Can Congress Override Supreme Court Decisions?
 

Although it runs counter to conventional wisdom, it may be that Congress can exercise authority to override Supreme Court (SCOTUS) decisions, simply by reenacting laws struck down by the SCOTUS, but with added provisions withholding jurisdiction from the federal courts to hear cases and make rulings pertaining to the constitutionality of the law.

Phyllis Schlafly in her book "The Supremacists: The Tyranny of Judges and How to Stop It," gives an example of a ruling made by the Supreme Court that ended up being overridden by Congress. The following paragraph may be the most interesting and important in her book:

"After the Supreme Court ruled in Tennessee Coal v. Muscoda (1944) that employers had to pay retroactive wages for coal miners' underground travel to and from their work station, Congress passed the Portal-to-Portal Act of 1947 prohibiting any court from enforcing such liability."

If a precedent has been already established, what's to keep it from being done again?

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