Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
The passage says current rules make judges step aside when their impartiality "might reasonably be questioned," which is vague and focuses on appearances instead of whether a judge is actually biased. The author argues this can miss real bias and proposes ending bias-based disqualification requests and instead requiring judges to write clear legal explanations for their rulings or for recusal. If an informed observer finds the judge’s written reasoning legally sound and the same result could have been reached without improper motives, then no real harm occurred and there’s no valid complaint.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the passage's explicit criticism of the recusal rules as 'vague' and look for the phrase about failing to indicate 'whose perspective to take'—the correct answer restates that textual weakness.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage8.According to the passage, a weakness of current rules regarding recusal and disqualification is that they
Correct Answer
B
The passage states, 'The rules provide vague guidance at best, making disqualification dependent on whether the judge's impartiality might reasonably be questioned, without giving any idea of whose perspective to take or how to interpret the facts.' This sentence directly supports choice B: the rules fail to specify whose perspective is relevant to determining apparent bias.
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