A Supreme Court reshaped by Trump has a low profile in this presidential
campaign
Send a link to a friend
[October 23, 2024]
By MARK SHERMAN and LINDSAY WHITEHURST
WASHINGTON (AP) — Conservatives already have a supermajority on the
Supreme Court as a result of Donald Trump's presidency. If Trump wins a
second term, the right side of the court could retain control for
several more decades.
Justices Clarence Thomas, 76, and Samuel Alito, 74, are the two oldest
members of the court. Either, or both, could consider stepping down
knowing that Trump, a Republican, would nominate replacements who might
be three decades younger.
“With President Trump and a Republican Senate, we could have a
generation of conservative justices on the bench in the Supreme Court,”
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham, the top Republican on the Senate
Judiciary Committee, recently wrote on X.
That’s exactly what worries Christina Harvey, executive director of the
progressive group Stand Up America. “The real key here is Trump
prevention. If Trump wins again, he could solidify right-wing control of
the Supreme Court for decades,” Harvey said.
Yet the nation's highest court has a lower profile than it did in the
past two presidential campaigns. That's despite an early summer ruling
on presidential immunity that insured that Trump would not have to stand
trial before the Nov. 5 election on charges of interference in the 2020
election and other consequential decisions on abortion, guns,
affirmative action and the environment.
Both Trump and Democratic President Joe Biden used the prospect of
Supreme Court nominations, which require Senate confirmation, to
reassure key constituencies on their way to the White House.
In 2016, Trump put out lists of potential Supreme Court nominees that
helped secure the enthusiastic backing of social conservatives. Four
years later, Biden went to South Carolina, with its large share of Black
Democratic primary voters, and pledged to name the first Black woman to
the Supreme Court.
Biden followed through on his promise when he chose Justice Ketanji
Brown Jackson in 2022.
Trump's three nominees, Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Neil Gorsuch and
Brett Kavanaugh, cemented the conservative majority that in 2022
overturned Roe v. Wade, among other major decisions.
That ruling, colloquially known as Dobbs, has led to abortion bans or
severe restrictions in many Republican-led states. But it also has
fueled voter anger that produced unexpected Democratic electoral success
two years ago and put abortion access on the ballot in 10 states this
year.
Vice President Kamala Harris, her party's White House nominee, has made
reproductive rights a central theme of her campaign.
[to top of second column]
|
The Supreme Court is pictured, June 30, 2024, in Washington. (AP
Photo/Susan Walsh)
The court? Less so.
While Harris also has embraced court changes put forward by Biden,
including 18-year terms for justices instead of lifetime tenure and
a binding ethics code, she doesn't talk much about those proposals
at her campaign events.
Delivering a message on abortion is simple and direct, said Alex
Badas, a political science professor at the University of Houston
who has studied the court and campaigns. “The court is kind of
esoteric,” Badas said.
In addition, Badas said, “Trump has a conservative court. He doesn’t
need to bolster that as an issue. And Harris doesn’t want to
overcommit because once she becomes president, it’s very unlikely
she’s going to be able to get the appointments needed to make the
court a more moderate court, let alone a liberal court.”
The oldest liberal justice is Sonia Sotomayor, who turned 70 in
June. Even if she were to retire, giving Harris a vacancy to fill,
it would do nothing to alter the ideological balance.
The Supreme Court rarely takes center stage in presidential
campaigns, which tend to focus on fundamental issues of war and
peace, the economy and security.
But in 2016, the sudden death of Justice Antonin Scalia delivered a
jolt to presidential politics, especially once the Republican-led
Senate refused to consider President Barack Obama's nomination of
Merrick Garland to the high court, which was otherwise split between
four Democratic liberal appointees and four Republican
conservatives. Garland is now Biden's attorney general.
“2016 was exceptional because not only did you have a vacancy, but
there was actually a vacancy that could crucially move the court in
one direction or another," said Christopher Schmidt, co-director at
the Supreme Court institute at the Chicago-Kent College of Law.
The circumstances were somewhat similar to 1968, when Republican
Richard Nixon's “law-and-order” campaign targeted the liberal Warren
Court and the nation knew the next president would appoint Earl
Warren's successor as chief justice, Schmidt said.
Biden's pledge that led to Jackson taking her place on the court
also had a historical analogue, Republican Ronald Reagan's campaign
promise to appoint the first woman. Eight months after Reagan took
office, Sandra Day O'Connor took her judicial oath.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved |