Pete Buttigieg Has a Plan to Ruin the Supreme Court

The Indiana mayor wants to depoliticize the court — but his proposal would have the exact opposite effect

Jennifer Victor
GEN

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Photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images

Democrats concerned about the Supreme Court’s increasingly conservative lean have a new friend on the campaign trail: Pete Buttigieg.

The beloved mayor of South Bend, Indiana, made waves last week when he unveiled his plan to reform our country’s highest court. Under Buttigieg’s vision, the Supreme Court would be expanded from 9 to 15 members — 5 conservatives and 5 liberals with lifetime tenure, plus 5 others who would serve one-year appointments, and whom the other 10 must agree on. In the event that the 10 ideologue justices couldn’t settle on 5 others, the court would be forced to suspend its operations for one year.

Buttigieg is so far the only presidential candidate to offer a specific path for reforming the Supreme Court. It’s probably a good thing his ideas have yet to catch on: This could turn the Court into another gridlocked, dysfunctional institution.

The plan was developed by two law professors (one of whom was Buttigieg’s college buddy), and has already received a fair amount of criticism for being half-baked, unconstitutional, and overly bureaucratic. But worst of all, the proposal suffers…

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Jennifer Victor
GEN
Writer for

Associate professor political science, Schar School Policy and Government, George Mason Univ.; Congress, parties, campaign finance, networks. Blogger @MisofFact