El Dorado News-Times

Judging Kavanaugh

- JOHN STOSSEL

Some people are very angry about President Trump's new Supreme Court pick. "Hell no, Kavanaugh! He is a dangerous man!" protesters shouted on the steps of the Supreme Court. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand yelled, "What is at stake is freedom for LGBTQ Americans, for equal rights, civil rights..."

"They are freaking out because they don't understand," Ilya Shapiro, editor of the Cato Institute's Supreme Court Review, tells me. "Those top areas, abortion or gay rights or Citizens United, there's really not going to be a change."

Every time one party appoints a judge, the other party acts as if the appointmen­t will fundamenta­lly change America. But the

Supreme Court is the most cautious of the three branches of government. Today's

Court, headed by Chief

Justice John Roberts, is especially respectful of precedent.

They almost always base their decisions on decisions made by prior justices, and they often defer to lower courts. That doesn't lead to many surprising changes. Maybe that's why, despite activists protesting most every recent appointmen­t, a study finds most Americans can't name a single Supreme Court justice. We notice the president, and most of us can name at least some members of Congress. Those people might do something surprising.

Supreme Court justices, whether Republican or Democratic appointees, are not very likely to undo existing laws, especially laws that millions of Americans have already acted on.

After 45 years of legal abortions, Roe v. Wade isn't likely to be repealed. Gay marriage is pretty safe too after a quarter-million gay marriages. The court's unlikely to reverse itself on either issue. Partisans would be smarter to keep their eyes on issues where the Court is closely divided.

Private property cases like the Kelo decision might go differentl­y with Brett Kavanaugh on the Supreme Court instead of swing-voter Anthony Kennedy. In that case, Kennedy joined the Court's four liberals in affirming the government's right to seize privately owned land and give it to other private landowners who might pay more in taxes.

Kennedy voted "for the bad guys," says Shapiro, adding optimistic­ally, "Kavanaugh could very well be the fifth vote to overturn Kelo."

Also, affirmativ­e action faces challenges. A lawsuit accusing Harvard of discrimina­ting against Asian-Americans may reach the court soon.

Shapiro says, "Kavanaugh could provide the fifth vote to overturn that 40-year-old experiment with using racial preference­s to promote some kind of nebulous diversity."

Kavanaugh also has a history of reining in government regulators -- "all these alphabet agencies that increasing­ly intrude in people's lives," as Shapiro puts it. "He has written at length that the government keeps doing things that it doesn't have the power to do."

At the White House, the day he was nominated, Kavanaugh made a point of saying, "The Constituti­on's separation of powers protects individual liberty."

That was good to hear. As a judge in D.C., Kavanaugh voted to strike down some environmen­tal rules. "I like the idea of clean air and clean water," says Shapiro, "but the EPA has taken a lot of liberties."

Kavanaugh is also likely to reject new gun control laws. "I think libertaria­ns will like the pushback on government excess," predicts Shapiro.

But conservati­ves have more reason to be happy than libertaria­ns. As a circuit court judge, Kavanaugh ruled that the NSA was justified in collecting metadata on Americans as part of its surveillan­ce program.

Kavanaugh volunteere­d to write that decision, enthusiast­ically arguing that preventing terrorist attacks was a "special need." But the government never could point to an instance where monitoring all of America's communicat­ions has ever prevented an attack.

"That's his worst case," says Shapiro. "He has a lot of good opinions on... police needing a warrant (and opposing) laws drawn so broadly that prosecutor­s are convicting people who are not guilty... Clearly, he defers to the government on national security grounds, but most judges and justices do anyway."

Libertaria­ns should be happy, Shapiro says. "The fact that we're looking around the edges to see what sorts of things (libertaria­ns) can disagree on shows how far we've moved in 10, 20 or 30 years."

Right. If a Kavanaugh Court moves even a little in the direction of restrainin­g government, that's progress.

John Stossel is author of "No They Can't! Why Government Fails -- But Individual­s Succeed."

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