Joe Biden, who for weeks has declined to clarify his position on progressive activists' calls to expand the Supreme Court to add liberal justices, said recently that if elected, he would establish a bipartisan commission of scholars to study possible ways to overhaul the judicial branch.
"I will ask them to, over 180 days, come back to me with recommendations as to how to reform the court system, because it's getting out of whack," Biden, the Democratic presidential nominee, told CBS News' Norah O'Donnell, according to an excerpt from a "60 Minutes" interview made public Thursday.
While Biden opposed court packing during the primaries, he has equivocated since the matter took on new urgency after Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died last month and Republicans rushed to fill her seat amid the election endgame. His equivocation has allowed the issue to fester and created fodder for a new line of attack from the right.
Under such pressure, Biden had said last week that voters "have a right to know where I stand" before they vote.
His proposal for a commission, however, continued to sidestep, for now, taking a yes-or-no position on diluting the power of the new conservative bloc that President Donald Trump and Senate Republicans are creating. And in the clip released by CBS, Biden emphasized that many other ideas were out there for overhauling the judiciary.
"The way in which it's being handled — and it's not about court packing — there's a number of other things that our constitutional scholars have debated, and I've looked to see what recommendations that commission might make," he said.
Remaining ambiguous could have strategic advantages for Biden — like avoiding clearly alienating either progressives or moderates and keeping the Supreme Court's conservative majority wary of overreach — but it could also leave him open to continued Republican attempts to stoke suspicions about his intentions, while irritating liberals who want a mandate to move decisively if Democrats take the White House and Congress next month.
Liberal calls to expand the number of Supreme Court seats began to swell when Senate Republicans would not permit a vote on President Barack Obama's nomination of Judge Merrick Garland after the February 2016 death of Justice Antonin Scalia, keeping the seat open for Trump to fill with Justice Neil Gorsuch instead. The calls have reached a new pitch with the breakneck confirmation process for Judge Amy Coney Barrett after the death of Ginsburg.