Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Judge Roberts whines and panhandles to Congress to act on salaries.


BLT:


The following item is by Supreme Court Correspondent Tony Mauro.
Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. is calling on Congress to make approval of a
judicial salary increase "a first order of business" when it comes back from
recess in January.

In his third annual year-end report on the state of the judiciary, Roberts
also pledged to work on improving relations with the other branches of
government and to continue reforming procedures for handling judicial misconduct complaints. The report was formally released at 12:01 a.m. Jan. 1.
 

Overall, Roberts said Americans should take "enormous pride in our judicial
system" which, he said, serves as a beacon around the world. "When foreign
nations discard despotism and undertake to reform their judicial systems,
they look to the United States judiciary as the model for securing the rule
of law," he said.
 Without specifically mentioning Pakistan, where the dismissal and arrest of
the chief justice in 2007 triggered turmoil, Roberts said "we do not need to
look beyond the front page of any newspaper" to understand the importance
of a "skilled and independent judiciary."
 

Roberts recounted how Russian Supreme Court justice Yuriy Ivanovitch
Sidorenko, in a recent visit to the United States, visited Arlington
National Cemetery to pay tribute to the late Chief Justice William
Rehnquist, Roberts' predecessor and mentor. Sidorenko and Rehnquist had
become friends, Roberts said, and Rehnquist had offered "advice and
encouragement" as the Russian judiciary was reformed in the post-Soviet era.

In his report Roberts also invoked Rehnquist's "20-year pursuit" of
judicial salary increases in urging swift action in 2008 on the issue.
Roberts noted that federal trial judges are "earning about the same as (and
in some cases less than) first-year lawyers at firms in major cities, where
many of the judges are located." The words "first-year lawyers" are
italicized in the text of Roberts' report. U.S. district court judges are
paid $165,200 a year, the same as members of Congress. Salaries for first-years at many top U.S. law firms hit $160,000 this year (not counting bonuses), and Williams & Connolly recently announced that it would pay incoming associates $180,000.



The House Judiciary Committee on Dec. 12 endorsed, by a 28-5 vote, a bill
that would raise the pay of district judges to $218,000, with similar
increases for other judges. The Senate was considering a similar bill when
the session ended in December. Roberts said he was grateful for support from
President George W. Bush and leaders of both parties of Congress on the
salary issue, adding, "I urge prompt passage as a first order of business in
the new session."
 

On the issue of judicial misconduct, Roberts said, "the judiciary must
relentlessly ensure that federal judges maintain the highest standards of
integrity." He said the Judicial Conference, the policy-making body of the
judiciary, had already implemented most of the recommendations for
procedural changes made in 2006 by a committee that Justice Stephen Breyer
headed. Rehnquist had created the committee in 2004 in part to respond to congressional complaints that it was difficult to hold judges accountable for alleged ethical violations. Further action will be considered at the conference's next meeting
in March, Roberts said. "The judiciary cannot tolerate misconduct," Roberts
said. "The public rightly expects the judiciary to be fair but firm in
policing its own." 
 

Roberts also spoke of the need to improve communications with Congress. It
was easier for the two branches to communicate, he noted, before the Court
moved from its space in the U.S. Capitol to its own building in 1935.
Roberts quipped, "I am assured that my colleagues are happy in our separate
building and not inclined to move back to the Capitol (even were we
invited)." So Roberts said other avenues of communication with Congress and
the executive branch will be sought to "strive, through respectful exchange
of insights and ideas, to know and appreciate where the others stand."



1 comment:

airJackie said...

If Roberts wants more money let him get a job. He is whining now because it's costing him to much for his girlfriend and his make up wife and kids. Now this man was making big bucks but choose this job as Justice now he wants more money. Don't give him and the other idiots a dime and if Roberts doesn't like it get out.