Philippine Daily Inquirer

High court on collision course with Trump

US Supreme Court reluctant to take up new cases on volatile social issues

- REUTERS

WASHINGTON— The US Supreme Court’s reluctance to take up new cases on volatile social issues is putting it on a collision course with President Donald Trump, whose justice department is trying to rush such disputes through the appeals system to get them before the nine justices as quickly as possible.

That tension could come to a head in 2019 if the court continues to avoid cases that the Republican president’s lawyers are aggressive­ly trying to bring to the justices.

Major victories

The court’s 5-4 conservati­ve majority includes Trump appointees Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch.

While Trump has suffered a series of setbacks in lower federal courts since taking office last year, he has collected major victories at the Supreme Court.

Most notably, the court in June upheld in a 5-4 ruling Trump’s travel ban targeting people from several Muslimmajo­rity countries, with Gorsuch casting a pivotal vote, after lower courts had blocked the policy.

But since Kavanaugh joined the bench in October after a bitter Senate confirmati­on fight, the court has declined to take up appeals by conservati­ve- leaning states seeking to deny public funds to women’s healthcare and abortion provider Planned Parenthood, while postponing action on a dispute over federal employment protection­s for gay and transgende­r people, opposed by Trump’s administra­tion.

Court in go-slow mode

At the same time, the administra­tion has been seeking to leapfrog more liberal-leaning lower courts to get cases on divisive questions over immigratio­n, transgende­r rights and the US census before the justices more rapidly.

“The court seems to be in go-slow mode at the moment when it comes to big cases. The court appears content to focus on meat-and-potatoes cases rather than blockbuste­r ones,” said Kannon Shanmugam, a lawyer who regularly argues cases before the justices.

Trump has frequently railed against the lower courts, especially the San Francisco-based 9th US Circuit Court of Appeals, that have ruled against him in some major cases including the travel ban.

In a setback to social and religious conservati­ves who strongly support Trump, the high court on Monday declined to take up appeals by Kansas and Louisiana to deny Planned Parenthood public funds under the Medicaid health insurance program for the poor.

A vote short

Three of the court’s five conservati­ves voted to hear the matter but, with conservati­ves Kavanaugh and Chief Justice John Roberts declining to join them, they fell a vote short of the required four needed to take up a case.

Conservati­ve Justice Clarence Thomas accused his colleagues of ducking the case because it’s controvers­ial. —

 ?? —AP ?? US President Donald Trump
—AP US President Donald Trump

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines