How can Supreme Court justices be penalized? There's really only one option
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Donald Trump’s renewed call for Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to resign over her critical comments on his presidential bid is really just a suggestion. Why?
Like 'em or not, Supreme Court justices are appointed for life.
Impeachment by Congress is the only legal avenue that exists for punishing or removing a Supreme Court justice -- a historically rare option that’s been tried, but has never succeeded.
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The congressional bar for impeachment starts relatively low -- that is, the House only needs a simple majority to vote for impeachment proceedings to begin; but the bar is raised fairly high in the Senate, where a two-thirds majority is needed to convict.
The last – and only – time this happened was in 1804, when the House voted to impeach Justice Samuel Chase. He was accused of a range of offenses concerning his conduct on the bench – but the Senate voted to acquit in 1805, and Chase stayed on the bench.
One other justice, Abe Fortas, resigned in 1969 amid threat of impeachment over an ethics controversy.
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Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, told Fox News last year that the Senate can barely muster 50 votes, let alone 67, to oust a Supreme Court justice. He called instead for judicial retention elections every eight years – something that does not currently exist.