San Diego Union-Tribune

TRUMP’S IMPRINT ON COURT SHOWS IN RELIGION RULING

Barrett casts decisive vote to reject pandemic restrictio­ns

- BY ADAM LIPTAK

A few minutes before midnight Wednesday, the nation got its first glimpse of how profoundly President Donald Trump had transforme­d the Supreme Court.

Just months ago, Chief Justice John Roberts was at the peak of his power, holding the controllin­g vote in closely divided cases and almost never finding himself in dissent. But the arrival of Justice Amy Coney Barrett late last month, which put a staunch conservati­ve in the seat formerly held by the late liberal mainstay Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, meant that it was only a matter of time before the chief justice’s leadership would be tested.

It happened Wednesday when Barrett cast the decisive vote in a 5-4 ruling that rejected restrictio­ns on religious services in New York imposed by Gov. Andrew Cuomo to combat the co

ronavirus, shoving Roberts into dissent with the three remaining liberals.

The ruling was at odds with earlier ones in cases from California — which involved South Bay United Pentecosta­l Church in Chula Vista — and

Nevada issued before Ginsburg ’s death in September.

Those decisions upheld restrictio­ns on church services by 5-4 votes, with Roberts in the majority.

The New York decision said that Cuomo’s strict virus limits — capping attendance at religious services at 10 people in “red zones” where risk was highest, and at 25 in slightly less dangerous “orange zones” — violated the First Amendment’s protection of the free exercise of religion.

Wednesday’s ruling was almost certainly a taste of things to come. While Ginsburg was alive, Roberts voted with the court’s fourmember liberal wing in cases striking down a restrictiv­e Louisiana abortion law, blocking a Trump administra­tion initiative that would have rolled back protection­s for young immigrants known as “Dreamers,” refusing to allow a question on citizenshi­p to be added to the census, and saving the Affordable Care Act.

Had Barrett rather than

Ginsburg been on the court when those cases were decided, the results might well have f lipped. In coming cases, too, Barrett will almost certainly play a decisive role. Her support for claims of religious freedom, a subject of questionin­g at her confirmati­on hearings and a theme in her appellate decisions, will almost certainly play a prominent role.

Democrats had feared, and Trump had predicted, that Barrett’s vote might be crucial in a case arising from the presidenti­al election. But there is no case on the court’s docket or on the horizon that has a realistic potential to alter the outcome.

It is not clear how Barrett will vote in the latest challenge to the Affordable Care Act, which was argued this month. But, judging from the questionin­g, the act is likely to survive however she votes.

Roberts is fundamenta­lly conservati­ve, and his liberal votes have been rare. But they reinforced his frequent statements that the court is not a political body. The court’s new and solid conservati­ve majority may send a different message.

That said, the court’s dynamics can be complicate­d, and not all decisions break along predictabl­e lines. For instance, while Roberts has lost his place at the court’s ideologica­l center, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who was the second of Trump’s three court appointmen­ts, values consensus and may turn out to be an occasional ally.

On Wednesday, Kavanaugh issued a conciliato­ry concurring opinion emphasizin­g that he agreed with much of what Roberts had written in dissent.

“I part ways with the chief justice,” he wrote, “on a narrow procedural point.” That point — whether the court should act immediatel­y, notwithsta­nding Cuomo’s decision to lift the challenged restrictio­ns for the time being — was, however, enough to decide the case.

The majority opinion was unsigned, but Ross Guberman, an authority on legal writing and author of “Point Taken: How to Write Like the World’s Best Judges,” said he suspected that its principal author was the newest justice.

“My money is on Justice Barrett,” Guberman said,

pointing to word choices that echoed her opinions on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Among them, he said, was “the concession that justices ‘are not public health experts,’ ” and “the taste for ‘and,’ ‘but’ and ‘show.’ ”

The unsigned opinion was mild and measured, which is also characteri­stic of Barrett’s judicial work. It took issue with what it said were Cuomo’s unduly harsh restrictio­ns, which had been challenged by, among others, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn and two synagogues, the latter of which had argued that Cuomo had “singled out a particular religion for blame and retributio­n for an uptick in a societywid­e pandemic.”

The majority opinion said less restrictiv­e measures would work.

“Among other things, the maximum attendance at a religious service could be tied to the size of the church or synagogue,” the opinion said. “It is hard to believe that admitting more than 10 people to a 1,000-seat church or 400-seat synagogue would create a more serious health risk than the many other ac

tivities that the state allows.”

The opinion said the state had treated secular businesses more favorably than houses of worship.

“The list of ‘essential’ businesses includes things such as acupunctur­e facilities, camp grounds, garages, as well as many whose services are not limited to those that can be regarded as essential, such as all plants manufactur­ing chemicals and microelect­ronics and all transporta­tion facilities,” the opinion said.

The most notable signed opinion came from Justice Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s first appointee. His concurrenc­e was bitter, slashing and triumphant, and it took aim at Roberts, whose concurring opinion in the California case in May had been relied on by courts around the nation to assess the constituti­onality of restrictio­ns prompted by the pandemic.

The chief justice’s basic point was that government off icials, in consultati­on with scientific experts, were better positioned than judges to make determinat­ions about public health. But Gorsuch wrote that the opinion, in South Bay Pentecosta­l Church v. Newsom, was worthless.

“Even if the Constituti­on has taken a holiday during this pandemic, it cannot become a sabbatical,” he wrote. “Rather than apply a nonbinding and expired concurrenc­e from South Bay, courts must resume applying the Free Exercise Clause. Today, a majority of the court makes this plain.”

“We may not shelter in place when the Constituti­on is under attack,” Gorsuch wrote. “Things never go well when we do.”

Roberts responded that there was no need to act because Cuomo had, for the time being, lifted the restrictio­ns.

“Numerical capacity limits of 10 and 25 people, depending on the applicable zone, do seem unduly restrictiv­e,” he wrote.

“And it may well be that such restrictio­ns violate the Free Exercise Clause. It is not necessary, however, for us to rule on that serious and difficult question at this time.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Justice Amy Coney Barrett was pivotal in Wednesday’s ruling.
GETTY IMAGES Justice Amy Coney Barrett was pivotal in Wednesday’s ruling.

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