House Passes Bill Ramping Up Supreme Court Security After Month of Delay
The House of Representatives on June 14 approved a bill that extends security to family members of Supreme Court justices after Democrats failed to get a provision they wanted into the legislation.
The House voted 396-27. to pass the Supreme Court Police Parity Act.
All no votes came from Democrats.
Five members did not vote.
The Senate passed the bill unanimously in May, shortly after the unprecedented leak of a draft decision that indicated the nation’s top court was preparing to overturn Roe v. Wade.
But top Democrats in the House delayed a vote because they wanted a change.
The bill grants the Supreme Court Police and the court’s marshal the ability to order protection for the families of Supreme Court justices or officers if such protection is deemed necessary. According to Sens. Chris Coons (D-Del.) and John Cornyn (R-Texas), the bill’s sponsors, it will enable “around-the-clock” protection for the family members.
House Democrats wanted to extend the protection to family members of clerks, which Republicans opposed.
“Supreme Court justices already have protection. This is about families of Supreme Court justices, and Democrats were fighting for families of law clerks, employees of Supreme Court. They should have protection, too,” Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.) said before the vote on the House floor in Washington.
He noted that the names of several clerks were widely circulated after the leak with suggestions that they were the ones behind the leak, and that one viral social media post also mentioned one of the clerks’ spouses.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) said last week that “no one is in danger” due to the delay in passing the bill, drawing criticism from Republicans.
Some Democrats in Washington described the bill as meaningless because Attorney General Merrick Garland already ordered around-the-clock security for the homes of the justices for an undetermined amount of time.
“It took House Democrats some time to get this bill to the floor. The reason it took that much time is, it was House Democrats that wanted to get one itty bitty one concession out of this bill, to protect the staff of that institution—the United States Supreme Court—but they refused,” Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-Texas) said. The bill “is a talking point” that doesn’t “really do anything,” she added.
https://www.ntd.com/house-passes-bill-ramping-up-supreme-court-security-after-month-of-delay_794081.html