Morning Sun

Amy Coney Barrett wouldn’t transform the court more than any other justice

- Bymichaelw. Mcconnell Mcconnell is therichard and Francesmal­lery professor of law and director of the Constituti­onal Law Center at Stanford Law School and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institutio­n.

Americans have enough divisive matters to worry about — not least a potentiall­y contested presidenti­al election — without being driven crazy over a Supreme Court appointmen­t. A little calm is in order. The appointmen­t to replace the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is certainly important. And it’s easy to understand why most Americans think the choice should be made by whoever is elected in November, especially given what happened — or did not happen— with President Barack Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland in 2016. But confirming Judge Amy Coney Barrett would not “transformt­he court for a generation.” It also would not end abortion rights or destroy the Affordable Care Act.

Justices come and go, and the balance of power on the Supreme Court shifts back and forth. It seldom stays the same for long. Ginsburgwa­s themost left-progressiv­emember of the court, close to Justice Sonia Sotomayor but certainly more liberal than Justices Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan. Any Republican president’s appointee, however moderate, would therefore move the court toward the center or the right.

But the three oldest justices, and therefore the three most likely to leave the court in the coming years, are Breyer (82), Samuel Alito (70) and Clarence Thomas (72). Breyer is themost moderate of the Democratic appointees. Replacing him with a progressiv­e Democrat would be like replacing Justice Sandra Day O’connor with Alito (as happened in 2006). Thomas and Alito are themost conservati­ve members of the court. Assuming that a Democrat is elected in the fall, the court could easily be dominated by its leftwing again, in just a few years, even with

Barrett on the bench.

This is not a reason for Barrett’s opponents to support her, but it is a reason for everyone to calm down.

Even the current court, with a solid majority of five conservati­ve-seeming justices, has decided many of themost important cases over the past year in favor of the liberal position. Consider Bostock (interpreti­ng Titlevii to apply to same-sex and transgende­r discrimina­tion), Regents (striking down Trump’s revocation of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA) and Vance (allowing the New York district attorney to subpoena Trump’s financial records). This is because modern conservati­ve legal theory is primarily aboutmetho­dology rather than results.

What about abortion rights? Well, in confirmati­on battles going back to the 1980s, abortion rights advocates have predicted that every nominee by a Republican president, if confirmed, wouldmean the reversal of Roe v. Wade. Yet it has never happened. Republican presidents have filled nine seats since Ronald Reaganwas elected president; nine times the nation was warned that Roe was on the chopping block. Somehow, the blade never falls. Roe was reaffirmed this summer, in effect, by June Medical, withamajor­ity opinionwri­tten by Chief Justice John Roberts Jr., an appointee of Presidentg­eorge W. Bush. Roe is the Road Runner of all precedents. Wile E. Coyote just never catches up.

There are reasons Roe is so resilient — and one of them is not the legal persuasive­ness of the opinion, which is nil. But the ruling is nearly a half-century old and has been reaffirmed multiple times by justices of both parties. Such a decision will not be lightly overruled. And whatever onemay think of abortion, the practice is so widespread and ingrained, and the right to it so intensely defended by a significan­t minority of Americans, that trying to use the force of the state to end it wouldwrenc­h the nation apart — while almost surely failing.

The politics would not be kind to pro-lifers. Right now, abortionre­lated disputes concernmar­ginal cases (such as late-term abortions, parental consent, sexselecti­ve abortion and disposal of fetal remains) where public opinion is divided and the majority might even support increased restrictio­ns. If Roe were overruled, the debate would shift to out-and-out prohibitio­ns, where public opinion is squarely on the side of abortion rights. Republican Party primaries would feature fights to the death between purists and compromise­rs, and a united pro-choice Democratic Party would gain the advantage.

The notion that a Barrett appointmen­t will mean the invalidati­on of the Affordable Care Act is even more far-fetched. True, a case seeking the ACA’S end has reached the Supreme Court and will be decided in the coming term. But most legal observers — even conservati­ves with no affection for Obamacare — think the legal basis for the challenge is laughably weak, and wonder if even one justice (let alone five) will buy it.

That does not mean the Barrett nomination does not matter. A Justice Barrett is unlikely to lead the court in more progressiv­e directions, and more likely to read statutes and the Constituti­on to mean what they say, and not what liberals want them to say. But that would be nothing more than the customary giveand-take of Supreme Court litigation. It is not sufficient reason to tear the country apart.

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