USA TODAY US Edition

Roberts delivers Supreme surprises

High court’s 2019 term showed unpredicta­bility

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WASHINGTON – When the Supreme Court opened its 2019 term nine months ago with a debate about the meaning of insanity, few could have predicted how crazy things would get.

Chief Justice John Roberts presided over President Donald Trump’s Senate impeachmen­t trial. A pandemic forced the first postponeme­nt of oral arguments in a century. The oldest justice questioned lawyers from her hospital bed, while the quietest justice spoke up daily. And opinions were released into July for the first time since 1996.

By the end of the term Thursday, the customaril­y conservati­ve court had issued decisions on gay and transgende­r rights, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, abortion rights and Trump’s lack of immunity from criminal investigat­ion that drew the loudest cheers from liberals.

The lesson seemed to be that although the president, the Democratic House and Republican Senate are predictabl­e, a court of nine is harder to pin down.

“The court’s a lot more complicate­d than a lot of observers give it credit for,” said former U.S. solicitor general Paul Clement, perhaps the premier Supreme Court advocate of his generation with more than 100 oral arguments under his belt.

That unpredicta­bility is largely the work of Roberts, who at 65 with 15 years leading the court has become a hugely influentia­l figure in American life. With four justices on the left and four others on the right, Roberts usually determines the result in the court’s most contentiou­s cases. In 62 cases this term, he was in the majority 60 times.

Thus it was that in two of the most closely watched cases – Trump’s effort to end the DACA program that protects 650,000 young, undocument­ed

Richard Wolf “The court’s a lot more complicate­d than a lot of observers give it credit for.”

Paul Clement former U.S. solicitor general

immigrants from possible deportatio­n and Louisiana’s effort to impose restrictio­ns on abortion clinics – Roberts threw in with the court’s liberals in 5-4 rulings.

“Those are very tenuous victories,” warned Elizabeth Wydra, president of the liberal Constituti­onal Accountabi­lity Center, which files legal briefs in major high court cases. The administra­tion can try again to eliminate DACA, and more abortion restrictio­ns are working their way through lower courts.

More “remarkable and welcome,” Wydra said, was the court’s 6-3 opinion giving the nation’s LGBTQ population employment protection under sex discrimina­tion laws – a ruling written by Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s first high court nominee. Roberts and the court’s four liberal justices were his silent partners.

Although those cases focused unlikely attention on the court, it has come down in Trump’s favor more often. The five conservati­ve justices voted as a bloc nine times in 5-4 cases. Among them: enabling states to extend private school scholarshi­ps to religious schools and giving the president authority to fire the Consumer Financial Protection Board’s director without cause. Both rulings were written by Roberts.

“All chief justices have outsized influence because they are the most senior on the bench and, among other things, dominate the assignment of opinions,” said Harvard Law School professor Richard Lazarus, a classmate of Roberts there in the 1970s and author of “The Rule of Five,” a new book on the high court and climate change. “But few possess both that seniority and sit on a closely divided court in which they tend to be at the center of the spectrum.”

Perhaps more noteworthy, the court has agreed at the Trump administra­tion’s request to block many lower court actions from taking effect while appeals are mounted, particular­ly on the president’s immigratio­n crackdown.

“It is way too soon to say this is not a conservati­ve court,” said University of Chicago Law School professor David Strauss, who directs the school’s Supreme Court and appellate clinic.

Seeking good government

The court has shown that faced with a freewheeli­ng president and a politicall­y divided Congress, it can be a stickler for what it considers good government.

That was Roberts’ intention Thursday when he sentsubpoe­nas issued by congressio­nal Democrats back to two federal appeals courts to assess the informatio­n Congress seeks in light of the burden such demands could place on the president.

And it was Roberts’ intention last month in striking down Trump’s effort to end the DACA program, just as he did a year earlier when the administra­tion sought to add a question on citizenshi­p to the 2020 census. Both times, Roberts said, the decision-making process was so sloppy it violated federal law.

“Presidents, the chief has made clear, possess great authority. But for that same reason, they have to follow required processes, precisely because so much is at stake when they wield such authority,” Lazarus said.

Roberts’ decision to side with the court’s liberals on abortion last month had less to do with opposing state restrictio­ns – he has supported them – than it did with Louisiana’s effort to impose the exact same limit the court had struck down four years earlier in Texas.

“A lot of his decision-making is strategic or tactical,” said Ilya Shapiro, director of the Center for Constituti­onal Studies at the libertaria­n Cato Institute. “He defers to the status quo. He doesn’t like the court to make waves.”

Thus the court often ruled incrementa­lly in some of the major decisions of the term – sending cases back to lower courts and giving the losing side another chance. Roberts promised as much during his Senate confirmati­on in 2005, when he said the justices should do only what they must to resolve the narrow questions that come before them.

“I think Roberts doesn’t get enough credit for being sincere in some of the platitudes he said at his hearings,” said Michael McConnell, a former federal appeals court judge who directs Stanford Law School’s Constituti­onal Law Center. “The chief, in particular, is trying to keep the court balanced.”

Beyond Roberts’ influence, Trump’s two high court nominees played prominent roles during the term, making clear they cannot be taken for granted based on their conservati­ve ideology.

Gorsuch wrote the landmark gay and transgende­r rights opinion, declaring that employers who fire workers based on sexual orientatio­n or gender identity are guilty of sex discrimina­tion. He wrote Thursday’s 5-4 decision declaring about half of Oklahoma Native American territory, which strips the state of jurisdicti­on over criminal cases involving Native Americans. Only the four liberal justices were on his side.

Kavanaugh sided with Roberts and those four liberals in declaring a New York City gun restrictio­n moot, rather than striking it down as an example of gun control rules run amok. He wrote for himself and Gorsuch on Thursday that although Trump’s lawyers can continue to fight a New York prosecutor’s subpoena, “no one is above the law.”

Compromise and decorum

Though the court’s liberals have been relatively unified, its conservati­ves more often go their separate ways – marching to different drummers in a way that aggravates many in the conservati­ve legal movement.

“There are originalis­ts, there are textualist­s, there are law-and-order types, there are minimalist­s,” Shapiro said. “There are a lot of different types of Republican-appointed justices.”

That often results in the appearance of compromise and accommodat­ion, if not outright backroom deals. Wednesday, Associate Justices Stephen Breyer and Elena Kagan went along with 7-2 rulings in cases expanding religious exemptions from laws and rules. The next day, Gorsuch and Kavanaugh went along on both 7-2 rulings about subpoenas for Trump’s financial records.

“A lot of people believe that the court is trying to achieve the compromise position that the democratic process probably would arrive at if the democratic process was working,” McConnell said.

Another theme appears to be avoiding chaos. Monday, the court unanimousl­y allowed states to tie the hands of presidenti­al electors, rather than risk upending the results from Election Day. That same day, they upheld a law banning robocalls to cellphones despite agreeing that an exception made it unconstitu­tional; they struck down the exception instead.

One theory as the term drew to a close was that Roberts, and perhaps several of his colleagues, wanted to project unity and calm during a pandemic and a presidenti­al election year.

At the start of the term in October, the court introduced a policy intended to trim the justices’ own voluble instincts. It sought to give lawyers arguing in court two minutes uninterrup­ted before the flood of questions from the bench, a self-stifling that proved difficult.

By the end of the term, when forced to conduct oral arguments by conference call, the justices asked questions in order of seniority. That pattern allowed Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a four-time cancer survivor, to pitch in from a hospital where she was recovering from a gallbladde­r condition. It enabled Associate Justice Clarence Thomas, who rarely speaks in court, to take his regular turn in the rotation.

Whether the compromise and decorum will continue into next term is guesswork. By October, the court will face its third major challenge to the Affordable Care Act, which Roberts initially saved in 2012 while sullying his reputation among conservati­ves. More religious liberty cases are on their way, as well as an effort by House Democrats to get secret grand jury materials from the probe into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

Other cases that seemed ripe for the high court’s review have been passed over, such as challenges to state gun restrictio­ns and the qualified immunity from civil lawsuits often given police and other public officials accused of misconduct. It may be that justices on the right and left don’t want to hear cases they aren’t relatively sure of winning with Roberts in the middle.

Then there is the chance Trump will lose reelection, and the court’s conservati­ve majority will be faced with a Democrat in the White House – something that led to considerab­le friction during the Obama administra­tion.

“They don’t want to be yet another source of friction and controvers­y and bitter attacks,” Strauss said. “But let’s see what they do in a Biden administra­tion.”

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 ?? JACK GRUBER/USA TODAY ?? Associate Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh have played major roles in making the high court difficult to pin down ideologica­lly.
JACK GRUBER/USA TODAY Associate Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh have played major roles in making the high court difficult to pin down ideologica­lly.

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