Trump high court pick Kavanaugh may face
contentious cases soon
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[July 11, 2018]
By Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump's Supreme Court nominee may not have to wait too long for
controversial cases if he is confirmed to the job, with disputes
involving abortion, immigration, gay rights, voting rights and
transgender troops possibly heading toward the justices soon.
Republicans are hoping Brett Kavanaugh, the conservative U.S. appeals
court judge selected on Monday by Trump to replace retiring Justice
Anthony Kennedy, will be confirmed by the Senate before the next Supreme
Court term opens in October.
There are no blockbusters among the 38 cases already on the docket for
the justices, but they could add disputes on controversial issues being
appealed from lower courts.
Legal battles are developing over state laws restricting abortion
including one in Arkansas that effectively bans medication-induced
abortions. The justices in May opted not to intervene in a case
challenging that law, waiting instead for lower courts to rule, but it
could return to them in the future.
Other abortion-related cases could reach the court within two years.
These involve laws banning abortions at early stages of pregnancies,
including Iowa's prohibition after a fetal heartbeat is detected. There
is litigation arising from plans by certain states including Louisiana
and Kansas to stop reimbursements under the Medicaid insurance program
for the poor for Planned Parenthood, a national abortion provider.
There also are challenges to state laws imposing difficult-to-meet
regulations on abortion providers such as having formal ties, called
admitting privileges, at a local hospital.
Kavanaugh's judicial record on abortion is thin, although last year he
was on a panel of judges that issued an order preventing a 17-year-old
illegal immigrant detained in Texas by U.S. authorities from immediately
obtaining an abortion.
GAY RIGHTS
Another issue expected to return to the court is whether certain types
of businesses can refuse service to gay couples because of religious
objections to same-sex marriage.
The high court in June sided, on narrow legal grounds, with a Colorado
baker who refused to make a wedding cake for two men because of his
Christian beliefs, but sidestepped the larger question of whether to
allow broad religious-based exemptions to anti-discrimination laws.
That issue could be back before the justices as soon as the court's next
term in a case involving a Washington state Christian florist who
similarly spurned a gay couple.
Kennedy, who wrote the baker ruling, cast decisive votes backing gay
rights four times, most notably in 2015 when the court legalized
same-sex marriage nationwide. It is not known how Kavanaugh would vote
on those issues as he has not been involved in any gay rights cases
during his 12 years as a judge.
Trump's bid to ban transgender people from the military has been
challenged in lower courts. That issue could make its way to the Supreme
Court.
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With the U.S. Supreme Court building in the background, Supreme
Court nominee judge Brett Kavanaugh arrives prior to meeting with
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S., July 10, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
After lower courts blocked Trump's ban last year, he announced in
March he would endorse Defense Secretary James Mattis' plan to
restrict the military service of transgender people who have a
condition called gender dysphoria. Trump's administration has asked
courts to allow that policy to go into effect, but so far to no
avail.
Sharon McGowan, a lawyer with gay rights group Lambda Legal, said
she saw no evidence Kavanaugh would be any less conservative on gay
and transgender rights than Trump's other appointee to the court,
Neil Gorsuch.
On immigration, litigation is continuing over Trump's plan to
rescind a program created under Democratic former President Barack
Obama that protected from deportation hundreds of thousands of young
immigrants brought to the United States illegally as children.
Lower courts blocked Trump's plan to scrap the program. Congress has
failed to agree on a plan to replace it.
Kavanaugh could have to deal with cases involving a practice called
partisan gerrymandering in which state legislators redraw electoral
maps to try to cement their own party in power. In June, the
justices avoided a broad ruling on whether partisan gerrymandering
violates the constitutional rights of voters and whether federal
judges can intervene to rectify it.
Democrats have said Republican gerrymandering has helped Trump's
party keep control of the U.S. House of Representatives and various
state legislatures.
Kennedy previously kept his conservative colleagues from closing the
door to litigation in federal court challenging partisan
gerrymandering.
The partisan gerrymandering case most likely to return to the
Supreme Court involves claims that Republican legislators in North
Carolina manipulated the boundaries of the state's 13 U.S. House
districts to ensure lopsided wins for the party.
Attorney Paul Smith of the Campaign Legal Center, which represents
the North Carolina plaintiffs, said they had been focused on trying
to convince Kennedy to rule in their favor, and now will try to
convince Chief Justice John Roberts, seen as the next-most-moderate
of the conservative justices. Smith viewed Kavanaugh as likely
voting with the court's most conservative justices to reject
gerrymandering challenges.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung; Editing by Will
Dunham)
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