senate democrats a book on powers or the menendez trial because nothing screams ethics quite like robert menendez. but please, by all means, go check on the flags being flown at the alito home. joining us now is fox news contributor, ben domenech. ben, the right doesn t even get it, right? when it is their turn to that, you have john paul stevens, souter, g g.o.p. picks and recently elizabeth warren s beloved customer financial protection bureau was saved by justices appointed by republicans? so really, the world is going to end if another republican justice gets appointed? look, all of these people live in this fantasy world where the republican justices who are appointed are somehow abject partisans who can t be counted on to have heterodox opinions
trump as a victim of the justice system, that might help them with certain group of voters they are trying to win mike over and peel away from president biden right now. but you are absolutely right. he s not the only one facing serious legal issues. hunter biden will also be facing his own trials, expected to be embarrassing, expected to take out the poncho of biden family drama that the president would rather not have out there mighte of these will issues between now and november and they are afraid of the justice system right now. trey: i guess i m glad i went to law school and the lodge agreed to help talk about presidential politics. i need to apologize to my law professors because they prepared me for it. thank you very much and thank you for joining me on a sunday night. i look forward to visiting with you soon. thank you. trey: still ahead some of the future of the supreme court is doomed if you ask the left, they missed souter and brennan,
corridor between san francisco and stanford university would go to try to destroy people like sam alito and clarence thomas. more reprehensible. and we have won the swiss billionaire, mr. weese. he s got five billion dollars that he funnels through arabella s. so there s all of these efforts are being concentrated and the whole subtext is law that they can t pack the door. they tried to storm the homes of the justices, even have an assassin. they didn t do it. but assassin turned up in one case, and they failed to disrupt the conservative majority. and they can t stand that because in the past they either had a liberal majority on the court or they could flip justices like souter or william brennan or potter stewart or john paul stevens. and they felt they could always do that. now, they don t have control of the court and that means their agenda is dependent on popular support. and nobody supporting their border policies. the economy, inflation, crime. and they re exasperated. so wh
if roe v. wade is overturned, if casey is overturned, those two cases figure prominently in lawrence of a texas, in obergefell, which legalized marriage equality. i am not wrong in thinking that it opens the door wide for those decisions to be overturned. it does open. it it s matters a door. roe v. wade is kind of a super precedent, because in 1992 republican justices came together on the supreme court. o connor, souter, and kennedy. and they said look, row is controversial. maybe it is right. maybe it is wrong. but it has been the lava land for more than 20 years at that, point and social expectations have crystallized around it and the court s legitimacy would suffer massively if we try to overrule it. that is where the supreme court started. they started with roe v. wade. the hardest decision. if you can overrule roe, you
the d. c. circuit. and she got all of the votes of the democratic senators and even managed to pull some republican senators. and that was very, very recently. and that has to weigh in her future this is an administration that likely wants an easy time of this and she would be smooth sailing. another potential nominee is justice leondra from the california supreme court. she is a former clerk to justin paul stevens. and she too, i think, would bring a lot of this particular pick. we have not had a state court justice to join the court since justice souter. that would be a different kind of diversity. but diversity nonetheless. and of course there is sherrilyn eiffel and she is currently the president and director of council also and and why you alumna. we have not had a civil rights lawyer on the high court since justice ginsburg and of course, justin marshall, the first african american to join the court. he also served as the president and naacp legal defense i would go a