Analysis-Conservative U.S. justices show maximalism on guns and abortion
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[June 25, 2022]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Supreme
Court's blockbuster rulings on successive days that eliminated the right
to abortion nationwide and widened the rights of gun owners illustrate
how its expanded conservative majority is willing to boldly assert its
power.
In both rulings, the conservative justices delivered long-sought
victories to activists on the right who have decried the 1973 Roe v.
Wade ruling that legalized abortion and believe the court has been slow
to broaden gun rights.
The increasingly unrestrained court has become ever more willing to take
up and decisively rule on contentious issues since the 2020 addition of
former President Donald Trump's third appointee, Amy Coney Barrett, gave
the nation's top judicial body a 6-3 conservative majority.
Her appointment changed the court's dynamics by marginalizing Chief
Justice John Roberts, making it possible for its conservative bloc to
amass the five votes needed to decide cases without him. Roberts is
considered more of an incrementalist conservative.
Barrett and Trump's two other appointees, Neil Gorsuch and Brett
Kavanaugh, were in the majority in the gun ruling on Thursday and the
abortion decision on Friday.
The conservative majority may endure for years - possibly decades - and
has signaled interest in other big changes to the law. The court has
taken up a case to be argued in its next term, which starts in October,
that could end university policies considering race in student
admissions that have been used to promote campus diversity. Ending such
affirmative action policies has been another coveted goal of
conservatives.
TRUMP'S APPOINTEES
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Carolyn Shapiro, a former law
clerk for liberal Justice Stephen Breyer, expressed concern that the
conservative majority is out of step with the American people. Shapiro
noted that Trump was able to make three appointments despite failing to
win the popular vote in the 2016 elections and that Republican senators
pushed through the nominations on razor-thin majority votes.
"The makeup of the court has historically been healthier when it more
closely reflects the makeup and views of the American people," Shapiro
said.
Reuters/Ipsos polling indicates that a majority of Americans support
abortion rights and believe that the easy availability of firearms is a
reason why there are many mass shootings.
"The court is doing things that I think are dangerous for the country,
dangerous for the right of individuals, dangerous for democracy and
dangerous for its continued legitimacy," Shapiro added.
Before conservative Justice Antonin Scalia's 2016 death and the
subsequent addition of Trump's appointees, the court had been more
cautious in deciding what types of cases to hear.
It had a 5-4 conservative majority. But one of the conservatives,
Justice Anthony Kennedy, sometimes sided with the liberals on
contentious "culture war" issues including abortion, affirmative action
and LGBT rights. That led to the court sometimes avoiding contentious
cases or considering disputes with lower stakes.
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Supreme Court Police line up outside the United States Supreme Court
as the court rules in the Dobbs v Women's Health Organization
abortion case, overturning the landmark Roe v Wade abortion decision
in Washington, U.S., June 24, 2022. REUTERS/Mary F. Calvert/File
Photo
Jennifer Mascott, a professor at George Mason
University's Antonin Scalia Law School who clerked for conservative
Justice Clarence Thomas, rejected the notion that the court is
dominated by judicial activists. Mascott said in the abortion case,
the court did not outlaw the procedure, but instead let states
legislate as they see fit.
"It is removing itself from the process. It is not telling states
what to do," Mascott said.
The role of Roberts, who has sought to defend the court as an
institution and has avoided dramatic moves, has been diminished.
Roberts joined the majority in full in the gun case. In the abortion
case, he agreed with the majority on upholding the Mississippi ban
on abortion at 15 weeks of pregnancy at issue in the case but not in
overturning Roe.
The court's energetic involvement in issues of nationwide importance
extends beyond abortion and guns, as illustrated by the upcoming
college admissions case.
In the coming term, it will also hear a major new legal fight
pitting religious beliefs against LGBT rights in a case involving an
evangelical Christian web designer's free speech claim that she
cannot be forced under a Colorado anti-discrimination law to produce
websites for same-sex marriages.
The justices still have seven cases to decide before the current
term concludes by the end of the month including one involving a
public high school football coach who prayed on the field with
players after games - a ruling that could favor religious rights. In
another, the court could curb the ability of President Joe Biden's
administration to combat climate change.
The climate case is an example of one target for the conservative
justices: the power of federal agencies in what has been dubbed a
"war on the administrative state." For example, the court in January
blocked the Biden administration's COVID-19 vaccination-or-testing
mandate for companies with at least 100 employees, saying the agency
behind the order lacked the necessary authority.
Before Kennedy retired, the court was already supportive of
religious challenges. That has deepened since then including rulings
backing religious groups challenging pandemic-related restrictions
in 2020. The court on June 21 further reduced the separation of
church and state in a ruling that endorsed more public funding of
religious entities. The football coach ruling could add to that
trend.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Editing by Will Dunham)
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