Hugh Hewitt: The Supreme Court at 250
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Teaching Constitutional Law is a joy.
Every semester since 1996, my students hear that Con Law ought to be their most interesting class during their three years of law school.
This year the Court issued 67 majority opinions.
Because district court judge issue bolts-from-out-of-the-blue on a regular basis, there’s a perception abroad that the judiciary becoming politicized. Our highest court, however, is an enormous force for stability in the country that just turned 250 years old.
The most significant of this term’s cases may well turn out to be NRSC v. the FEC, which held that the provisions of the Federal Election Campaign Act restricting the amount of money a party can spend in direct coordination with a candidate’s campaign, those restrictions were unconstitutional, and that breathes much-needed life into the two major political parties which indeed need the lift.
The Supreme Court has gone about its work successfully and will be back at it in October. The “republic of laws not men” carries on.
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