Sunday, March 24, 2019
2000 US Presidental Election :: essays research papers
     The fourth principle of the rule of legal philosophy state, " every persons must be given due process, that is, a fair see to defend themselves against formal charges that they have violated the rules." The premise for this principle is the prototype that, the official body that hears and renders judgment on the charges may be prepossess against the defendant instead of impartial. The conclusiveness of the fall in States Supreme Court to bring out the counting of "undervotes" in the state of Florida was not only a semipolitically biased decision, it was also a decision that violated the rule of law. My pipeline is based on not so much the dissenting whimsey of the minority, but of the concord opinion of the majority of the Supreme Court.     A political trial is one in which political considerations, not simply the law and the facts, affect the proceedings and verdict. both human being has a accepted clip of morals and beliefs that they hold to be an important part of their character. This is no different for the judges of the Supreme Court. They too have a set of morals and beliefs that they live by. The difference is that their job description says that they have to fall upon decisions not based on their morals and beliefs, but their decisions must be based on the rule of law. It is obvious to me that many of the judges on the Supreme Court, did not follow their job description and instead of basing their decision of Bush vs. Gore on the rule of law, they based it on who they voted for. Every conservative on that panel voted to stop the recount which in enactment helped Bush win, and every liberal on the panel voted to continue the recount which would have given Gore a chance at winning.     The concurring opinion of the majority seems to addle it evident in some of the arguments they make that their opinion was based on politics and not on law. often of the e vidence they bring up only seems to contradict their decision much than support it. In Rehnquists opinion, with whom Scalia and Thomas join, concurring, he brings up the case of Anderson v. Celebrezze, (1983), in which the court said In the context of a Presidential election, state-imposed restrictions implicate a uniquely important national interest. For the President and the Vice President of the United States are the only elected officials who represent all the voters in the Nation.
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