Monday, July 9, 2018
Courtship and a Powerful Lurch to the Right
The
United States Supreme Court is “judgment proof.” There is no reversing it on
constitutional issues, and the U.S. Constitution is the least amendable such
foundational document in the democratic world. While the Equal Rights Amendment,
proposed in 1972, might someday generate the necessary statewide approval (one
more state needs to ratify), the last amendment to the constitution, the 27th
which necessitates an intervening election for Congress to give itself a
raise), passed in 1992 but was introduced in 1789. Wow!
In
the 20th century, several major Republican appointees to the bench
have gravitated slightly or even greatly towards the left. No one evidenced
that trend like Eisenhower-appointed Chief Justice Earl Warren (former
Republican governor of California), an activist jurist who became a major civil
rights activist. Republican Ronald Reagan appointed now-retiring Supreme Court
Associate Justice, Anthony Kennedy, in 1987. He became known as the “swing
judge” who actually moved the court to support gay marriage by his vote.
With
Kennedy gone, it is clear that the President’s advisors did not want to pick a
judge who was likely to leave those most conservative leanings over time. Trump
selected 53-year-old Brett
Kavanaugh, a respected jurist whose staunch conservative leanings are
solidly documented during his tenure as a justice on the District of Columbia
Court of Appeals, often considered to be the second most important court in the
land. And while the confirmation fight is expected to be vituperative, it is
very interesting to note that since Donald Trump’s inauguration, the Supreme
Court has already handed conservatives a litany of decisions while virtually
blanking out liberal issues where it really matters. Justice Kennedy swayed
back towards his conservative roots in his final year on the bench.
Writing
for the ABA Journal (July 6th), UC Berkeley School of Law Dean,
Edwin Chemerinsky explains that pattern of post-Trump election decisions by
that court: “Conservatives won virtually every major
U.S. Supreme Court case decided during the 2017 October term. Kennedy leaving
the court and likely being replaced by someone even more conservative, makes
this term the harbinger of what is likely to come for a long time.
“I cannot think of another term since October 1935 in which
conservatives prevailed in so many important cases during a single term. One
reflection of this is found by looking at the 5-4 decisions. There were 19 5-4
rulings out of 63 decisions this most recent term. Kennedy voted with Chief
Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel A. Alito and
Neil M. Gorsuch in 14 of them. He voted with the liberal justices–Ruth Bader
Ginsburg, Stephen G. Breyer, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan–zero times. A year
ago, in the ideologically divided cases, Kennedy was with the liberals 57
percent of the time. Two years ago, Kennedy was the key vote to uphold the
University of Texas’s affirmative action program and to strike down key
provisions of Texas’s restrictive abortion law… Sometimes the court ruled
broadly; at other times narrowly. But almost always, it was in the directions
that conservatives preferred.”
Indeed, cases supported Christian cake-makers who refused to
provide a cake for the celebration of a gay marriage, upheld the President’s
travel ban, ruled that public service employees could not be forced to pay
union dues even if they benefited from the collective bargaining agreement,
decided against a California law requiring family planning clinics to provide
information involving contraception and abortion and found technical reasons
not to consider the Constitutionality of partisan gerrymandering. The only
concession to liberal values was a requirement that, before accessing GPS location
tracking information in a criminal investigation, police must first secure a
warrant.
Given the age of the liberal justices, if Donald Trump is able to
appoint more replacements to the court, the court will swing severely right for
decades, no matter who is elected to every other federal office. Even without
having that benefit, given the age of most of the conservative justices on that
bench, the United States is in for a very long period of pro-business,
anti-environmental and financial regulatory positions and severe limits to
civil rights. These court appointments are the most “successful” results – if
you lean severe right – of any Republican president in recent memory.
I’m Peter Dekom, and I am
afraid that the United States is finished taking three steps forward for a very
long time; this is the time where it is taking four steps back.
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