Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Supreme Court familiar with having eight justices

- Richard Wolf

WASHINGTON – If the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s seat on the Supreme Court remains vacant for some time, it won’t be anything her colleagues are not accustomed to.

When Associate Justice Antonin Scalia died suddenly in February 2016, Senate Republican­s blocked President Barack Obama from filling the seat, which would have given liberals a majority for the first time in decades. The court muddled through with only eight justices for 14 months.

When previous justices died in office or retired before their successors could be confirmed, the court similarly moved forward with eight members, often for months as Senate confirmation hearings dragged on or a nominee was rejected. Most recently, the battle over Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination stretched into October 2018, leaving the court shorthande­d at the start of its term.

The high court also is stuck at eight whenever one justice steps back or recuses themselves from considerin­g a case, often because he or she was involved with it as a judge or lawyer before joining the court.

Justices also step aside on occasion because of a financial, family or personal conflict.

Cases that are decided unanimousl­y or by lopsided votes aren’t affected. But if the justices are deadlocked, at least initially, it can lead them to find a narrow solution that doesn’t advance the law very far in any direction.

If they emerge 4-4, they can reschedule the case for the following term, hoping for a ninth justice. That happened in July 2020, when Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch cast the deciding vote that put the eastern half of Oklahoma under Native American criminal jurisdicti­on. A case raising the same issue could not be decided the previous term because of Gorsuch’s recusal.

Sometimes, the court simply ties up, rendering its ruling almost meaningles­s. The tie vote leaves the most recent decision by a lower court intact. There is no new, national precedent created by the nation’s highest court.

That happened four times in the months after Scalia’s death in 2016, most notably when the court considered President Barack Obama’s effort to protect several million undocument­ed immigrants from deportatio­n. The court deadlocked on the successor to Obama’s 2012 DACA policy, leaving intact a federal appeals court decision striking down the expansion.

The court also tied in a major labor rights case threatenin­g public employee unions’ long-held right to collect fees from non-members for collective bargaining. That avoided what could have been a major blow to the union movement, but the court in 2018 finally ended the practice.

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