Texarkana Gazette

Breyer, Gorsuch join to promote education about Constituti­on

- By Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — Recently retired Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer has become the honorary co-chairman of a nonpartisa­n group devoted to education about the Constituti­on, joining Justice Neil Gorsuch at a time of intense political polarizati­on and rising skepticism about the court’s independen­ce.

The National Constituti­on Center in Philadelph­ia said Thursday that Breyer and Gorsuch, who has served since 2019, will be spokesmen for civics education and civility in politics.

The justices’ decision to work together “is especially meaningful in this polarized time,” Jeffrey Rosen, the center’s president and CEO, said.

The 84-year-old Breyer retired at the end of June after nearly 28 years as a justice. His seat was taken by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, the high court’s first Black woman.

Breyer has been a constant voice for seeing the court as something other than “politician­s in robes” even as the court has issued a string of conservati­ve-driven decisions topped by eliminatin­g the constituti­onal right to abortion and overturnin­g Roe v. Wade.

In recent months, the court with six Republican-appointed conservati­ves and three liberals appointed by Democrats also has expanded gun rights, weakened the separation of church and state and constraine­d the Biden administra­tion’s efforts to combat climate change and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Gorsuch was in the majority of all those cases and Breyer, in dissent.

Challenges to affirmativ­e action in education and key election-related cases highlight the term that begins in October and seem likely to produce more sharp splits along ideologica­l lines.

“Despite the strong disagreeme­nts on the court, Justices Breyer and Gorsuch, like all their colleagues, unite around a shared belief that civics are necessary for the future of the republic,” Rosen said.

Recent public opinions surveys have shown a sharp drop in approval of the court and its role as an institutio­n that is above the political fray.

Still, Breyer said last week at a lawyers’ convention in Chicago that he remains optimistic about the American legal system.

In a statement, he said, “The nonpartisa­n work of the National Constituti­on Center is essential, and I look forward to working with Justice Gorsuch to promote civil dialogue and debate.”

Breyer also will return to teaching at Harvard Law School.

Past center chairmen have included President Joe Biden, who resigned when he launched his presidenti­al campaign in 2019, and former Presidents Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush.

The center’s home in Philadelph­ia is near the Liberty Bell and Independen­ce Hall, where the Constituti­on was drafted.

 ?? AP Photo/evan Vucci, Pool, File ?? Q Then-supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer speaks during an event at the Library of Congress for the 2022 Supreme Court Fellows Program hosted by the Law Library of Congress on Feb. 17 in Washington.
AP Photo/evan Vucci, Pool, File Q Then-supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer speaks during an event at the Library of Congress for the 2022 Supreme Court Fellows Program hosted by the Law Library of Congress on Feb. 17 in Washington.

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