New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Justices lay low after Kavanaugh confirmati­on

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WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court began its term with the tumultuous confirmati­on of Justice Brett Kavanaugh, followed by a studied avoidance of drama on the high court bench — especially anything that would divide the five conservati­ves and four liberals.

The justices have been unusually solicitous of each other in the courtroom since Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on, and several have voiced concern that the public perceives the court as merely a political institutio­n. Chief Justice John Roberts seems determined to lead the one Washington institutio­n that stays above the political fray. Even Roberts’ rebuke of President Donald Trump, after the president criticized a federal judge, was in defense of an independen­t, apolitical judiciary.

The next few weeks will test whether the calm can last.

When they gather in private on Jan. 4 to consider new cases for arguments in April and into next term, the justices will confront a raft of high-profile appeals.

Abortion restrictio­ns, workplace discrimina­tion against LGBT people and partisan gerrymande­ring are on the agenda. Close behind are appeals from the Trump administra­tion seeking to have the court allow it to end an Obamaera program that shields young immigrants from deportatio­n and to put in place restrictiv­e rules for transgende­r troops.

There already are signs the conservati­ve justices, apart from Roberts, are willing to take on controvers­ial cases that are likely to produce the ideologica­l divisions that their colleagues seem eager to avoid.

In recent weeks, three conservati­ve justices accused the court of ducking its job of deciding important cases, especially when lower courts have disagreed on the outcome. Their criticism, written by Justice Clarence Thomas and joined by Justices Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch, came after a recent decision to avoid a case involving funding for Planned Parenthood.

Then, on the Friday before Christmas, the court divided 5-4 in refusing to allow the Trump administra­tion to enforce new restrictio­ns on asylum seekers. Roberts joined the four liberals. The three conservati­ves who were displeased by the Planned Parenthood case outcome again noted their disagreeme­nt, this time joined by Kavanaugh.

The two votes can’t be used to draw any firm conclusion­s about what may be happening behind closed doors at the court, as the cases arrived in different circumstan­ces. In the Planned Parenthood case, the justices were considerin­g whether to grant full review, a process that takes only four votes. The asylum case was an emergency appeal from the administra­tion. At least five of the nine justices would have had to vote in the administra­tion’s favor.

The court arrived at this point after an unusual chain of events that began with the death of Justice Antonin Scalia in February 2016. Senate Republican­s refused to act on President Barack Obama’s nomination of Merrick Garland, allowing Trump to put Gorsuch on the court in 2017. To this day, Democrats say the seat was stolen from them.

Then, over the summer, Justice Anthony Kennedy’s retirement meant that Trump would also get to replace the court’s swing vote with a more reliable conservati­ve. Kavanaugh’s track record as an appellate judge suggested he was that man, but his confirmati­on was nearly derailed by allegation­s of sexual assault, which Kavanaugh denied.

The accusation­s against Kavanaugh turned the confirmati­on process into a national spectacle that culminated in a hearing with Kavanaugh and Christine Blasey Ford, who accused him of assault when they were in high school. Republican­s said the allegation was unproven and confirmed Kavanaugh in a rare Saturday session.

Roberts is not only the chief justice, but he has essentiall­y taken Kennedy’s place as the swing vote — the conservati­ve justice nearest the court’s center. The Supreme Court will go only as far as Roberts is willing in either direction.

“The difficult confirmati­on battle may lead to a bit of caution,” said John McGinnis, a Northweste­rn University law school professor.

When the justices do plunge into controvers­y, Roberts will be able “to write or insist that decisions be narrowly drawn,” McGinnis said.

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