PULSE POINTS:
❓What Happened: Chief Justice John Roberts announced he is not planning to retire as he feels healthy.
👥 Who’s Involved: Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts.
📍 Where & When: Comments made in Buffalo, N.Y., during the 125th anniversary of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of New York.
💬 Key Quote: “I’m going out feet first,” Roberts joked when asked about retirement.
⚠️ Impact: Roberts emphasized the importance of judicial independence amidst calls for impeachment of a federal judge by President Donald J. Trump.
IN FULL:
Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts says he has no immediate plans to step down from the bench, citing good health as the primary reason. The 70-year-old Justice shared this during a public event in Buffalo, New York, marking the 125th anniversary of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of New York.
“I’ve sat down with them and said, ‘I want at the appropriate time’—because you don’t always notice that you’re slipping—‘I want the two of you to tell me if it’s time to go,” Roberts recounted, describing a conversation with two friends regarding retirement. He continued: “It was a long pause, and at once, the two of them said, ‘It’s time to go.’ So I said, ‘Alright, never mind.”
When asked whether his retirement could be imminent, the Chief Justice joked, “I’m going out feet first.”
However, the top jurist in the United States did not rule out a departure from the high court entirely. “I say that now. I mean, I’m sure if your health declines, and if you recognize that you’re a burden to the court rather than part of an asset to everybody, then, it’ll be time to go,” Roberts said, although he emphasized that he himself feels “pretty healthy.”
Despite the bravado expressed against retirement, Roberts conceded that there have been a few instances where age hampered the court’s function, but he insisted the justices were able to handle the problems internally without issue. “There have been times when somebody has stayed a little longer than they should, then the other colleagues come, and it’s always really worked out, so I don’t think that’s going to be a problem,” the Chief Justice said.
Notably, the Supreme Court—and Chief Justice Roberts specifically—has been criticized in recent weeks for its hesitancy to stop the ongoing Democratic lawfare efforts against the Trump White House. This has led to allegations that the high court and Roberts have allowed the federal court system to dramatically overreach and assume executive branch powers in contravention of the U.S. Constitution.