U.S. Supreme Court faces major challenges when it returns without
Ginsburg
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[September 22, 2020]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Justice Ruth Bader
Ginsburg's death will be felt at the Supreme Court in the coming weeks
as it starts a new term with a 5-3 conservative majority while preparing
for a major case on the Obamacare healthcare law and possible emergency
election-related disputes.
The court officially returns on Oct. 5 from summer break with a two-week
session of oral arguments held by teleconference, although it handles
last-ditch appeals whenever they arise.
With the normally nine-justice court operating one member down following
last week's death of the 87-year-old Ginsburg, a liberal icon, there is
the possibility of 4-4 splits, but also, as has been shown in the past,
potentially more desire for compromise among the justices.
With just three liberal justices left, there is little chance that the
five-justice conservative wing of the court can be thwarted, even if
Chief Justice John Roberts, who has sided with the liberals in big cases
recently, was to do so again.
The court as recently as 2016 spent 14 months without a ninth justice
following the death of conservative Antonin Scalia, a period in which
the justices often sought compromise. The justices, who get to pick
which cases they hear, also avoided taking up some contentious cases.
"There is a concern that really big changes that are made without a full
complement of justices may not been seen as legitimate. I hope the court
will be similarly cautious during this period," said Deepak Gupta, a
regular Supreme Court lawyer.
Complicating matters even further, the normally collegial court has been
conducting its business remotely since March because of the COVID-19
pandemic.
Republican President Donald Trump has said he wants a nominee confirmed
before the election on Nov. 3, when he is seeking a second term in a
race against Democrat Joe Biden. He said on Monday he would make an
announcement as early as this weekend, with appeals court judges Amy
Coney Barrett and Barbara Lagoa viewed as front-runners.
Looming on the horizon are Nov. 10 oral arguments in the latest
challenge to Obamacare, a case in which Ginsburg's vote might have been
crucial. The Supreme Court previously upheld the law, known officially
as the Affordable Care Act, on a 5-4 vote in 2012. Ginsburg was one of
the five justices in the majority then, which means that her absence
could tilt the balance.
Republican-led states and the Trump administration have asked the court
to strike down the entire law, which is being defended by Democratic-led
states and the House of Representatives.
There is a strong chance the court will have to weigh in on
election-related litigation, potentially even having a major say over
which candidate ultimately wins.
Sylvia Albert, director of voting and elections for Common Cause, a
voting rights group, said Roberts would likely seek a compromise in such
a situation because he is "concerned with his legacy and trying to find
a middle ground."
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A general view of the United States Supreme Court in Washington,
U.S., May 3, 2020. REUTERS/Will Dunham
Any other emergency applications made at the court in the short term
could also be affected by the lack of a ninth justice.
For example, in a case that the court could act on at any time, the
Trump administration has asked the justices to put on hold a federal
judge's decision to block during the pandemic a U.S. Food and Drug
Administration rule requiring women to visit a hospital or clinic to
obtain a drug used for medication-induced abortions.
Abortion is one of the most divisive social issues facing the court
and conservative activists want Trump to pick a nominee who will
curb abortion rights, which Ginsburg repeatedly voted to uphold.
HIGH-STAKES CASES
With Ginsburg's absence, the court's initial votes in cases argued
in October could be 4-4, meaning that if a decision was issued, the
lower court ruling would stand and no nationwide precedent would be
set if that was the final outcome. The court would most likely order
such a case to be reargued after the Senate confirms Ginsburg's
successor.
Among the cases being heard in the first week is a high-stakes
software copyright dispute between Alphabet Inc's Google and Oracle
Corp that is potentially worth billions of dollars to the winner.
Other cases the court has taken up for its new term could also be
affected. On Nov. 4, the justices consider a major legal fight over
the scope of religious-rights exemptions to certain federal laws.
The dispute concerns Philadelphia's decision to bar Catholic Social
Services from participating in its foster-care program because the
organization prohibited same-sex couples from serving as foster
parents.
The court on Dec. 2 weighs a bid by the Democratic-led House to
obtain material the Trump administration withheld from former
Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s report on Russian political
meddling in the 2016 presidential election.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Additional reporting by Joseph Ax;
Editing by Scott Malone and Peter Cooney)
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