U.S. Justice Gorsuch sees value of immigration through wife's eyes
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[September 14, 2019]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Supreme Court
Justice Neil Gorsuch on Friday extolled the value of immigration and
said his wife's experience as a naturalized U.S. citizen from Britain
has helped give him a greater appreciation of the American system of
government.
Gorsuch made the remarks at a time when President Donald Trump, the
Republican who appointed the conservative jurist to a lifetime job on
the court in 2017, has made hardline policies toward immigration a
centerpiece of his presidency and 2020 re-election bid.
Attending naturalization ceremonies where new citizens are sworn in as
citizens, Gorsuch said, is one of his favorite experiences. Immigrants
who apply for citizenship are sworn in, sometimes by federal judges,
after passing a test with questions about U.S. government and history.
"They are moments for me of renewal and commitment," Gorsuch said in an
interview with Reuters, adding that "judges often love doing them for
just that reason."
"I do worry when I read that something like 60 percent of the public
would fail that naturalization exam," Gorsuch added.
The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation said in October 2018
that only 36 percent of Americans surveyed could pass the citizenship
test.
Gorsuch said his wife, who he met while studying at the University of
Oxford in Britain, had helped engender in him an enhanced respect for
the U.S. Constitution. The couple have two daughters.
"Part of my appreciation for our Constitution, our remarkable system of
government, undoubtedly comes from seeing it through my wife's eyes,"
Gorsuch said. "We take some of our rights perhaps too lightly."
Gorsuch has been a reliable conservative vote in high-profile cases
including those involving Trump. The court has a 5-4 conservative
majority.
He was part of the conservative majority that last year upheld Trump's
travel ban on people entering the United States from several
Muslim-majority countries. In June, he and three other conservative
justices dissented when the court blocked Trump from adding a
citizenship question to the 2020 U.S. census that critics said was
intended to deter immigrants from taking part in the decennial
population count.
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U.S. Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch poses for a picture next to
the U.S. flag and the flag from his home state of Colorado in his
chambers at the Supreme Court building in Washington, U.S. September
13, 2019. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Trump has taken numerous steps to limit illegal and legal
immigration.
Gorsuch on occasion has shown an independent streak, siding with the
court's four liberals in 5-4 rulings in favor of immigrants,
criminal defendants and Native Americans.
The 52-year-old justice is engaging in a round of media interviews
to promote his new book, "A Republic, If You Can Keep It," a
selection of his writings including court opinions and speeches. In
2018, Gorsuch received a $225,000 payment from his publisher,
Penguin Random House, according to his most recent financial
disclosure form.
In stressing the need for increased civility in public life, Gorsuch
seeks to steer clear of politics. Trump is known for his
bare-knuckles approach to taking on political opponents, critics,
the news media and judges who rule against him. When asked about
Trump's criticism of judges, Gorsuch declined to respond directly,
but did defend the judiciary as a whole.
"You are asking me to get involved in something political, and I'm
not going get involved in politics. I'm a judge," Gorsuch said.
But he added, "I think the American judiciary is filled with
remarkable people, selfless people, men and women who could be
making a lot of money and attaining a lot of fame and fortune and
who have given that up to serve, mostly anonymously."
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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