The New Jersey Supreme Court has been at the center of some highly contentions and overly politicized arguments in the last couple of years. Those debates have not concerned novel and consequential issues presented to the honorable justices of the court, rather they have related to the court’s composition. The discourse has taken place, in increasing volume, in our government offices, legislative floors and the press.
At issue, and of tremendous moment, has been the independence of our judiciary from the heightened partisanship that we see today at all levels of our government. A system devised to regulate the constitutional checks on government, resolve the disputes of private and public parties, and respond to the requests of the aggrieved had been imperiled as governmental authority and political will clashed.
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