The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Will Gorsuch abandon his judicial philosophy to get what he wants?

- Dana Milbank Follow Dana Milbank on Twitter, @Milbank.

As gay and transgende­r Americans march inexorably toward equality, Justice Neil Gorsuch is on the horns of a dilemma: Does he jettison his judicial philosophy to slow their progress?

Gorsuch, President Trump’s first appointee to the Supreme Court, literally wrote the book (published last month) on judicial “textualism,” the philosophy that says judges must rule on the plain meaning of the law, not legislativ­e intent nor desired outcomes.

So he’s in a corner now as the high court decides whether to bless employment discrimina­tion against LGBTQ Americans. Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act prohibits discrimina­tion on the basis of sex, and if you set aside cultural views on homosexual­ity 55 years ago and look only at the law itself, it’s clear: Firing somebody for not following traditiona­l sex stereotype­s — say, a man who dates a man or a woman who was identified as male at birth — is discrimina­tion on the basis of sex.

How can sexual orientatio­n not be about sex?

Gorsuch acknowledg­ed as much during Tuesday’s argument, telling David Cole, lawyer for the transgende­r plaintiff (the cases involve both transgende­r and gay discrimina­tion), to “assume for the moment I’m with you on the textual evidence. It’s close, OK? We’re not talking about extra-textual stuff.”

But then the justice pivoted in a decidedly non-textual direction. He asked whether judges should “take into considerat­ion the massive social upheaval that would be entailed in such a decision, and the possibilit­y that Congress didn’t think about it.” What? This from the guy who just wrote that judges shouldn’t “do anything other than interpret statutes according to the ordinary meaning of their terms,” who ridiculed attempts to divine legislativ­e intent from the “flotsam” of history, and who derided “consequent­ialists” who “seek to select the outcome calculated to produce optimal policy results”?

Now, he’s asking about congressio­nal intent and policy results. That’s a good bit of intellectu­al chicanery.

Gorsuch invited Cole to contemplat­e a “drastic” change to gender-neutral bathrooms and dress codes (neither of which was at issue in Tuesday’s cases). When Cole said available evidence so far finds “no upheaval,” Gorsuch shot back: “Did you want to address [the] arguments or not?” “I thought I was,” Cole said. He was. But Gorsuch didn’t want to hear it. Twenty-one states and the District of Columbia already forbid LGBTQ discrimina­tion. Where is Gorsuch’s imagined cataclysm?

And surely Gorsuch knows his other non-textualist argument, that the matter is a “legislativ­e rather than a judicial function,” is a dodge. Has he met Congress? It can’t pass a resolution at 8 a.m. proclaimin­g it morning.

Other conservati­ves — Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh — kept their cards close, while a fiery Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg schooled Trump administra­tion solicitor general Noel Francisco on case law. “I guess I’m thinking of the wrong case,” he said when Ginsburg corrected him. When Francisco counseled against interpreti­ng the law to protect gay people, she reminded him: “No one ever thought sexual harassment was encompasse­d by discrimina­tion on the basis of sex back in ‘64.”

Justice Samuel Alito floated the strained hypothetic­al of an employer who can’t discern an employee’s gender. “So this is ‘Saturday Night Live’ Pat?” asked Pamela S. Karlan, lawyer for the gay plaintiffs.

“I’m not familiar with that,” said Alito.

Gorsuch was in no mood for merriment. He competed with Justice Sonia Sotomayor for the floor, interrupte­d an exchange between Ginsburg and the solicitor general, and retorted to Justice Elena Kagan when she broke in on his questionin­g of Bursch.

“That’s helpful,” he told her, “but I’m also curious what you have to say, Mr. Bursch.”

When Karlan offered a hypothetic­al about requiring women arguing before the court to wear “Hooters outfits,” Gorsuch belittled the “absurd example.” When she elaborated, he interjecte­d: “That’s not what I’m getting at, and you know what I’m getting at.”

He pressed her testily and at length on bathroom use by transgende­r people, leading her to remind him her clients are gay, not transgende­r.

Gorsuch could be a problem for those seeking to preserve discrimina­tion. That might be why one lawyer for the cause, Jeffrey Harris, struggled when Gorsuch pointed out that the “language of the statute” broadly defines “the causes of discrimina­tion.”

Harris rambled, then lost his train of thought: “I’m sorry, remind me of the question one more time?”

The question is whether Gorsuch will interpret the text of the law the way he claims to — or devise an excuse to produce his desired result.

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