The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Big cases, retirement rumor as session starts

Travel ban ruling expected; speculatio­n on Kennedy retiring

- By Mark Sherman

The Supreme Court enters its final week of work before a long summer hiatus with action expected on the Trump administra­tion’s travel ban and a decision due in a separation of church and state case that arises from a Missouri church playground.

The biggest news of all, though, would be if Justice Anthony Kennedy were to use the court’s last public session on Monday to announce his retirement.

To be sure, Kennedy has given no public sign that he will retire this year and give President Donald Trump his second high court pick in the first months of his administra­tion.

Kennedy’s departure would allow conservati­ves to take firm control of the court.

But Kennedy turns 81 next month and has been on the court for nearly 30 years. Several of his former law clerks have said they think he is contemplat­ing stepping down in the next year or so. Kennedy and his clerks were gathering over the weekend for a reunion that was pushed up a year and helped spark talk he might be leaving the court.

“Soon we’ll know if rumors of Kennedy’s retirement are accurate,” one former Kennedy clerk, George Washington University law professor Orin Kerr, said on Twitter on Friday.

When the justices take the bench Monday, they are expected to decide the case of Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Missouri, which was excluded from a state grant program to pay for soft surfaces on playground­s run by not-for-profit groups.

The case is being closely watched by advocates of school vouchers, who hope the court will make it easier to use state money to pay for private, religious schooling in states that now prohibit it.

Missouri has since changed its policy under Republican Gov. Eric Greitens so that churches may now apply for the money.

Also expected in the next few days, though there’s no deadline by which the court must decide, is a ruling on whether to allow the administra­tion to immediatel­y enforce a 90-day ban on visitors from six mostly Muslim countries.

Justice Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s first Supreme Court nominee, could play a pivotal role in both the travel ban and church playground cases.

In all, six cases that were argued between November and April remain undecided. Three of those, all involving immigrants or foreigners, were heard by an eight-justice court, before Gorsuch joined the bench in April.

If the eight justices are evenly divided, those cases could be argued a second time in the fall, with Gorsuch available to provide the tie-breaking vote.

Meanwhile, to see where Justice Gorsuch might fit on the Supreme Court, watch the company he keeps.

Gorsuch has already paired up four times with Justice Clarence Thomas — the court’s most conservati­ve member — in separate opinions that dissent from or take issue with the court’s majority rulings.

While the sample size is small, the results show Gorsuch’s commitment to follow the strict text of the law and a willingnes­s to join Thomas in pushing the envelope further than the court’s other conservati­ves.

Gorsuch was picked by President Donald Trump to be a reliable conservati­ve in the mold of the late Antonin Scalia. But the question after his confirmati­on hearings was how far to the right he would be.

The early trend of Gorsuch and Thomas acting together has pleased those who hoped Gorsuch would continue Scalia’s legacy and be another intellectu­al beacon for conservati­ves.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The U.S. Supreme Court building will be the center of momentous decision this week. Among the cases are the proposed travel ban.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The U.S. Supreme Court building will be the center of momentous decision this week. Among the cases are the proposed travel ban.

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