The Oklahoman

Supreme Court at crossroads in term with upcoming abortion, gun cases

- Todd Ruger CQ-Roll Call (TNS)

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court begins its new term next week at a crossroads and under tremendous political scrutiny, as the expanded conservati­ve majority takes on major cases on abortion and guns that could change American society as well as how the public views the high court’s legitimacy.

Those issues will dominate commentary about the Supreme Court through the end of the term in June. By that point, with the 2022 midterm elections in full swing, the justices may have ruled to give states more power to restrict abortion access and less power to curtail firearm possession.

Abortion and gun rights long have motivated partisan political clashes and debates about the court. But a narrow 5-4 conservati­ve majority for years curbed major changes to constituti­onal law in those areas, where the court’s work greatly influences the country’s

culture.

Now, the 6-3 conservati­ve majority has agreed to decide cases that ask the court to unwind nearly 50 years of precedents on the constituti­onal right to an abortion and to expand for the first time the Second Amendment rights to possess a gun outside the home.

Both major issues closely align with long-standing Republican political priorities and weave throughout campaign rhetoric and recent superheate­d Supreme Court confirmation battles.

“The conditions for the right side running the table have never looked better,” Irv Gornstein, executive director of the Supreme Court Institute at Georgetown Law, said last week at a panel discussion to preview the court’s coming term.

“In every term besides the last, one right-side justice was all it took to slow down, and occasional­ly reverse, the march to the right. And that’s no longer true,” Gornstein said.

Big or small

The question hanging over the term, as it has been for several years, is whether the court will make broader decisions that have sweeping fallout in American life, or whether it will find a middle ground with narrower consequenc­es.

Last term, the first with the current lineup of justices, turned out to be a transition­al one. The majority avoided big moves on major issues and reached unexpected consensus on many controvers­ial cases in a way that limited the scope of the decision’s impact.

That’s an approach that Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. has talked about, with an overriding concern to maintain the legitimacy of the court as nonpartisa­n. Yet on the last day of the term in July, the conservati­ve wing stuck together for 6-3 decisions on voting rights and money in politics that aligned with Republican­s and their allies.

And, this summer, the justices issued a sharply divided 5-4 emergency order to allow a Texas law to go into effect that all but banned abortion after six weeks of pregnancy – about 85 percent to 95 percent of all abortions in that state.

The legal fights over that Texas law will likely force the Supreme Court to act again on abortion in the coming months. In one, the Justice Department filed a lawsuit that pointed out how Texas women are being forced to travel hundreds of miles to nearby states to have abortions or have missed appointmen­ts because they don’t have the means to make such a trip.

Political pressure

That has only intensified the already white-hot political spotlight and fueled expectatio­ns from both ends of the political spectrum. The justices in December are set to hear oral argument in a case about a Mississipp­i law that bans abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy and the constituti­onality of such bans on abortions before the fetus could survive outside the womb on its own.

Former Vice President Mike Pence, speaking last week at a family values forum in Hungary, noted that three new justices, Neil M. Gorsuch, Brett M. Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett, were appointed under the Trump administra­tion.

“It is our hope and our prayer that in the coming days the new conservati­ve majority on the Supreme Court of the United States will take action to restore the sanctity of life to the center of American law,” said Pence, a longtime opponent of abortion.

The current right to an abortion rests mainly on two cases: Planned Parenthood v. Casey, a 5-4 decision in 1992 that found states could not enact laws that are an “undue burden” on the right to an abortion, including bans before viability of the fetus, and the landmark 1973 decision Roe v. Wade, which first establishe­d the right to an abortion.

The divide on Capitol Hill is as partisan as it is longstandi­ng. In briefs, a combined 231 Republican members of Congress urged the Supreme Court to overturn Roe and Casey, while 236 Democratic members of Congress, as well as the Biden administra­tion, urged the opposite.

The Mississipp­i case appears poised to spark division no matter how it is decided. Carrie Severino, a former clerk for Justice Clarence Thomas, said any ruling in the case would cause a huge explosion in American culture but that there is little space for compromise in the case.

“I don’t think anyone has come up with a clear explanatio­n to me of how, under existing Supreme Court precedent, you could possibly have a 15-week abortion ban surviving” judicial review, Severino, chief counsel and policy director at the Judicial Crisis Network, said last week at a Federalist Society panel discussion on the court’s new term.

In the other major case, set for oral argument in November, a gun rights group is appealing a ruling that upheld New York’s process that denies the vast majority of concealed carry permit applicatio­ns. In Congress, Democratic efforts on gun control – in the wake of a series of mass shootings at schools, concerts and grocery stores – have run into a Republican roadblock in the Senate.

Those cases, and another about religious liberty, are in areas that can reveal the most about how the justices look at the law, Kannon Shanmugam, the chair of the Supreme Court and appellate practice group at the Paul, Weiss law firm in Washington, said during the Federalist Society panel discussion.

“Particular­ly with three new members on the court in the last four years, who have had relatively limited ability to opine on those issues, this term is going to tell us a lot, just based on those three cases alone,” Shanmugam said.

The political environmen­t is fraught in other ways: A bill from several Democratic lawmakers seeks to expand the number of justices, while a White House commission will report on that and other possible structural changes to the court.

“In every term besides the last, one right-side justice was all it took to slow down, and occasional­ly reverse, the march to the right. And that’s no longer true.”

Irv Gornstein Executive director of the Supreme Court Institute at Georgetown Law

Making their case

Some justices went public in recent weeks with concerns that the court’s reputation is at stake, no matter how they might rule on a typical haul of lower-profile cases.

Justice Stephen G. Breyer, under pressure from the political left to retire so Democrats can fill his seat with a younger liberal, made media appearance­s to promote his new book about how politics can imperil the court’s legitimacy.

Thomas, the court’s most conservati­ve member, blamed the media in a speech this month for making it sound like justices simply go to their personal preference­s on issues like abortion.

And Barrett cautioned in a speech this month that “judicial philosophi­es are not the same as political parties.”

But a Gallup poll released last week found that Americans’ opinions of the Supreme Court have worsened over the summer, from a 49 percent approval in July to 40 percent this month, the lowest rating since that poll started in 2000.

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