Chattanooga Times Free Press

PARTISAN COURT HARMFUL TO U.S.

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WASHINGTON — Our constituti­onal system of “checks and balances” only works if those in a position to operate the levers of checking and balancing do their job. It is clear that a Republican Congress and Republican appointees to the Supreme Court have no taste for such work. For the moment, President Trump is mostly unchecked and unbalanced.

It is equally clear — on Trump’s travel ban but also on issues related to voting rights, labor rights and gerrymande­ring — that the Republican Five on the nation’s highest court have operated as agents of their party’s interests.

And now things stand to get even worse because of Justice Anthony Kennedy’s retirement. He was, at least on some occasions, a moderating force. His replacemen­t by another conservati­ve hardliner in the mold of Justice Neil Gorsuch would give right-wing interpreta­tions of the law free rein.

This Court’s direction was troubling enough with Kennedy there. On the travel ban, for example, the majority that included Kennedy discounted the obvious (practicall­y every word Trump has said about Muslims) to make a decision based on a rather absolutist view of presidenti­al power, about which they were skeptical when Barack Obama was president.

When it comes to access to the ballot, they are pushing the nation back to the jurisprude­nce of the pre-civil rights era. The majority’s shameless ratificati­on of a racial gerrymande­r by Texas’ Republican Legislatur­e, wrote Justice Sonia Sotomayor in dissent, demonstrat­ed its refusal to enforce the “right of equal opportunit­y.”

And on Wednesday, in what might be seen as a companion to the Citizens United decision that enhanced the influence of corporatio­ns on our political life, the majority voted to undercut organized labor’s ability to fight back. In Janus v. American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, it ended the practice of public employee unions automatica­lly collecting fees from nonunion members on whose behalf they negotiate contracts, tossing aside 41 years of settled law and crippling the broader labor movement.

You might ask: What’s wrong with all these 5-to4 partisan decisions? Well, there is the matter of the Republican majority in the United States Senate not even permitting a vote on President Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland to the court, allowing Trump to fill the seat with a Republican. Every 5-to-4 conservati­ve decision is (in the parlance of judges) the fruit of a poisonous tree of unbridled partisansh­ip.

But the other problem with 5-to-4 rulings was outlined by a distinguis­hed jurist. “I do think the rule of law is threatened by a steady term after term after term focus on 5-4 decisions,” he said. “Politics are closely divided. … There ought to be some sense of some stability if the government is not going to polarize completely.”

The words are those of Chief Justice John Roberts to the legal scholar Jeffrey Rosen in 2006. And Roberts was right: The court he leads is contributi­ng mightily to the polarizati­on he decries.

All the recent talk about civility should not stop opponents of a right-wing court from doing everything in their power to keep the judiciary from being packed with ideologues who behave as partisans.

There is nothing civil about rushing a nominee to replace Kennedy before the midterm elections. And no rule of civility demands the confirmati­on of justices who would leave an abusive president unchecked and use raw judicial power to roll back a century’s worth of social progress.

 ??  ?? E.J. Dionne Jr.
E.J. Dionne Jr.

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