The Philippine Star

Kavanaugh to hear first arguments as SC justice

-

WASHINGTON (AP) — A Supreme Court with a new conservati­ve majority takes the bench as Brett Kavanaugh, narrowly confirmed after a bitter Senate battle, joins his new colleagues to hear his first arguments as a justice.

Kavanaugh will emerge this morning from behind the courtroom’s red velvet curtains and take his seat alongside his eight colleagues. It will be a moment that conservati­ves have dreamed of for decades, with five solidly conservati­ve justices on the bench.

Kavanaugh’s predecesso­r, Justice Anthony Kennedy, who retired in June, was a more moderate conservati­ve and sometimes sided with the court’s four liberal justices. Kavanaugh, in contrast, is expected to be a more decidedly conservati­ve vote, tilting the court right for decades and leaving Chief Justice John Roberts as the justice closest to the ideologica­l middle.

With justices seated by sebut niority, US President Donald Trump’s two appointees will flank the Supreme Court bench, Justice Neil Gorsuch at one end and Kavanaugh at the other.

Court watchers will be looking to see whether the new justice asks questions at arguments and, if so, what he asks. There will also be those looking for any lingering signs of Kavanaugh’s heated, partisan confirmati­on fight. But the justices, who often highlight their efforts to work together as a collegial body, are likely to focus on the cases before them.

Republican­s had hoped to confirm Kavanaugh in time for him to join the court on Oct. 1, the start of the new term. Instead, the former DC. Circuit judge missed the first week of arguments as the Senate considered an allegation that he had sexually assaulted a woman in high school, an allegation he adamantly denied.

Kavanaugh was confirmed 50-48 Saturday, the closest vote to confirm a justice since 1881, and has had a busy three days since then. On Saturday evening, Kavanaugh took his oaths of office in a private ceremony at the Supreme Court while protesters chanted outside the court building.

And on Monday evening he was the guest of honor at a ceremonial swearing-in at the White House. While Trump apologized on behalf of the nation for “the terrible pain and suffering” Kavanaugh and his family had suffered and declared him “proven innocent,” the new justice assured Americans that he would be fair and was taking the job with “no bitterness.”

 ?? EPA ?? US President Donald Trump greets Supreme Court Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh at the White House in Washington on Monday.
EPA US President Donald Trump greets Supreme Court Associate Justice Brett Kavanaugh at the White House in Washington on Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines