President George W. Bush stated March 3, 2004:
“We will not stand for judges who undermine democracy by legislating from the bench and try to remake the culture of America by court order.”
What is the remedy to judges usurping power?
Article 3 of the Constitution states:
“The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme court, and in such inferior courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain.”
In other words, only the Supreme Court is created by the Constitution. All inferior courts are created by Congress, which also has the power to limit or abolish them.
Phyllis Schlafly continued in Judicial Tyranny:
“The Founding Fathers in their wisdom gave us the solution to this dilemma. All federal courts other than the Supreme Court were created by Congress, not by the Constitution.
Whatever Congress creates, it can un-create or regulate.
Congress can decide what sorts of cases the federal courts can hear and not hear.
Article 3 of the U.S. Constitution gives Congress the power to define the jurisdiction of the federal courts.
There is a long record of Congress limiting or withdrawing the jurisdiction of the federal courts over specific subjects. This power has been used dozens of times throughout our history.
Several years ago, Senator Tom Daschle got a bill passed by Congress to take away jurisdiction from the federal courts over brush clearing in South Dakota. He didn’t want environmentalist lawsuits interfering with the way they fight forest fires in South Dakota …
Congressman Jim Sensenbrenner’s Real ID bill that passed the House takes away jurisdiction from the federal courts to hear environmentalists’ challenges to the completion of the fence on our southern border near San Diego.
No one challenged the constitutionality of that jurisdictional provision.
Limiting the jurisdiction of the federal courts over subjects where we don’t trust the supremacist judges is the number-one way to curb the imperial judiciary … (and) requires only a simple majority vote in both Houses of Congress …”
Schlafly added:
“In late 2004, Chief Justice William Rehnquist … included in his annual report one significant sentence …
‘There were several bills introduced in the last Congress that would limit the jurisdiction of the federal courts to decide Constitutional challenges to certain kinds of government action’ …
Rehnquist’s report implicitly confirms that Congress has the Article 3 power to limit jurisdiction on constitutional issues and take away from the federal courts the power to continue to do the sort of damage that they have been doing for the past several decades.”
David Gregoire, writing for LibertyOneNews, March 19, 2025, quoted Law Professor Alan Dershowitz:
“Alan Dershowitz … asserted that Congress has the power to reshape the judiciary by adjusting the number and jurisdiction of district courts.”
TheGatewayPundit article March 20, 2025, stated:
“Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has suggested that Congress could strip federal courts of jurisdiction.
‘Congress has the authority to strip jurisdiction of the federal courts to decide these cases in the first place.
The sabotaging of President Trump’s agenda by ‘resistance’ judges was predictable — why no jurisdiction-stripping bills tee’d up at the onset of this Congress?’”
Phyllis Schlafly concluded:
“The role that judges play in our system of government should be like that of baseball umpires …
But umpires are not permitted to change the rules of the game; the fans would not tolerate an umpire calling a batter out after two strikes.” |