In political crosshairs, U.S. Supreme Court weighs abortion and guns
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[October 02, 2021]
By Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Just before midnight
on Sept. 1, the debate over whether the U.S. Supreme Court's
conservative majority will dramatically change life in America took on a
new ferocity when the justices let a near-total ban on abortion in Texas
take effect.
The intense scrutiny of the court will only increase when the justices -
six conservatives and three liberals - open their new nine-month term on
Monday. They have taken up cases that could enable them to overturn
abortion rights established in a landmark ruling 48 years ago and also
expand gun rights - two cherished goals of American conservatives.
In addition, there are cases scheduled that could expand religious
rights, building on several rulings in recent years.
These contentious cases come at a time when opinion surveys show that
public approval of the court is waning even as a commission named by
President Joe Biden explores recommending changes such expanding the
number of justices or imposing term limits in place of their lifetime
appointments.
Some justices have given speeches rebutting criticism of the court and
questions about its legitimacy as a nonpolitical institution. Its
junior-most member Amy Coney Barrett, a conservative confirmed by Senate
Republicans only days before the 2020 presidential election, said this
month the court "is not comprised of a bunch of partisan hacks."
"There's no doubt that the court's legitimacy is under threat right
now," lawyer Kannon Shanmugam, who frequently argues cases at the court,
said at an event organized by the conservative Federalist Society. "The
level of rhetoric and criticism of the court is higher than I can
certainly remember at any point in my career."
The court's late-night 5-4 decision not to block the Republican-backed
Texas law banning abortions after six weeks of pregnancy put
abortion-rights advocates including Biden on high alert.
The justices now have a chance to go even further. They will hear a case
on Dec. 1 in which Mississippi is defending its law banning abortions
after 15 weeks of pregnancy. Mississippi's Republican attorney general
is asking the court to overturn the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that
legalized abortion nationwide and ended an era when some states banned
it.
In another blockbuster case, the justices could make it easier for
people to obtain permits to carry handguns outside the home, a major
expansion of firearms rights. They will consider on Nov. 3 whether to
invalidate a New York state regulation that lets people obtain a
concealed-carry permit only if they can show they need a gun for
self-defense.
CONGRESSIONAL HEARINGS
Former President Donald Trump was able to appoint three conservative
justices including Barrett who tilted the court further rightward, with
the help of maneuvering by a key fellow Republican, Senator Mitch
McConnell.
The Democratic-led Congress has held two hearings in recent months on
how the court has increasingly decided major issues, including the Texas
abortion one, with late-night emergency decisions using its "shadow
docket" process that lacks customary public oral arguments.
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Pro-choice demonstrators hold up signs during a group chant outside
of the U.S. Supreme Court as justices hear a major abortion case on
the legality of a Republican-backed Louisiana law that imposes
restrictions on abortion doctors, on Capitol Hill in Washington,
U.S., March 4, 2020. REUTERS/Tom Brenner/File Photo
"The Supreme Court has now shown that it's willing to
allow even facially unconstitutional laws to take effect when the
law is aligned with certain ideological preferences," Democrat Dick
Durbin, the Senate Judiciary Committee's chairman, said on
Wednesday.
Conservative Justice Samuel Alito in a speech on Thursday objected
to criticism that portrays the court's members as a "dangerous cabal
that resorts to sneaky and improper methods."
"This portrayal feeds unprecedented efforts to intimidate the court
or damage it as an independent institution," Alito said.
Conservative Justice Clarence Thomas last month said judges are
"asking for trouble" if they wade into political issues. Thomas has
previously said Roe v. Wade should be overturned, as many
conservatives have sought.
Liberal Justice Stephen Breyer noted in a May speech that the
court's legitimacy relies in part on avoiding major upheavals in the
law when people have come to rely on existing precedents.
"The law might not be perfect but if you're changing it all the time
people won't know what to do, and the more you change it the more
people will ask to have it changed," Breyer said.
Abortion rights advocates have cited the fact that Roe v. Wade has
been in place for almost a half century as one reason not to
overturn it.
Breyer, at 83 the court's oldest member, himself is the focus of
attention. Some liberal activists have urged him to retire so Biden
can appoint a younger liberal who could serve for decades. Breyer
has said he has not decided when he will retire.
George Mason University law professor Jenn Mascott, a former Thomas
law clerk, said the justices should not be swayed by public opinion.
"What the justices have said they want to do is decide each case on
the rule the law," Mascott said. "I don't think they should be
thinking that the perception would be that they are too partisan one
way or another." (This story corrects Justice Breyer's age to 83,
not 82)
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung; Editing by Will
Dunham and Scott Malone)
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