On Monday, President Joe Biden announced he would ask Congress to approve reforms to the U.S. Supreme Court and seek a constitutional amendment to overturn the court’s decision in Trump v. United States granting presidents immunity from criminal prosecution.
To find out more about the proposals, and the chances of them passing, UVA Today checked in with Barbara A. Perry, the Gerald L. Baliles Professor and co-chair of the Presidential Oral History Program at the University of Virginia Miller Center of Public Affairs. Perry is a former judicial fellow at the Supreme Court and was a researcher for former Chief Justice William Rehnquist.
Q. Are the proposals political hyperbole or are there issues with the court that should be addressed?
A. There have been a lot of revelations about gifts and vacations, money going to some justices, as well as controversial decisions, and that’s upset a lot of people in and out of politics.
Of course, if the president, Congress or the court decide the way you want them to, you like them and you approve. If not, then you disapprove. People could review the three reforms being proposed here as, “Oh well, the president and liberals didn’t like the way the court has been deciding cases on abortion, the Voting Rights Act, federal regulatory power and the presidential immunity decision, in particular.” That’s true.
But it’s also true that among Republicans, who agree with these decisions, 57% favor some of these reforms, liked fixed terms, for example.
Q. President Biden is asking Congress to pass binding and enforceable ethics rules and require justices to recuse themselves from cases for conflicts of interest. How’s that different than the code the Supreme Court created for itself in 2023?
A. Unlike codes of ethics for other federal judges, there’s no enforcement in the current Supreme Court code. The justices have been involved in controversy, with Justice Clarence Thomas receiving expensive vacations and gifts from businessmen who have cases coming before the court and not recusing himself. There have also been controversies with political activities by Justice Samuel Alito’s wife and Thomas’ wife.

