Stabroek News

U.S. top court to rule on last cases as talk about Kennedy swirls

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WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme Court is set to issue the final rulings of its current term today, including one on religious rights, amid talk that swing voter Justice Anthony Kennedy is considerin­g retirement.

The court in the coming days is also expected to act on President Donald Trump’s emergency request seeking to revive his travel ban on people entering the United States from six Muslim-majority countries, which was blocked by lower courts.

Although there are no firm indication­s that Kennedy, 81 in July, will step down, some of his former law clerks have said he is considerin­g it. Any announceme­nt could come after the court has finished issuing its rulings this morning.

Kennedy has repeatedly declined to respond to media requests seeking comment on his plans. He joined his former law clerks at a reunion event on Saturday night, with several attendees saying he did not address the rumours.

If Kennedy were to retire, President Donald Trump, a Republican, would have a historic opportunit­y to recast the court in a more conservati­ve posture, possibly for decades to come. He has already appointed one conservati­ve justice, Neil Gorsuch. But Gorsuch replaced a conservati­ve in a similar mold, Justice Antonin Scalia, who died last year. Replacing Kennedy, the swing vote for the last decade on the closely divided court, would be more significan­t. Kennedy has sided with the court’s four liberals on some major issues, most notably gay rights.

Speaking on ABC’s “This Week” programme on Sunday, Kellyanne Conway, a Trump adviser, declined to say if there has been any communicat­ion between the White House and Kennedy.

The nine justices are due to rule in six cases, not including their decision expected in the coming days on the travel ban.

Of the remaining cases argued during the court’s current term, which began in October, the most eagerly awaited one concerns a Missouri church backed by a conservati­ve Christian legal group. The ruling potentiall­y could narrow the separation of church and state.

The church sued after being denied state taxpayer funds for a playground improvemen­t project because of a Missouri constituti­onal provision barring state funding for religious entities.

Trinity Lutheran could be headed for a lopsided win, with two liberal justices joining their conservati­ve colleagues in signaling support during the April oral argument. It was one of the first in which Trump’s conservati­ve appointee to the court, Neil Gorsuch, participat­ed.

The most notable of three immigratio­n-related cases in which rulings are due on Monday is a dispute over whether immigrants detained by the U.S. government for more than six months while deportatio­n proceeding­s unfold should be able to request their release. The case takes on additional significan­ce with Trump ratcheting up immigratio­n enforcemen­t, placing more people in detention awaiting deportatio­n.

The court also is set to decide a case that could clarify the criminal acts for which legal immigrants may be deported. Another involves whether the family of a Mexican teenager shot dead while standing on Mexican soil by a U.S. Border Patrol agent in Texas can sue for civil rights violations.

As the justices look to finish work before their summer break, they must decide what to do with Trump’s travel ban, which was blocked by lower courts. The administra­tion wants the ban to go into effect while the litigation continues.

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Anthony Kennedy

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