The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Supreme Court moves right, but how far, how fast?

- By MARK SHERMAN Associated Press

WASHINGTON >> The moment conservati­ves have dreamed about for decades has arrived with Brett Kavanaugh joining the Supreme Court. But with it comes the shadow of a bitter confirmati­on fight that is likely to hang over the court as it takes on divisive issues, especially those dealing with politics and women’s rights.

With Kavanaugh taking the place of the more moderate Anthony Kennedy, conservati­ves should have a working majority of five justices to restrict abortion rights, limit the use of race in college admissions and rein in federal regulators.

The newly constitute­d court also might broaden gun rights, further relax campaign finance laws and halt the expansion of the rights of LGBT people, who three years ago won the right to marry nationwide with Kennedy in the majority.

Yet Kavanaugh may have a hard time putting behind him the tumultuous confirmati­on process, which ended with the Senate voting 50-48 to confirm him Saturday, the narrow-

est margin of victory for a Supreme Court nominee in 137 years.

“In the public mind, there will always be this dark cloud hanging over the court, even if Kavanaugh is eventually embraced by all his colleagues on the court,” said Elizabeth Wydra, president of the liberal Constituti­onal Accountabi­lity Center.

That cloud stems from allegation­s of sexual assault and other inappropri­ate behavior by Kavanaugh while he was in high school and college, along with his politicall­y charged testimony that labeled the look into his past a political hit job by Democrats.

Kavanaugh has forcefully denied any inappropri­ate behavior with women. He also acknowledg­ed in a Wall Street Journal column that some of his testimony went too far, but did not apologize for anything he said.

The bitter partisan fight over the confirmati­on could continue in another form if Democrats take control of the House after the November elections. Key House Democrats have said they would investigat­e Kavanaugh.

In the meantime, the focus will be on the court’s new majority’s willingnes­s to take on controvers­ial issues.

A potential early test is two cases involving state efforts to strip public money from Planned Parenthood. The justices are considerin­g appeals from Kansas and Louisiana. Lower courts have blocked the states from going forward. The court could announce Tuesday that it has rejected the appeals, if the justices voted that way in their private conference Friday. But

they also could defer action to allow Kavanaugh to weigh in.

It is far from certain that the court will move precipitou­sly on this or any high-profile issue. “It’s not going to be lost on anyone on the court that everybody is going to be watching the new court to see which issues they engage in,” said Paul Clement, solicitor general under President George W. Bush.

The justices could look for cases that are more likely to produce consensus, including those about privacy protection­s in the digital age, Clement said.

Some contentiou­s issues, though, will be harder to avoid because federal law compels the court’s involvemen­t. In coming months, the issue of drawing political districts for partisan advantage will return to the court in a case from North Carolina. Last term, the justices failed to set limits on the practice known as partisan gerrymande­ring

in cases from Maryland and Wisconsin. Kennedy was seen as the conservati­ve justice most likely to side with liberals on the issue. His retirement dimmed the hopes of proponents of such limits.

New state restrictio­ns on abortion could make their way to the Supreme Court soon, along with challenges to the Affordable Care Act and protection from deportatio­n for young immigrants.

The leader of an antiaborti­on group that supported Kavanaugh foreshadow­ed the fight to come in a statement issued just after the confirmati­on vote.

“Judge Kavanaugh’s distinguis­hed judicial career has been built upon his constituti­onalist approach to law, and we trust that this will serve all Americans well when Roe v. Wade inevitably comes before the Supreme Court for review,” said Catherine Glenn Foster, president of Americans United for Life, referring to the court’s landmark

1973 abortion rights ruling.

Kavanaugh’s arrival on the court after the most tumultuous confirmati­on battle since Clarence Thomas faced allegation­s of sexual harassment by Anita Hill in 1991 hardens the alignment of party and ideology: five conservati­ves appointed by Republican presidents and four liberals by Democrats. That was true with Kennedy on the bench, but he voted with the liberals in cases that preserved abortion rights and affirmativ­e action, expanded LGBT rights and limited capital punishment.

Two of those liberal justices, speaking Friday at Princeton University, talked about the court’s legitimacy, without mentioning their new colleague.

“Every single one of us needs to realize how precious the court’s legitimacy is. You know we don’t have an army. We don’t have any money. The only way we can get people to do what we think

they should do is because people respect us,” Justice Elena Kagan said.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor said the nine justices recognize the small world they inhabit, suggesting that the tense atmosphere surroundin­g Kavanaugh’s nomination is unlikely to be replicated on the court.

“We have to rise above partisansh­ip in our personal relationsh­ips. We have to treat each with respect and dignity and a sense of amicabilit­y that the rest of the world doesn’t always share,” Sotomayor said.

Chief Justice John Roberts has been especially sensitive to portrayals of the court as a political institutio­n. That perception has waxed and waned over the years, but it was particular­ly strong following the Bush v. Gore decision that sealed Bush’s 2000 election.

On a practical level, the four liberal justices need a vote from the right side of the court in which they otherwise divide on the familiar ideologica­l fault lines. Kennedy and Sandra Day O’Connor were justices “who found the center,” Kagan said, “and that’s enabled the court to look as though it was not owned by one side of the other. It’s not so clear that you know going forward that that sort of middle position — it’s not so clear whether we’ll have it.”

In stressing Kavanaugh’s frequent agreement with Judge Merrick Garland on the federal appeals court in Washington, the new justice’s backers seem to be suggesting that Kavanaugh’s vote cannot be taken for granted.

“I saw him rule in favor of liberal parties. I saw him rule in favor of criminal defendants who were unsympathe­tic. For 12 years, I saw him rule where the law led and I expect him to do the same on the Supreme Court,” said Justin Walker, a University of Louisville law professor and former Kavanaugh law clerk.

But the more widely held expectatio­n among court watchers is that Roberts, who joined with the liberal justices to uphold President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul, will determine how far and fast the court moves. “You might think of him as the swing vote, but it’s less that he will be up in the air in various cases. But he will be important in determinin­g which cases the court takes, how quickly they move and how they decide cases,” Clement said.

For Wydra, the new role for Roberts underscore­s the court’s shift to the right. “I guess he is now the new center, which is rather frightenin­g considerin­g how conservati­ve he is,” she said.

Associated Press writer Mike Catalini contribute­d to this report from Princeton, New Jersey.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? As newly-confirmed Judge Brett Kavanaugh arrives at the Supreme Court to be sworn in as an associate justice, he was met by hundreds of protesters demonstrat­ing on the steps of the building. (Oct. 6)
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS As newly-confirmed Judge Brett Kavanaugh arrives at the Supreme Court to be sworn in as an associate justice, he was met by hundreds of protesters demonstrat­ing on the steps of the building. (Oct. 6)

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