The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

What Kavanaugh could change

- David A. Super is a professor of law at Georgetown University,.

After a buildup worthy of a master of reality TV, President Trump has nominated Judge Brett Kavanaugh for the Supreme Court vacancy created by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy’s retirement. This continues a run of almost 50 consecutiv­e years when the court has had a majority of Republican appointees.

Many commentato­rs will rush to cast this nomination solely in terms of what it means for the rights to abortion and to marriage equality for same-sex couples. Although those issues are important, Kavanaugh probably will have the deciding vote on many other issues that have a profound impact on people’s daily lives. He should be assessed on what he would bring to the court on all these issues.

Still, the starting point has to be abortion. Kennedy, the court’s primary swing justice for at least a dozen years, became increasing­ly antagonist­ic to Roe vs. Wade over the years. He never was willing to cast the fifth vote to overrule it directly, surely aware of the turmoil that would result. If Roe were overturned, abortion would dominate state politics — and elections — across the country for the next several years. Kennedy valued continuity and gradualism; triggering that sort of upheaval wasn’t in his nature.

If Kavanaugh is confirmed, he is unlikely to be similarly reticent. Of many very conservati­ve judges around the country, he was among the handful that the Federalist Society shortliste­d and sent to Trump. What almost certainly made Kavanaugh — and the others on the Federalist list — stand out is that they gave the list-makers maximum confidence that they would cast the decisive vote against Roe. Nobody should let the theater of confirmati­on hearings, or vague promises to respect precedent, obscure that fact.

Same-sex marriage is slightly more complicate­d. The court grounded its most important decisions protecting same-sex couples on the same right to privacy that underlies Roe. The most straightfo­rward way to eliminate constituti­onal protection for the right to abortion is to reject or limit the right to privacy. Doing so would also remove the constituti­onal foundation for protecting same-sex couples. A decision against Roe implies that marriage equality too would be imperiled.

Kavanaugh’s judicial history also bears on a set of cases about how courts enforce what is indisputab­ly the law. For example, when a university broke federal privacy laws in disclosing confidenti­al informatio­n to a state agency, a closely divided Supreme Court held that the injured student could not obtain redress. He could only wait and hope that the federal government would do something.

With the Trump administra­tion openly refusing to enforce laws and regulation­s with which it disagrees, refusing to allow victims their day in court is tantamount to repealing the law itself. In a similar case, Kavanaugh enthusiast­ically rejected a cook’s right to argue that he was fired in illegal retaliatio­n for reporting health and safety violations. Again, the government could have pursued the question but not the individual, even though it meant the law went unenforced.

Another set of cases Kavanaugh would likely decide concerns employers, credit card companies and other big businesses and their clear obligation­s under the law or under their own contracts. To get around those obligation­s, employers and businesses require employees or customers to sign arbitratio­n clauses. In theory, these provide an out-of-court means of resolving disputes.

In practice, the arbitrator­s are handpicked by the companies’ trade associatio­ns, and the procedures are deliberate­ly made so burdensome that people often cannot afford to press legitimate complaints. In several closely divided opinions, the Supreme Court has prevented states from protecting their residents against the abusive contract provisions. Similarly, in a case that came before him, Kavanaugh found in favor of the clauses or their outcomes.

Finally, as Donald Rumsfeld would say, there are the unknown unknowns. Every so often, the court is called upon to respond to sudden emergencie­s posing fundamenta­l threats to our identity as a free and democratic country.

When President Franklin D. Roosevelt interned more than 100,000 Japanese Americans without any evidence of disloyalty, when President Truman claimed a national emergency gave him the right to seize the steel industry, when President Nixon asserted the right to withhold incriminat­ing tapes from a special prosecutor, and when President George W. Bush claimed the right to hold people indefinite­ly without any review of the basis, the Supreme Court was asked to intervene.

The court has not always distinguis­hed itself in these situations. Especially crucial in these times are justices willing to act independen­tly even at the cost of disappoint­ing those who brought them to the court. It is difficult to find examples of such courageous, independen­t moves in Kavanaugh’s decisions. If he cannot point to some in the confirmati­on process, we should worry about his ability to perform the court’s vital role in a crisis, be it an updated version of one from our past or something new.

 ?? Chip Somodevill­a / Getty Images ?? Judge Brett Kavanaugh, President Donald Trump’s nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court.
Chip Somodevill­a / Getty Images Judge Brett Kavanaugh, President Donald Trump’s nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court.

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