Chapter 13: Judicial Politics Flashcards

1
Q

The federal judicial power extends to any case arising under the

A

Constitution and federal law and treaties, to cases in which federal official or foreign governments are involved

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2
Q

The Constitution gives the federal judges power through their

A

Independence

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3
Q

Federal judges serve

A

For life (barring the commission of any impeachable offenses)

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4
Q

Judges are appointed as

A

Not elected

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5
Q

Judicial power is the power to decide what

A

The Constitution and law of the Congress really mean

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6
Q

Judicial Review

A

Power of the federal courts, especially the Supreme Court, to declare wars of Congress, laws of states, and actions of the President unconstitutional or invalid

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7
Q

Judicial Review is not explicitly stated in

A

The Constitution but is referred to by it

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8
Q

The Supreme Court created

A

The power of judicial review in the case of Marbury v. Madison

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9
Q

The courts make policy in their

A

Interpretation of federal laws, treaties, and the Constitution

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10
Q

Since some laws are intentionally vague, Congress allows the courts to

A

Read meaning into the terms thereby making policy in doing so

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11
Q

Judicial self-restraint

A

Judges should not read their own philosophies into the Constitution and should avoid direct confrontations with Congress, the president, and the states whenever possible

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12
Q

Original Intent

A

The doctrine of original intent the values of the Founders as expressed in the text of the Constitution and attempts to apply these values to current conditions

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13
Q

Original Intent: The supporters of original intent argue that

A

The Supreme Court should not set aside laws made by elected representatives unless they conflict with the Founders’ original intent

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14
Q

Proponents argue the use of the Doctrine of Original Intent used by

A

Judicially self-restrained judges will lead to decisions that agree with the U.S Constitution

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15
Q

Proponents argue it will protect the Constitution from being changed due to

A

Popular but sometimes transitory sentiment in society

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16
Q

Opponents argue it

A

Use will lead to make it too difficult to change the Constitution to reflect the changes in contemporary society

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17
Q

Judges who set aside laws that do not accord with

A

Their personal views of today’s moral standard are substituting their morality for that of elected bodies

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18
Q

Judicial activism: The idea behind judicial activism is that

A

The Constitution is a living document whose strength lies in its flexibility, and judges should shape constitutional meaning to fit the needs of contemporary society

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19
Q

Proponents argue it allows the court to

A

More easily change the U.S Constitution to reflect the value norms of contemporary society without having to go through the problematic formal amendment process

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20
Q

Opponents argue it can lead to

A

Court decision that are in fact unconstitutional

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21
Q

Opponents argue it allows the U.S Constitution to be changed subject to

A

The popular but sometimes transitory whims of society

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22
Q

A judicial principle that the issue has already been decided in

A

Earlier cases and the earlier decision needs only to be applied in the specific case before the court

23
Q

A sequence of judicial decisions based on

A

State decisions creates a legal precedent

24
Q

Precedent

A

Principle that previous decisions should determine the outcome of current cases

25
Q

Precedent creates

A

Stability in the law

26
Q

Jurisdiction

A

The power of a court to hear a case in question

27
Q

Original jurisdiction

A

A particular court’s power to serve as a place where a given case is initially argued and decided

28
Q

Appellate jurisdiction

A

A particular court’s power to review a decision or action of a lower court

29
Q

Appeal requests that

A

A higher court review a case decided by a lower court

30
Q

Structure and Jurisdiction of Federal Courts

A

1) The Federal Court system has 3 level
2) The U.S Supreme Court
3) The U.S Court of Appeal (12)
4) The U.S District Court

31
Q

The U.S Supreme Court: The final interpreter of all matters involving

A

The Constitution and federal laws and treaties, whether the case began in a federal court or in a state court

32
Q

Has complete discretion:

A

It can be determine whether to accept an appeal and consider a case

33
Q

It decides to take cases that present a

A

“Substantial federal question” or where the federal courts of appeal are deciding a similar issue differently

34
Q

The Rule of Four

A

Four of the nine justices on the Supreme Court must agree to hear the case on appeal

35
Q

U.S Supreme Court: When the U.S Supreme Court accepts an appeal from

A

A state supreme court, the case goes directly to the U.S Supreme Court, it does not start at the district court level

36
Q

Appeals from State Courts:

A

These cases normally involve the application of the Constitution or a federal law

37
Q

Appeal from State and Federal Courts

A

About 8,000 cases are appealed to the U.S Supreme Court each year, only about 125 are accepted and decided

38
Q

Courts of Appeal

A

They do not hold trials or accept new evidence, but consider only the records of the trial courts and oral or written arguments submitted by attorneys

39
Q

District Courts

A

The federal trial courts and these conduct civil and criminal trials

40
Q

Presidents try to nominate judges who share their

A

Political philosophy

41
Q

A Litmus test refers to

A

Recruitment based on nominee’s stance on a single issue

42
Q

Modernly, presidents and senators deny using a

A

Litmus test and the single issue is abortion

43
Q

Republican presidents have denied using a litmus test but have insisted that

A

Nominees generally support a philosophy of judicial self-restraint

44
Q

All presidential nominations for the federal judiciary, including the Supreme Court, are sent to the

A

Senate for confirmations

45
Q

The Senate Judiciary Committee holds a hearing, votes on the nomination, and then report to the full

A

Senate, where a final confirmation vote is taken

46
Q

In the past, most senators believed presidents deserved to

A

Appoint their own judges, the opposition party would get its chance when it won the presidency

47
Q

Only if the Senate found the nominee participated in a

A

Scandal had religious or racial bias, or was incompetent, would it not confirm the nominee

48
Q

Modernly, publicity and partisanship over the confirmation of Supreme Court nominees have

A

Increased markedly in recent years, asking the nominee their positions on a whole host of issues, even when answering these questions would require the nominee to violate judicial rules of conduct

49
Q

The political views of the Supreme Court justices have

A

An important influence on Court decisions

50
Q

Justices are influenced primarily by their

A

Ideology, but public opinion, the president’s position, and the arguments of interest groups all contribute to the outcome of the case

51
Q

The Supreme Court lags behind

A

Public opinion

52
Q

Presidential influence: The U.S Solicitor General presents

A

The government’s (the president’s) case when it is a party to a lawsuit

53
Q

Interest group influence: Have become

A

A major presence in S.CT. cases, Planned Parenthood, the NAACP, and the ACLU sponsor many cases themselves