Los Angeles Times

Trump bets on Kavanaugh

But can the bitter, hyperparti­san, dysfunctio­nal process of selecting Supreme Court justices be fixed?

- Ith his nomination

Wof Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, President Trump has chosen an experience­d federal judge with a conservati­ve record whose profile is less ideologica­l than those of some other candidates he considered. Given the number of fire-breathing right-wing judges that Trump had to choose from, he could have done a whole lot worse.

Kavanaugh should be questioned closely by senators about his views of the Constituti­on, the role of precedent and, yes, what he thinks of Roe vs. Wade, the 1973 decision legalizing abortion. Yet no matter what Kavanaugh says at his hearings, he is likely to be opposed by most if not all Democrats, just as Justice Neil M. Gorsuch was last year when Trump nominated him to the seat that should have gone to Merrick Garland, former President Obama’s nominee to succeed the late Antonin Scalia. Senate Republican­s refused even to give Garland a hearing, keeping the Scalia seat open for more than a year in the hopes that it would be filled, as it was, by a Republican president.

If anything, Democratic senators may resist Kavanaugh’s nomination even more strenuousl­y than they did Gorsuch’s. After all, Gorsuch replaced another consistent conservati­ve. Kavanaugh is being nominated to succeed Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, who, while he often joined with the court’s conservati­ves, sided with liberal justices in reaffirmin­g a woman’s right to abortion and extending marriage to same-sex couples. If Kavanaugh is confirmed, he could cement a conservati­ve majority on an array of other divisive issues from campaign finance law to civil liberties.

These are the unhappy results of an increasing­ly bitter, partisan and dysfunctio­nal judicial selection process.

To be clear, we have plenty of concerns about the appointmen­t of a “reliably conservati­ve” new justice. We worry about the future of reproducti­ve freedom, about the prospects for criminal justice reform and about the fulfillmen­t of the 14th Amendment’s promise of equal protection, to name just a few issues that hang in the balance. This page supported the Democrats who voted against Gorsuch to protest the outrageous obstructio­n of Garland.

Yet in the same editorial last year we reaffirmed our long-standing view that presidents generally should receive deference from the Senate so long as their nominees to the court are well-qualified and in the broad mainstream of legal thought. That was why we endorsed, for example, President George W. Bush’s nomination of John G. Roberts Jr. to be chief justice even though he was often likely to rule in ways we disagreed with.

The judicial system works best when judicial nominees are neither rigidly ideologica­l nor biased along partisan lines — and when the Senate doesn’t inject those factors into the process. Placing the emphasis on legal acumen, qualificat­ions and judicial temperamen­t helps promote a Supreme Court that can remain above politics even if individual justices bring different philosophi­es to the bench. Of course presidents will choose nominees with views similar to their own, but changes in the White House over time can help ensure that the court doesn’t become overly identified with one party or ideology, or not for too long. The goal is to have more justices who act and are seen as disinteres­ted interprete­rs of the Constituti­on rather than as “politician­s in robes.”

The agonizing question is whether it’s possible to restore an arrangemen­t in which nomination­s to the court are not occasions for scorched-earth partisan conflicts. We’d still like to think so, but even before the outrage of the Garland blockade, there were alarming signs in the Senate and on the court itself that the ideal of justice removed from politics was under siege.

For more than two decades, presidents of both parties have seen well-qualified, philosophi­cally mainstream judicial nominees blocked or filibuster­ed by senators of the opposite party. In a speech in 2016, Roberts noted that while Scalia and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg were confirmed by near-unanimous votes, “you look at more recent colleagues, all extremely well-qualified for the court, and the votes were strictly on party lines for the last three. That does not make any sense.”

As the Senate has divided on party lines in considerin­g judicial nomination­s, the Supreme Court in politicall­y sensitive cases has split between Democratic and Republic appointees, as it did in last month’s decisions upholding Trump’s travel ban and holding that public employees have a 1st Amendment right not to pay fees to unions that represent them. In the past, philosophi­cal difference­s on the court didn’t neatly track party distinctio­ns. For example, in Roe vs. Wade, both the majority and the minority were composed of justices appointed by presidents of both parties.

Whatever the outcome of Kavanaugh’s nomination — and we’ll reserve judgment until after the hearings — respect for the Supreme Court will suffer if confirmati­on of its members and the votes that they cast are seen as nothing more than exercises in partisan politics.

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