U.S. Supreme Court not politicized, says Chief Justice Roberts
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[September 25, 2019]
By Andrew Chung
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. Chief Justice
John Roberts, speaking at a New York synagogue on Tuesday night,
lamented the perception that the Supreme Court is becoming politicized
and that the justices' decisions are guided primarily by their partisan
affiliation.
Roberts' concerns about the impression of the court comes during a
highly-charged political moment when the judiciary is getting hit from
all sides. President Donald Trump has repeatedly criticized federal
courts and judges who have blocked his policies, while some Democratic
politicians have implied that the court's conservative majority is
motivated mainly by politics instead of interpreting the law.
"When you live in a polarized political environment, people tend to see
everything in those terms. That's not how we at the court function and
the results in our cases do not suggest otherwise," said Roberts before
hundreds in attendance at the Temple Emanu-El Streicker Center in
Manhattan.
Roberts in November rebuked Trump after the Republican president called
a judge who ruled against his policy barring asylum for certain
immigrants an "Obama judge."
In August, a handful of Democratic senators filed a brief in a firearms
case the justices had agreed to hear, suggesting the high court was too
influenced by politics. "The Supreme Court is not well. And the people
know it," the brief said.
The nine-member court, which begins its next term on Oct. 7, has a 5-4
conservative majority.
Roberts, 64, a conservative appointed by Republican President George W.
Bush in 2005, said the justices do not work in a political manner. "A
lot of criticism is based on a misperception of the court," he said.
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Chief Justice of the United States John G. Roberts is seen during a
group portrait session for the new full court at the Supreme Court
in Washington, U.S., November 30, 2018. REUTERS/Jim Young -/File
Photo
Roberts pointed out that of the court's 19 decisions last term that
split 5-4, only seven rulings divided along ideological lines.
Roberts has emerged as the court's ideological center since the
retirement last year of conservative Justice Anthony Kennedy, who
sometimes joined the liberal justices in major rulings, including
over gay rights and abortion.
Last term, some liberal justices also publicly raised the alarm over
the pace at which the conservative majority was overruling
precedents, a fear shared by abortion rights advocates and
Democratic politicians over whether the court may overrule Roe v.
Wade, the landmark 1973 Supreme Court ruling that legalized abortion
nationwide.
On Tuesday, Roberts said the court must respect precedent. There is
"no reason to suppose that I and my eight colleagues are any better
at discerning the meaning of the constitution than members of the
courts that went before us," he said.
Roberts also drew laughs and cheers from the crowd when, in a nod to
liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's growing celebrity, he called
her a "rock star."
(Reporting by Andrew Chung; editing by Christian Schmollinger)
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