Baltimore Sun

Will Breyer stick around or leave after big term?

At 82, liberal justice has given no signs of what he’s going to do

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — After writing two of the Supreme Court’s biggest decisions this year, Stephen Breyer could say he’s come to a fitting end of nearly 27 years as a justice and announce his retirement.

Or the 82-year-old liberal justice could reason that his pragmatic, collaborat­ive approach to judging has never been more needed on the high court and decide to stick around.

Breyer has given no indication he plans to retire at the end of the court’s term, which is set for Thursday.

Justices have sometimes used the term’s last day to announce their retirement­s. That’s what Justice Anthony Kennedy did in 2018.

But on one occasion that could resonate with Breyer, the court’s summer break had already begun when Justice Sandra Day O’Connor said she would retire once her successor had been confirmed.

Breyer and O’Connor were close on the court, employing similar approaches to their work, though she was generally more conservati­ve.

Some liberal activists who have been pushing for his departure are mostly resigned to the prospect that he will remain on the Supreme Court bench.

“I am assuming the worst and hoping for the best, by which I mean I’m hopeful he might still make an announceme­nt, but I’m not expecting one at this point,” said Brian Fallon, executive director of the progressiv­e court group Demand Justice.

The reason for the liberal discontent: Democrats hold a narrow majority in the Senate, and an untimely death or lengthy absence by one of the older Democrats could give Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell all he needs to prevent a successor to Breyer from being confirmed.

Unlike most legislatio­n, nomination­s require a bare Senate majority.

Anything that threatens Democrats’ control of the Senate could imperil President Joe Biden’s fulfillmen­t of his pledge to name the first Black woman to the Supreme Court.

If nothing changes in the Senate, Breyer could retire next year as well, in the run-up to the congressio­nal midterm elections.

Breyer and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg resisted calls to step down the last time Democrats controlled Congress and the White House, when Barack Obama was president. Then, Ginsburg died less than two months before Biden’s election.

It’s not as if McConnell hasn’t frustrated Democrats before.

In 2016, he prevented President Barack Obama from filling a Supreme Court vacancy and kept Antonin Scalia’s seat open awaiting the outcome of that year’s presidenti­al election, won by Donald Trump more than eight months after Scalia’s death.

Last year, McConnell pushed through the confirmati­on of Justice Amy Coney Barrett just over a month after Ginsburg’s death and less than a week before the 2020 election.

In both cases, a Senate under Republican control was able to put a Trump nominee on the court. Those were two of Trump’s three Supreme Court appointmen­ts that cemented a 6-3 conservati­ve majority.

Breyer’s retirement and replacemen­t by a Biden nominee wouldn’t alter that ideologica­l balance, but Supreme Court nomination­s are sufficient­ly rare

that they always result in a pitched battle in politicall­y polarized times.

A former Harvard professor and aide to Sen. Edward Kennedy in the 1970s, Breyer has been among the leading Supreme Court voices cautioning against viewing the justices as politician­s in robes.

Speaking to a Harvard audience in April, Breyer said that “it is wrong to think of the Court as another political institutio­n” and urged supporters of expanding the court to think long and hard about what that would do to the institutio­n.

In the midst of the coronaviru­s pandemic, Breyer has spent much of his time at his

home in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, making a steady stream of public appearance­s via Zoom.

Some conservati­ves said the calls for Breyer to step down now from progressiv­e groups and law professors would backfire.

“The political campaign to force Justice Breyer to retire is the worst possible way to do it,” said Mike Davis, founder of the Article III Project, a conservati­ve counterpar­t to Demand Justice.

Breyer’s experience this year could be seen as a vindicatio­n of his approach.

Breyer has been in several majorities with the other liberal justices in which they

joined with a bloc of conservati­ves. Among those was the court’s decision earlier in June to preserve the Affordable Care Act, rejecting a GOP-led challenge, in an opinion Breyer wrote.

Breyer also wrote the court’s opinion siding with a high school student who had been suspended from cheerleadi­ng after a vulgar social media post in response to not making the varsity team.

The health care and cheerleadi­ng cases showed “Justice Breyer’s ability to achieve consensus in a pragmatic way that’s agreeable to other justices,” said Washington attorney Pratik Shah, who once worked as the justice’s law clerk.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP 2017 ?? Stephen Breyer has served on the Supreme Court for nearly 27 years.
STEVEN SENNE/AP 2017 Stephen Breyer has served on the Supreme Court for nearly 27 years.

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