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Justice Gorsuch has brief warning about Biden's SCOTUS proposals: Too many laws can pose 'a danger'

Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch responded to President Biden's proposals to overhaul the Supreme Court with a brief warning in an interview Monday, calling it potentially "dangerous."

Gorsuch sat down with "America Reports" host Sandra Smith in a wide-ranging interview following the release of his new book, "Over Ruled: The Human Toll of Too Much Law." Asked about Biden's suggestions for changes to the Supreme Court, Gorsuch stopped short of commenting, telling Smith, "You’re not going to be surprised that in a presidential election year I am not going to get into politics."

Smith pressed the justice, however, about concern that Biden's proposed reforms could be in violation of the separation of powers.

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"I think that is a question all Americans have to ask," Gorsuch replied.

"Too little law, that is a danger to our freedoms and our aspirations for equal treatment of all persons. Too much law, maybe that is a danger, too," he added.

The Trump appointee went on to quote James Madison, who warned about the consequences of having too many laws in the U.S.

"The thing to fear most is too much law in a democracy and what happens when laws become too voluminous to be understood by ordinary Americans. He [Madison] said, the money and the connected can find their way. They can figure it out better than anyone else. And everyone else, ordinary people, will be put at a disadvantage," Gorsuch told Smith.

"And that’s the question we have to ask yourselves today," he continued. "About the separation of powers when it comes to federalism vertically, in our separation of powers and also horizontally in terms of how much we do through

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