Trumpfs victory has enormous consequences for the Supreme Court
By Robert Barnes
November 9 at 8:27 AM - The Washington Post
The political earthquake that hit Tuesday night has enormous consequences for
the Supreme Court, swallowing up Judge Merrick Garlandfs ill-fated nomination
and dismantling Democratic hopes for a liberal majority on the high court for
the first time in nearly a half-century.
In the short term, Republican Donald Trumpfs victory means that at some point
next year, the nine-member court will be restored to full capacity, once again
with a majority of Republican-appointed justices.
Democratic attempts to filibuster Trumpfs choice would likely lead
Republicans to end that option for Supreme Court justices, just as Democrats did
for other judicial nominations when their party controlled the Senate.
Trumpfs upset victory likely changes the courtfs docket as well: Court
challenges to President Obamafs regulations regarding the Affordable Care Act
and immigration, which have preoccupied the justices in recent terms, will
likely disappear under a President Trump and a Republican-controlled
Congress.
The long-term question will be Trumpfs ultimate impact on the courtfs
membership, and whether he gets the chance to do more than choose the successor
to Justice Antonin Scalia, who died in February.
Two of the courtfs liberals, Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Stephen G.
Breyer, are 83 and 78, respectively. Moderate conservative Justice Anthony M.
Kennedy is 80.
As long as those three stay, the courtfs rulings on sensitive social issues —
protecting abortion rights, affirmative action and gay rights, for instance —
are secure.
gA lot of the big things are actually ones on which the court already has a
so-called liberal majority,h Neal K. Katyal, the acting solicitor general under
President Obama, said before the courtfs term began last month.
Tuesdayfs election assures that Kennedy will remain the courtfs pivotal
justice, for now. Trump has said he will draw his Supreme Court nominee from a
list of 20 judges and one senator: Mike Lee of Utah. All appear to be more
conservative than Kennedy, the courtfs longest-serving justice.
Kennedy is the member of the current court most likely to be in the majority
when the court splits 5 to 4 in its most controversial decisions. Most of the
time, he sides with Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and the courtfs other
remaining conservatives: Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr.
But on some social issues, Kennedy sides with the liberals: Ginsburg, Breyer
and Obamafs two choices for the court, Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Elena
Kagan.
He joined them and wrote the majority opinion finding that gay couples have a
constitutional right to marry; in fact, Kennedy has written all of the courtfs
cases protecting gay rights.
Last term, he wrote the decision approving the limited use of race in college
admission decisions, and voted to strike down a Texas law that the court said
imposed unnecessary burdens on a womanfs right to obtain an abortion.
But three of the five justices supporting those issues are the oldest on the
court. Abortion rights advocates immediately sounded an alarm.
gPresident-elect Trump has publicly pledged to overturn Roe and
promised punishment for the one in three American women who will have an
abortion in her lifetime,h said Nancy Northup, president of the Center for
Reproductive Rights. She was referring to Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court
decision assuring a womanfs right to an abortion
Garland, a moderate liberal who is chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the D.C. Circuit, would likely have replaced Kennedy as the justice in the
middle. Obama nominated him last March in part because Republicans in the past
have said he was the most likely Democratic nominee to win confirmation.
But Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) declared on the night of
Scaliafs death that Republicans would not act on any Obama nominee. The move
brought charges that McConnell had politicized the process, but the gambit
worked: It will now be a Republican president making the lifetime appointment to
replace Scalia.
Trump has said his nominee will come from the list compiled with the help of
the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, and the legal group, the
Federalist Society. His nominee will be like Scalia in seeking to overturn
Roe and be a strong supporter of the Second Amendment, Trump has
said.
All eyes will now be on the courtfs oldest members, Kennedy and Ginsburg.
Replacing Kennedy with a more stalwart conservative would immediately impact the
courtfs dynamics. He has given no indication about how long he intends to serve
on the court.
Ginsburg has said she will serve as long as she is up to the job. She would
likely be loath to allow Trump to pick her successor; she caused an uproar this
summer when in media interviews she called him a gfakerh and said she feared for
the court and the country if he were elected.
Ginsburg turned aside calls from some liberals that she retire years ago, so
that Obama could name her replacement. She said it was unclear whether the
Senate would confirm her successor. And she told The Washington Post that there
was no rush: She felt it was likely that another Democrat would be elected after
Obama.