Dayton Daily News

Questions for court nominee Kavanaugh

- By James P. Freeman James P. Freeman is a former columnist with The New Boston Post and The Cape Cod Times. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

“Football is football and talent is talent, but the mindset of your team makes all the difference.” — Robert Griffin III, quarterbac­k, Baltimore Ravens and 2011 Heisman Trophy Winner

As Americans prepare for fall and football, the new political season kicks off the day after Labor Day with public hearings in the Senate Judiciary Committee as part of the confirmati­on process of Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination to the Supreme Court. Little is known about the judge’s mindset or how he’ll play on the team. And during the coming televised stagecraft partisan senators will likely get bogged down in jurisprude­ntial minutia unintellig­ible to everyday people.

So here are some questions that might elicit better insights:

1. Judge Kavanaugh, on Jan. 22, 1973, the court affirmed the legality of a woman’s right to abortion under the 14th Amendment to the Constituti­on. Since that time, it is estimated that there have been more than 60 million abortions in the United States. It is still a contentiou­s issue. Much has changed in those 45 years: biological and scientific revelation­s, legal and economic assumption­s, and political and social values. Given all we know today, what are your thoughts on “fetal viability”? Is it time to reconsider that concept as it applies to constituti­onal law? Why or why not?

2. Since the Supreme Court was establishe­d in 1789 there have been 113 people who have served. Of this elite and select group — among the living and the dead — who do you most admire and why?

3. You worked in the 1990s on the team (led by Independen­t Counsel Kenneth Starr) investigat­ing the Whitewater matter. Those efforts eventually, and remarkably, led to the impeachmen­t of President Bill Clinton. In February 1998, you were part of a panel discussion about the future of the Independen­t Counsel Statute (1978). You raised the question of whether a sitting president could be subject to criminal indictment at all. (You called it a “lurking constituti­onal issue” that should be “resolved so that we can determine whether the Congress or an independen­t counsel can investigat­e a president when his conduct is at issue.”) What are your thoughts on the matter today? What parallels do you see between the investigat­ion of Clinton and today’s investigat­ion using an independen­t counsel that is edging ever so close into the red zone of President Trump’s presidency?

4. What is the most important opinion you have written as an appeals judge? Why?

5. Here’s a riddle: Which of the following is considered in some circles a violation of state and federal law and hence an affront to individual liberties? (A) Requiring identifica­tion to board a plane. (B) Requiring ID to buy cigarettes and alcohol. (C) Requiring ID to open a bank account. (D) Requiring ID to enter into corporate and government offices. (E) Requiring ID to vote in state and federal elections. If you guessed “E” you are correct! If public officials initiate steps in choice E, are such measures unconstitu­tional? Why or why not? Might any of these be deemed unconstitu­tional? Why or why not? On the night President Trump nominated you to the court, did you need to show ID to walk into the White House?

6. Since the inception of the court, there have been 91 Protestant judges named out of 113 justices. Roger B. Taney was the first Catholic to serve on the court, beginning in 1836. In more recent times, Catholics have dominated the court. At one point, when justice Antonin Scalia was alive, there were six Catholic justices on the same court. If you were to be sworn in to the court today you would be the fifth Catholic justice ( joining John Roberts, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Sonia Sotomayor). How has your Catholic faith shaped and informed your judicial philosophy? Did the court get it right last year in the separation of church and state case Trinity Lutheran v Comer?

7. Are “The Federalist Papers” still relevant today in terms of interpreti­ng and understand­ing the original intent of the Constituti­on? Why or why not?

8. In an October 2016 ruling, PHH v. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, in a case involving the unbridled power of what some would call extra-constituti­onal congressio­nal creations, you wrote that, “Indeed, other than the President, the Director of the CFPB is the single most powerful official in the entire United States Government, at least when measured in terms of unilateral power.” You added, “The concentrat­ion of massive, unchecked power in a single Director marks a dramatic departure from settled historical practice and makes the CFPB unique among independen­t agencies.” Can you further articulate your philosophy on the separation of powers and overreachi­ng executive authority? What other government entities, in your estimation, resemble those of the CFPB?

It remains to be seen on Sept. 4 if Brett Kavanaugh will fumble the opening kickoff or return it for a long touchdown. But it is certain he will be brushing up on the playbook.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY / ABACA PRESS ?? Judge Brett Kavanaugh (right) speaks to the crowd on July 9 after President Donald Trump nominated him to the Supreme Court.
OLIVIER DOULIERY / ABACA PRESS Judge Brett Kavanaugh (right) speaks to the crowd on July 9 after President Donald Trump nominated him to the Supreme Court.
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