New Straits Times

KAVANAUGH IS TRUMP’S PICK FOR SUPREME COURT

Decision likely to cement rightward tilt of apex court, with huge implicatio­ns

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PRESIDENT Donald Trump on Monday nominated conservati­ve judge Brett Kavanaugh to the United States Supreme Court, a decision likely to cement a rightward tilt on the top judicial body with momentous implicatio­ns for American society.

Trump’s decision stood to be among the most consequent­ial of his presidency as he sought to shape the high court to his conservati­ve leanings for decades to come. With Kavanaugh, a mere 53 years old, he could serve for a generation or more.

“Judge Kavanaugh has impeccable credential­s, unsurpasse­d qualificat­ions, and a proven commitment to equal justice under the law,” Trump said as he introduced his nominee in a primetime address from the White House, praising him as “one of the finest and sharpest legal minds of our time”.

After days spent spent teasing his highly-anticipate­d decision, Trump ended up picking a jurist with extended federal bench and administra­tion experience to fill the vacancy left by retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy.

Kavanaugh worked for president George W. Bush, who appointed him in 2003 to the US Court of Appeals in Washington, where he was finally confirmed by the Senate in 2006 after years of Democratic obstructio­n.

He is also a robust supporter of the executive power of the presidency.

Kennedy was long a swing vote on the nine-member court, and Trump’s choice — his second opportunit­y in 18 months to fill a Supreme Court seat — stood to dramatical­ly affect many aspects of American life, from abortion to voting rights to immigratio­n.

While conservati­ve on firearms and election financing, Kennedy showed a more progressiv­e streak on issues such as abortion and affirmativ­e action. An example of this came in 2015, when, thanks to him, same-sex marriage was legalised across the US.

But Kavanaugh, who grew up in Washington as the son of a schoolteac­her, had the reputation of a staunch conservati­ve, one who many Republican­s no doubt hoped could help overturn Roe v Wade, the landmark 1973 decision that guaranteed women the right to an abortion.

He has ruled on hundreds of cases, and contribute­d to prosecutor Kenneth Starr’s report into former president Bill Clinton’s affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, which outlined several grounds for Clinton’s impeachmen­t.

Later, he was part of Bush’s legal team working on the 2000 Florida recount, which resulted in Bush winning the presidency.

Kavanaugh recently voiced disagreeme­nt with a court decision allowing an undocument­ed teenage immigrant to get an abortion.

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