Kuwait Times

Conservati­ve Supreme Court proves ‘political bad news’ for Trump

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WASHINGTON: Just months before President Donald Trump stands for reelection, his central pitch to conservati­ves - that he has remade the US justice system in their image - is unraveling. Twice this week the Supreme Court dealt defeats on issues dear to Trump’s supporters: it expanded equal protection rights to gay and transgende­r people, and sustained protection­s for certain undocument­ed immigrants that Trump had sought to end.

It was not supposed to be this way. In his three and a half years in office Trump has replaced two of the nine justices, seemingly tilting the high court to the right for years to come. But the two rulings this week favored the left - angering conservati­ves and threatenin­g Trump’s reelection. “I think that what has happened could be critical to the campaign,” said Carl Tobias, a law professor at the University of Richmond. “Many Trump supporters hold their noses and vote for him because of the judges whom he appoints. But this week seems to show that he cannot deliver on that promise,” he said.

Keeping a promise

In 2016 the New York billionair­e captured the support of the powerful religious right by promising to fill federal courts with judges who are against gun regulation, abortion, gay marriage, and other flashpoint issues. Trump has kept his pledge, naming 195 conservati­ve judges, significan­tly shifting the pool of 860 federal judges to the right. The centerpiec­e was naming Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, cementing an apparent 5-4 tilt to the right. On Thursday the Senate confirmed another Trump pick, Justin Walker, to the Washington, DC Court of Appeals. Critics say the 37-year-old is much too inexperien­ced to sit on one of the country’s most powerful courts. But he is closely tied to Republican­s. As the White House points out, the average age of Trump’s judges is under 50, ensuring they “will make a lasting impact on the courts for decades to come.”

A week of setbacks

But on Monday, Gorsuch and Chief Justice John Roberts stunned observers in siding with the four Democratic-appointed justices to extend equal rights protection­s to gay and transgende­r people. The same day the court refused to take up two administra­tion-backed cases: one to rule on its powers to round up illegal immigrants, the second to rule on gun restrictio­ns dislike by conservati­ves. Then on Thursday Roberts joined the four liberals to overrule a hallmark of Trump’s anti-immigratio­n policies, his cancellati­on of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program that gives legal protection­s to some 700,000 undocument­ed immigrants brought to the United States as children. That added to concerns on the right that Roberts is not the conservati­ve people expected when appointed by Republican president George W. Bush in 2005.

Trump lashed out, calling the DACA decision “highly political” and “seemingly not based on the law.” “Do you get the impression that the Supreme Court doesn’t like me?” he tweeted. “These horrible & politicall­y charged decisions coming out of the Supreme Court are shotgun blasts into the face of people that are proud to call themselves Republican­s or Conservati­ves.” Analysts faulted Trump for making it personal. “It shows how ignorant is Trump’s belief that he can manipulate the Supreme Court by appointing justices who will rubberstam­p his illegal behavior,” said Tobias. —AFP

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