes.

lorty@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 12:46 collapse

Like the unbiased judges appointed by politicians?

GiddyGap@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 12:58 collapse

There’s already a system in place to hold politicians accountable.

WanderingVentra@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 18:01 collapse

How well had that worked for the US President’s and their appointed Supreme Court justices which have been getting bribed in public without consequences? Unless you mean the guillotine…

GiddyGap@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 18:40 collapse

You can impeach all of them, including Supreme Court justices, within the framework of the law that has been set by elected representatives.

zik@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 03:53 next collapse

Having elected officials makes sense for politicians since their job is to represent the interests of the people but it’s terrible for other types of public office.

What do you want from a judge or a sheriff? Someone who’s experienced and competent. Who can best judge that? Would it be the hierarchy of their peers who they work with every day or would it be random members of the public who’ve barely even heard of them?

Edit: and no, I’m not suggesting political appointments. That’s also a recipe for disaster. Do it like Commonwealth countries: make the civil service independent of the political process and make appointments be part of the usual process of promotion.

febra@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 06:56 next collapse

Having them be appointed by politicians isn’t making much sense either. It’s not a secret that many judges have their own political affiliations since they often get appointed with support from different political factions (see the supreme court in the US). In theory, you’re right. In practice, it doesn’t always work that way.

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 12:22 next collapse

What do you want from a judge or a sheriff?

You want someone who aligns with the legislature and President. If your courts are stacked with the opposition party and there’s no legal way to replace them, they become a judicial firewall against any legislative reform.

MrMakabar@slrpnk.net on 14 Sep 13:31 next collapse

Not at all. The judges appointed by the opposition party, protect the laws made by the opposition party, when they were in government. This way the government can not just ignore those laws. So most countries have very long term limits for judges to deal with that. Hence a single government can not just stack the courts. Term limits are used, so no single government just happens to be able to appoint a lot more judges then usual. However even with the term limit being death, a court like the US supreme court has judges appointed by five different presidents for example.

UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 14:59 collapse

The judges appointed by the opposition party, protect the laws made by the opposition party

Why would you want a judge protecting bad laws?

Hence a single government can not just stack the courts.

But a party that’s held power for decades can. Mexico spent nearly a century under a single party. You’ll find similar dynamics in Japan, Germany, Korea, the UK, China, Venezuela, Russia, Pakistan, Thailand…

Imagine a Venezuela election in which Maduro is replaced, but the Chavez/Maduro packed court simply rules the new government illegitimate and strikes down all their decisions. Do you just wait until all the Chaveismo judges retire/die? Or do you replace them?

ILikeBoobies@lemmy.ca on 14 Sep 18:48 collapse

That’s only if politicians select them

SSJMarx@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 20:35 collapse

I think it depends on your legal system. Appointed judges that can overturn legislation are a problem, but if the judges don’t have that power and all they’re doing is running a courtroom then a judge representative of the community would be an asset.

Etterra@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 04:24 next collapse

So… The American system (mostly)?

GarbageShootAlt2@lemmy.ml on 14 Sep 17:28 collapse

No, judges are mostly appointed in the US

Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works on 14 Sep 13:51 next collapse

I feel like there should be a first line of defense, so you don’t get charismatic idiots. Like some hard test and only the top 20 % scorers can campaign.

[deleted] on 14 Sep 15:27 next collapse
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NotMyOldRedditName@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 17:43 next collapse

Like how many of your rulings in the past 10 years have been overturned

aodhsishaj@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 02:44 collapse

Or have you passed the law entrance exam. Judges in Texas are elected and they don’t even need to have passed the state bar in some counties

NotMyOldRedditName@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 07:37 collapse

they don’t even need to have passed the state bar in some counties

WTF

WanderingVentra@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 17:59 collapse

Why? We don’t really have that for Presidents, which are just as, if not more, dangerous.

qaz@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 18:22 collapse

Yeah, and look how that turned out

ZombiFrancis@sh.itjust.works on 14 Sep 15:48 next collapse

It is interesting how easily the article passes off ‘stacking courts’ as more of a danger with elections than appointments.

Angry_Autist@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 04:35 next collapse

Nearly all media is owned by conservative white men that willingly court fascism if it means lower taxes.

formergijoe@lemmy.world on 15 Sep 07:43 collapse

Yeah, there’s no way you can stack an elected court!

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/6dcb0bb4-8abb-4b97-aa0d-5fcdbf7cae37.png">

super_user_do@feddit.it on 14 Sep 18:42 next collapse

I don’t get the social dynamic that would eventually bring the party to elect only the candidates loyal to the party. For real, here in Italy we’ve got a great issue of nepotism and this reform would probably bring fresh air to a corrupt and inefficient elite

Almost surely not everyone will be able to candidate themselves, some kind of degree or qualitification must be a minimum requrement

demizerone@lemmy.world on 14 Sep 22:39 collapse

It would be hilarious if America became the corpo plague lands and Mexico became the land of the living and Americans tried to cross into Mexico but the border wall Biden built was too impenetrable.