USA TODAY US Edition

Kagan is powerful ‘bridge-builder’ on the Supreme Court

Justice was Obama’s second nominee to the bench

- Richard Wolf

WASHINGTON – The day before Brett Kavanaugh was confirmed to take the seat next to hers at the Supreme Court, Associate Justice Elena Kagan publicly fretted over the institutio­n’s future.

Her fear had less to do with the bitter partisansh­ip that marked Kavanaugh’s nomination in 2018 than it did the retirement of his predecesso­r, Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy, whose penchant for being the swing vote had extended the court’s decades-long reputation for being, in Kagan’s words, “impartial and neutral and fair.”

But in its two terms since then, the court has maintained most of its luster as the least political branch of the federal government. It handed President Donald Trump and the conservati­ve legal movement several major defeats and limited the impact of their victories.

Chief Justice John Roberts gets most of the credit, or blame. But the strategic influence of Kagan, President Barack Obama’s second Supreme Court nominee a decade ago, can be seen in many of the unexpected rulings and in the court’s ability, in her words, to remain “somehow above the fray.”

“It’s an incredibly important thing for the court to guard this reputation of being fair, of being impartial, of being neutral and of not being simply an extension of the terribly polarized political process and environmen­t that we live in,” she said in October 2018, seated next to fellow Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor at Princeton, their undergradu­ate alma mater.

That reputation seemed fragile when Kagan was confirmed Aug. 5, 2010, to replace Associate Justice John Paul Stevens, a Republican president’s nominee who went on to lead the court’s liberal wing. Kagan’s Senate confirmati­on left the court with a stark partisan divide: five conservati­ves nominated by Republican presidents and four liberals nominated by Democrats.

Perhaps for that reason, the court’s more centrist justices – Roberts and Kennedy, until his retirement in 2018, from the right, Kagan and Associate Justice Stephen Breyer from the left – often have found common ground in the middle. For Kagan, that’s no accident.

“She emerged immediatel­y as a bridge-builder,” says Abbe Gluck, a professor at Yale Law School and former law clerk for Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. “She has gone out of her way to try to find areas of common ground with all the more conservati­ve members of the court.”

Kagan’s votes are less predictabl­e than her better-known liberal colleagues, Sotomayor and Ginsburg. She writes separately from the court’s majority opinion less often and less stridently. She picks her fights.

Four times in the past two terms, Kagan

wrote the principal dissent for the four liberals in cases on voting rights, workers’ rights, consumer rights and property rights.

“Sometimes I come back from conference, and I just want to ram my fist through the wall,” Kagan recounted during an appearance at George Mason University in 2019.

But in the Princeton appearance, she said, “If you hold grudges, or if you have a bad relationsh­ip with one of your colleagues, then in the next case and in the next case and in the next case, you have not much of a chance of persuading that colleague to come along with what you think is the right thing to do.”

Unlike the eight former federal appeals court judges she serves with, Kagan had never been a judge before arriving on the Supreme Court. She had a rich and varied career marked by twists and turns that gave her vast experience in both government and academia. “Serendipit­y,” she calls it.

Had Republican­s not blocked her nomination by President Bill Clinton to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, she would have missed being named dean of Harvard Law School. If she had not been denied the school’s presidency, she probably would have been unavailabl­e when Obama needed a solicitor general to represent the government at the Supreme Court.

At Harvard, Kagan brought peace to a warring faculty and won over the law school community with what Miguel Estrada, a conservati­ve appellate litigator with whom Kagan graduated Harvard Law in 1986, calls the “diplomatic skills” she brought to the court.

As solicitor general, her first-ever oral argument was what she called the “incredibly nerve-racking experience” of arguing Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, in which the court ruled 5-4 that corporatio­ns, acting independen­tly, can spend unlimited amounts on elections.

She was beginning her fourth sentence when Associate Justice Antonin Scalia interrupte­d: “Wait, wait, wait, wait.” The two later became good friends, mutual admirers and hunting buddies.

Obama considered Kagan for the Supreme Court seat that went to Sotomayor in 2009, and she was atop the list a year later when Stevens, 40 years her senior, retired at 90. She was confirmed 63-37 after winning over five Republican­s.

Within a few years, Kagan had earned kudos from liberals as well as conservati­ves for her work ethic, brainpower, oral and written skills, affable personalit­y and adherence to the court’s precedents.

“I haven’t had a single regret” about his successor, Stevens told USA TODAY in 2014. “There are a few times where I would have decided a case differentl­y than she has,” but “she’s a beautiful

“She asks really great questions, and unlike many leaders, she does not really want to hear herself talk. She listens.” Martha Minow Dean of Harvard Law School

writer. She’s doing a fine job.”

At the two tasks observable by the general public – hearing oral arguments and writing opinions – Kagan excels. During arguments, she probes for weak spots in advocates’ positions, seeking to influence her colleagues along the way. Her only equal, most court watchers agree, is conservati­ve Associate Justice Samuel Alito.

“She asks really great questions, and unlike many leaders, she does not really want to hear herself talk,” says Martha Minow, who succeeded Kagan as dean at Harvard Law School. “She listens.”

Kagan’s opinions, whether in the majority or dissenting, are crafted to be understood by nonlawyers. She gathers input from all four of her law clerks but treats their draft opinions as “a kind of a launching pad,” she said in 2014.

She writes the final version herself, she said, because “it’s important for me to have my own voice.” That includes sprinkling in references to popular culture, from Spider-Man to the TV show “Veep,” as well as quips.

“She has succeeded Justice Scalia as the court’s finest writer,” says Walter Dellinger, an appellate lawyer, professor and former acting solicitor general.

Outnumbere­d 5-4 by conservati­ves throughout her tenure on the court, Kagan’s liberal minority has suffered major defeats. A provision of the Voting Rights Act was invalidate­d.Labor unions lost the right to collect fees from nonmembers. A private company was allowed to deny its workers coverage for contracept­ives, and a town board was allowed to open its meetings with solely Christian prayers.

Kagan doesn’t write dissenting opinions often – this past term, she penned just one – but in 2019, she couldn’t hold back when the court ruled 5-4 that federal judges are powerless to stop partisan state legislatur­es from drawing egregious legislativ­e district lines.

“The practices challenged in these cases imperil our system of government,” Kagan wrote. “Part of the court’s role in that system is to defend its foundation­s. None is more important than free and fair elections. With respect but deep sadness, I dissent.”

“There is a vast difference between her majority opinions and her dissents, and they show off two very different skills,” says Irv Gornstein, executive director of the Supreme Court Institute at Georgetown University Law Center. “Her majority opinions in closely divided cases usually read like they are written to hold five, while her dissents in closely divided cases read like they are written for the ages.”

Despite conservati­ve control, Kagan and her fellow liberals have won their share of victories. The Affordable Care Act was preserved, thanks to the willingnes­s of Kagan and Breyer to weaken its expansion of Medicaid. Same-sex marriage was legalized nationwide. Abortion restrictio­ns twice were struck down.

In the most recent term, the court extended federal protection­s from job discrimina­tion to gay and transgende­r workers and blocked the Trump administra­tion from ending the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which protects 650,000 undocument­ed immigrants from deportatio­n.

“Kagan is playing a nine-justice game. She understand­s that judging is a collective activity,” Dellinger says. “So, more than any other justice, she is less concerned with what her perfect position would be and more concerned about what would be a right and workable answer that would attract a majority of the court.”

 ?? ALLISON SHELLEY/GETTY IMAGES ?? Justices Elena Kagan, left, and Sonia Sotomayor are part of the Supreme Court’s liberal bloc.
ALLISON SHELLEY/GETTY IMAGES Justices Elena Kagan, left, and Sonia Sotomayor are part of the Supreme Court’s liberal bloc.

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