Boston Herald

it’S Supremely diSappoint­ing

Left leanings not what Republican­s expected

- Joe Battenfeld

The much-hyped return to a staunchly conservati­ve Supreme Court under President Trump has been just that — hype — as the court has sided with liberals in several new landmark cases.

It must be galling Trump to see the high court reject his positions as it’s done lately in the case of immigratio­n, gay and lesbian rights and now abortion rights.

Right in the center of the legal drama has been Chief Justice John Roberts, an appointee of Republican President George W. Bush in 2005 who conservati­ves once thought could be counted on to protect their flank. Roberts was viewed as such a potential conservati­ve jurist that 22 Democrats — including then-Democratic Senators Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, Ted Kennedy and John Kerry — voted against his confirmati­on.

Roberts, in fact, has turned out to be a swing vote and a bitter disappoint­ment to some conservati­ve Republican­s, especially Trump.

For the third high profile case in a row, the Republican appointee has sided with liberal justices — twice to break a 4-4 deadlock.

In the latest ruling on Monday, Roberts voted to uphold Roe v. Wade and declare unconstitu­tional Louisiana’s restrictiv­e new abortion rights law, which critics claimed would have closed nearly all the abortion clinics in the state.

The court also struck down a similar anti-abortion law out of Texas four years ago, but that was when moderate Judge Anthony Kennedy was on the bench.

When Kennedy left, replaced by Brett Kavanaugh, conservati­ves and the White House rejoiced, thinking that the court would now be dominated by more conservati­ve doctrine. Liberals in particular feared the new bent of the court would jeopardize Roe v. Wade, which for decades has upheld a woman’s right to an abortion.

But in the first major abortion case faced by the new court, conservati­ves failed to win the majority they so desperatel­y craved, as Roberts sided with Democratic appointees Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor and Stephen Breyer. It was Massachuse­tts’ own Breyer who wrote the decision rejecting the Louisiana law, saying that “the evidence … shows that opposition to abortion played a significan­t role in some hospitals’ decisions to deny admitting privileges” to doctors.

Roberts wrote a separate opinion saying that the Louisiana law “imposes a burden on access to abortion just as severe as that imposed by the Texas law. … Therefore Louisiana’s law cannot stand under our precedents.”

It was the third straight victory for liberals, coming on the heels of the court’s decision temporaril­y upholding the DACA program for children of illegal immigrants and extending anti-discrimina­tion protection­s to LGBTQ employees.

And once again the Trump administra­tion was relegated to blasting the court’s ruling.

Roberts did leave some wiggle room in his opinion that could leave the door open for other states attempting to restrict abortion, but that was of little comfort to abortion opponents and Trump.

The court’s future will soon be in the hands of voters who will have the ultimate say in November over whether Trump gets the chance to pack the court even more with conservati­ves.

 ?? GeTTy imAgeS ?? COURT IN SPOTLIGHT: A pro-life activist holds a sign during a demonstrat­ion in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, D.,C., on Monday. The court ruled against the Louisiana law that restricted access to abortions.
GeTTy imAgeS COURT IN SPOTLIGHT: A pro-life activist holds a sign during a demonstrat­ion in front of the Supreme Court in Washington, D.,C., on Monday. The court ruled against the Louisiana law that restricted access to abortions.
 ?? THS file ?? FRUSTRATIO­N MOUNTS: President Trump has appointed two conservati­ve members to the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch, but has not won cases he thought he would after stacking the bench with conservati­ves.
THS file FRUSTRATIO­N MOUNTS: President Trump has appointed two conservati­ve members to the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch, but has not won cases he thought he would after stacking the bench with conservati­ves.
 ?? AP file ?? ROGUE JUSTICE: Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was appointed as a conservati­ve but has sided with liberals several times recently.
AP file ROGUE JUSTICE: Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was appointed as a conservati­ve but has sided with liberals several times recently.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States