Las Vegas Review-Journal

Elated v. scared: Americans divided on justice’s retirement

- By Richard Fausset, Farah Stockman and Jose A. Del Real New York Times News Service

D.A. King, the head of an Atlanta-area group that opposes illegal immigratio­n, heard word of Justice Anthony M. Kennedy’s retirement while vacationin­g on St. Simons Island, off the Georgia coast. He was elated thinking of the conservati­ve who might replace him.

Kristen Clarke, a civil rights lawyer, heard the news on the radio not far from the Supreme Court itself, as she was driving to a Capitol Hill hearing about the Voting Rights Act. She figured her job defending voting rights was about to become much more of a challenge.

In West Hollywood, Curtis Collins was working out at Barry’s Bootcamp, and he said the Supreme Court justice’s announceme­nt dominated the Wednesday afternoon conversati­on among the predominan­tly gay group of men exercising there. “Everybody was talking about it, how appalling it was,” he said. “Everyone was saying they were scared. We don’t normally talk about politics in there.”

And in North Carolina, as the news of the impending retirement flashed on Amy Mahle’s phone, she wondered whether God might soon answer her prayers — and let her finally see the high court overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 case establishi­ng a constituti­onal right to abortion. “I think it’s possible,” she said. “I would love that.”

It is not exactly shocking when an 81-year-old man decides to retire after 30 years on the job. And yet, Kennedy’s announceme­nt this week still managed to deliver a powerful jolt to the nation. His departure comes at a fragile time for the country, as a first-term president has vigorously assumed the role of disrupter-in-chief. President Donald Trump said he wanted to pick a jurist who could serve at least 40 years on the court, potentiall­y cementing the president’s impact on the country for generation­s.

Kennedy, a centrist swing vote, is likely to be replaced by a reliable conservati­ve, tipping the institutio­n decidedly rightward. For many conservati­ves, this amounts to a kind of judicial grand prize, one that outweighs any concerns about Trump’s departures from conservati­ve

 ?? AL DRAGO / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2017) ?? Supreme Court Justices Neil Gorsuch, left, and Anthony Kennedy share a moment in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. Kennedy, who has long been the decisive vote in many cases, this week announced his intent to retire from the bench,...
AL DRAGO / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2017) Supreme Court Justices Neil Gorsuch, left, and Anthony Kennedy share a moment in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. Kennedy, who has long been the decisive vote in many cases, this week announced his intent to retire from the bench,...

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