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- Claim Text
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Selfish disregard for the rules would not be a very persuasive reason to change the Court, so an important question for reformers is why, other than competing political interests, the Court ought to be changed.
- Simplified Text
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An important question for reformers is why the Court ought to be changed other than competing political interests because selfish disregard for the rules would not be a very persuasive reason to change the Court
- Confidence Score
- 0.900
- Claim Maker
- The author
- Context Type
- Legal Article
- UUID
- a1164049-f520-49da-ae57-16122df1e839
- Vector Index
- ✗ No vector
- Created
- February 15, 2026 at 3:29 PM (2 months ago)
- Last Updated
- February 15, 2026 at 3:29 PM (2 months ago)
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2 months ago
https://harvardlawreview.org/print/vol-137/confusion-and-clarity-in-the-case-for-supreme-court-reform/
This article analyzes the arguments for and against Supreme Court reform, focusing on formal and substantive disagreements. It examines historical precedents for reform and argues that the current movement stems from concerns about the Court's recent decisions.
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