Nearly two-thirds of all U.S. adults surveyed in a new poll said that they believe that Supreme Court justices should face term limits and leave the court after a certain amount of time on the bench.
The Reuters/Ipsos survey conducted between April 15-16 found that just 22 percent of respondents support lifetime appointments for Supreme Court justices, while 63 percent support term limits. The remainder had no opinion or were unsure.
While having new faces join the court was important for many Americans, doing it without a vacancy on the court at its current size was not nearly as popular. Just 38 percent said they supported "court-packing," or expanding the size of the Supreme Court and adding more justices to the bench, while 42 percent opposed such an idea. The remaining 20 percent were unsure.
President Biden has pledged to launch a bipartisan committee aimed at looking at potential reforms to the court, including court-packing. Many left-leaning activists support such a proposal due to the successful confirmation of three justices nominated by former President Trump, who they argue will be hostile to liberal causes for decades as a result.
Nearly two-thirds of all U.S. adults surveyed in a new poll said that they believe that Supreme Court justices should face term limits and leave the court after a certain amount of time on the bench.
The Reuters/Ipsos survey conducted between April 15-16 found that just 22 percent of respondents support lifetime appointments for Supreme Court justices, while 63 percent support term limits. The remainder had no opinion or were unsure.
While having new faces join the court was important for many Americans, doing it without a vacancy on the court at its current size was not nearly as popular. Just 38 percent said they supported "court-packing," or expanding the size of the Supreme Court and adding more justices to the bench, while 42 percent opposed such an idea. The remaining 20 percent were unsure.
President Biden has pledged to launch a bipartisan committee aimed at looking at potential reforms to the court, including court-packing. Many left-leaning activists support such a proposal due to the successful confirmation of three justices nominated by former President Trump, who they argue will be hostile to liberal causes for decades as a result.
In the new Reuters/Ipsos survey, many Americans expressed a lack of confidence in the court and just 49 percent said they had a "great deal" or a "fair amount" of confidence in its decisions, though that percentage was higher than what was registered for the respondents who had confidence had in the White House or members of Congress.
The poll was conducted online with responses from 1,003 U.S. adults with a credibility interval of 4 percentage points.
Comments