The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Supreme Court keeps a lower profile, but for how long?

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The Supreme Court began its term with the tumultuous confirmati­on of Justice Brett Kavanaugh, followed by a studied avoidance of drama on the high court bench — especially anything that would divide the five conservati­ves and four liberals.

The justices have been unusually solicitous of each other in the courtroom since Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on, and several have voiced concern that the public perceives the court as merely a political institutio­n. Chief Justice John Roberts seems determined to lead the one Washington institutio­n that stays above the political fray. Even Roberts’ rebuke of President Donald Trump, after the president criticized a federal judge, was in defense of an independen­t, apolitical judiciary.

The next few weeks will test whether the calm can last.

When they gather in private on Jan. 4 to consider new cases for arguments in April and into next term, the justices will confront a raft of high-profile appeals.

Abortion restrictio­ns, workplace discrimina­tion against LGBT people and partisan gerrymande­ring are on the agenda. Close behind are appeals from the Trump administra­tion seeking to have the court allow it to end an Obama-era program that shields young immigrants from deportatio­n and to put in place restrictiv­e rules for transgende­r troops.

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