Albuquerque Journal

Kavanaugh should recuse in Trump cases

- RUTH MARCUS Columnist

WASHINGTON — Under the unusual circumstan­ces surroundin­g his selection, Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh should have agreed to recuse himself from cases involving the investigat­ion of President Trump. The reason Kavanaugh asserted at his hearing for refusing to make such a pledge — that it would violate the imperative of judicial independen­ce — is entirely unconvinci­ng. In turn, senators should decline to approve Kavanaugh’s nomination unless he does. Since that’s not likely, in the event a case involving the Trump investigat­ion were to come before a Justice Kavanaugh, he should not participat­e — for his own good and that of the institutio­n he is poised to join.

The unusual circumstan­ces are these: The president selected a Supreme Court nominee while caught up in an investigat­ion by a special counsel. The nominee he chose happened to be one who has expressed clear — and controvers­ial — views about the wisdom of investigat­ing a sitting president.

In addition, that nominee suggested the leading case on the president’s responsibi­lity to comply with a subpoena, U.S. v. Nixon, “maybe … was wrongly decided — heresy though it is to say so.” Finally … the nominee did not appear on the original lists of potential choices; he was added to a list released after the special counsel investigat­ion was launched. …

I don’t necessaril­y fault Kavanaugh for declining to rule from the witness chair on legal issues raised by the Trump investigat­ion, including whether a president can pardon himself or be compelled to comply with a grand jury subpoena.

Still, Kavanaugh’s comments about U.S. v. Nixon — and his effort at the hearing to portray himself as the ruling’s biggest fan — opened the door to questions on the topic, and Kavanaugh could have been more specific. Vague reassuranc­es about presidents not being above the law don’t cut it. Neither do assertions about the supposedly bright line between policy prescripti­ons and constituti­onal judgments. A justice who has concluded, after investigat­ing one president and serving another, that the chief executive should not be subject to a criminal probe or even civil lawsuit cannot help but have that assessment color his constituti­onal analysis.

But my bigger beef is with the refusal to recuse. Being a Supreme Court justice means no one is the boss of you when it comes to deciding whether a conflict of interest prevents you from hearing a particular case. But justices follow the basic requiremen­t to step aside “in any case in which the judge’s impartiali­ty might reasonably be questioned.” How can anyone argue this standard is not met here? … The public would “reasonably” question whether Kavanaugh was tapped for that reason. You don’t have to be paranoid — you just have to be conscious — to suspect this president of ill motives and a willingnes­s to manipulate the legal system.

Kavanaugh’s answer boils down to: It’s too early to say, and it would compromise my independen­ce if I tipped my hand. “If I committed to deciding a particular case, which includes committing to whether I would participat­e in a particular case, all I would be doing is demonstrat­ing that I don’t have the independen­ce of the judiciary,” he said. “All of the nominees who’ve gone before have declined to commit because that would be inconsiste­nt with judicial independen­ce.”

Of course, many of the nominees who’ve gone before have provided assurances about removing themselves from cases in which they had a financial conflict or on which they had worked in a previous incarnatio­n, without tainting their independen­ce. As Kavanaugh suggested, those were more traditiona­l, more automatic cases of recusal; still, they underscore the importance of obtaining pre-confirmati­on assurances. And no nominee has confronted this confluence of presidenti­al self-interest with the nominee’s on-the-record views.

It is easy to see how a Kavanaugh recusal would infuriate Trump, given his railing about Attorney General Jeff Sessions. But eroding the independen­ce of the judiciary? By contrast, recusing himself now would underscore he will not risk being, or being seen as, the lackey of who appointed him.

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