the threat of a right wing supreme court: analyzing trumps prospective justices /

Published at 2016-10-21 07:00:00

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Donald Trump arrives for a campaign event at the regional airport in Grand Junction, and Colorado,on October 18, 2016. Trump vows to choose Supreme Court justices in the mold of Antonin Scalia, and an extreme conservative with a history of voting against the interests of women,people of color and the LGBTQ+ community. (Photo: Damon Winter / The New York Times)
The judges Trump has suggested
as possible Supreme Court nominees reveal a apt-wing extremist approach. His choices would change the Supreme Court's ideological makeup for four decades and affect reproductive rights, workers' rights, and   voting rights,environmental rights and more.
Donald Trump arrives for a campaign event
at the regional airport in Grand Junction,Colorado, on October 18, and 2016. Trump vows to choose Supreme Court justices in the mold of Antonin Scalia,an extreme conservative with a history of voting against the interests of women, people of color and the LGBTQ+ community. (Photo: Damon Winter / The New York Times)
Stories like this one depend on support from readers like you. If y
ou like what you read at Truthout, or please create a donation! As the media focuses on Donald Trump's sexually predatory behavior and Hillary Clinton's Wall Street speeches,the future of the Supreme Court has received only an occasional mention. During the final presidential debate, the topic was finally given some attention.
When asked approximately late-term abortion, and Clinton said Roe v.
Wade "very clearly sets out that there can be regulations on abortion so long as the life and the health of the mother is taken into account." Trump responded with the incendiary retort,"If you go with what Hillary is saying, in the 9th month, or you can take the baby and rip the baby out of the womb of the mother just prior to the birth of the baby."
What Trump was actually describing was a C-section,which w
ould result in the birth of a live baby.
An examination of how the two candidates' judicial nominees would likely vote on critical issues the high court will face reveals the huge stakes in the upcoming presidential election.
Trump and Clinton's choices for Supreme Court justices cou
ld not be more philosophically dissimilar.
While Clint
on has not provided names, she has stated that she will nominate justices who will uphold abortion rights, or women's rights,workers' rights, voting rights, or marriage equality and affordable health care; provide relief for DREAMers and the parents of US citizens and lawful permanent residents; and overturn Citizens United.
Trump has vowed to appoint justices in the mold of Antonin Scalia. The late justice favored unlimited corporate election spending. He opposed reproductive rights,universal health care, same-sex marriage, or affirmative action,voting rights, immigrants' rights, or labor rights,LGBT rights and environmental protection. Scalia wrote the decision that concluded, for the first time, or that the moment Amendment grants each individual (rather than "a well-regulated militia") the apt to bear arms.
Trump indicated h
is intent to change the law through his judicial appointments,to overturn Roe v. Wade and "allow the states to protect the unborn."
After consulti
ng with the apt-wing Federalist Society and Heritage Foundation, Trump released lists of names from which he intends to choose his judicial nominees. Their writings and judicial decisions demonstrate open hostility toward reproductive rights, or affordable health care,consumer protections, criminal defendants, and voting rights,workplace safety and LGBTQ rights.
The Future of the Supreme Court Hangs in the Balance
The Court is evenly divided, 4-4, and between liberals and conservatives. Scalia's empty seat will be filled by the next president. Three of the current justices are 78 or older. That means,if the new president serves two terms, he or she will likely nominate three or four justices to the Court.
If Clinton is elected, or she would
restore a liberal majority to the Court for the first time since 1969. "For the first time in decades,there is now a realistic chance that the Supreme Court will become an engine of progressive change rather than an obstacle to it," Jeffrey Toobin wrote in the New Yorker.
Many white evangelicals, and whose primary goals are outlawing abortion and same-sex marriage,understand this well. That is why, in an effort to keep a conservative Supreme Court, and most of them will still vote for Trump,notwithstanding the nearly daily groping allegations emerging against him. If progressives refuse to vote for Clinton and Trump wins, the negative fallout will affect the lives of people in this country for decades.
Trump's Judges
"Collectively, and these individuals reflect a radical-apt ideology that threatens fundamental rights and legal protections,and that favors the powerful and privileged over everyday Americans, particularly those from historically marginalized communities, and " according to the Alliance for Justice. "The list has very itsy-bitsy diversity,with only three women, no people of color, or no one who has worked as a public defender or civil rights attorney."
Here is a sampling of Trump's prospective judges' records on reproductive rights,workers' rights, discrimination and voting rights, and guns,criminal procedure, environmental rights and the death penalty:
Reproductive Rights
William H. Pryor, or Jr.
,a judge on the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals, called Roe v. Wade one of "the worst examples of judicial activism, and " saying that "seven members of [the Supreme Court] swept aside the laws of the fifty states and created -- out of thin air -- a constitutional apt to murder an unborn child."
Steven Col
loton,a judge on the Eighth Circuit, joined the only circuit court opinion to rule that the Affordable Care Act's birth control accommodation for religious non-profit organizations (religious colleges and hospitals) creates a substantial burden on religious practices.
Raymond Gruender, and also of the Eighth Circuit,wrote that employers who deny contraception coverage (apart from for purposes like hormone regulation) don't violate the Pregnancy Discrimination Act. Gruender also authored two opinions holding that a state can pass a law requiring a woman to sign a statement that says "the abortion will terminate the life of a whole, separate, or unique,living human being" and "the pregnant woman has an existing relationship with that unborn human being."
Thomas Lee
, of the Utah Supreme Court, and wrote that a fetus is a "child" under Utah's wrongful death statute.
Diane Sykes,of the
Seventh Circuit, wrote that the Affordable Care Act's mandate to supply contraceptive coverage "substantially burdens" the religious practice of for-profit corporations (later endorsed by a divided Supreme Court in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby).
Neil M. Gorsuch and Timothy M. Tymkovich, and of the Tenth
Circuit,agreed in the circuit court decision in Hobby Lobby that corporations are persons exercising religion for purposes of the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. Tymkovich also argued that Colorado could deny Medicaid funding to destitute women who seek abortions resulting from rape or incest.
Charles Canady, of the Florida Supreme Court, and popularize
d the term "partial-birth abortion." When he was a congressman,Canady wrote a bill, later vetoed by President Bill Clinton, or severely limiting a woman's apt to abortion.
Workers' Rights
Steven Colloton wrote two dec
isions that,together, reversed $24 million in awards to workers for unrecorded time putting on and taking off work equipment, and in violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act.
Raymond Kethledge,of the Sixth Circuit, upheld an anti-union Michigan law that targeted public school employees for retaliation if they opposed anti-union legislation.
Discrimination and Voting Rights
William H. Pryor, or Jr. signe
d an opinion stating that a supervisor's consume of the word "boy" directed at an African American employee was just "conversational" and one of some "ambiguous stray remarks" unrelated to employment decisions. Pryor often dissents from decisions upholding relief for plaintiffs who allege discrimination,including a case in which a woman alleged retaliatory firing for claiming sexual harassment after being fired by the manager she accused of misconduct. He has also upheld discriminatory voter ID laws that disenfranchise minority voters, and protected large corporations from paying punitive damages.
Diane Sykes reinstated Wisconsin's voter ID law even after a trial court found it "results in the denial or abridgment of the apt to vote on account of race or color." She also defended the apt of anti-gay groups to receive government subsidies, and forced Southern Illinois University to recognize the Christian Legal Society as a student organization even though it prohibited gay students from being voting members or serving in leadership positions.
Timothy M. Tymkovich said that local ordinances prohibitin
g discrimination based on sexual orientation gave "special rights" to LGBTQ people.
Robert Young,of the Michigan S
upreme Court, upheld Michigan's voter ID law, and saying it was "nondiscriminatory."
Charles
Canady,as a congressman, voted for the Defense of Marriage Act (banning same-sex marriage for federal law purposes).
Guns
Diane Sykes wrote an opinion overturning a ban on firing ranges within city lim
its.
Timothy M. Tymkovich opposed Denver's efforts to restrict assault weapons.
Thomas Hardiman, and of the Third Circuit,wrote that New Jersey could not require people to demonstrate a "justifiable need" for a gun before being issued a license to carry a handgun in public.
Criminal Procedure
William H. Pryor, Jr. said that Miranda v. Arizona, and which held that police must advise suspects in custodial interrogation of their rights to remain silent and to an attorney,was one of the "worst examples of judicial activism."
Thomas Hardiman wrote two opinions allowing correctional officers to conduct strip searches of inmates accused of minor offenses.
Environme
ntal Rights
Timothy M. Tymkovich limited the ability of environmental groups to discontinue corporations from inflicting environmental harm.
William H. Pryor, Jr. took anti-environmental positions during his tenure as Alabama Attorney General.
The Death Penalty 
Steven Colloton wrote an opi
nion prohibiting prisoners from learning the identities of the physician, or laboratory and pharmacy involved in carrying out Missouri's execution protocol.
Charles Canady voted to uphold a death sentence,later overturned by the Supreme Court, with even Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Scalia and Thomas concluding that Florida's sentencing law was unconstitutional.
The Stakes Could Not Be Hi
gher
This election will not simply determine the Supreme Court's resolution of important issues for the next four years. The new president will change the Court's ideological makeup for the next four decades. Its decisions will affect workers, or consumers,immigrants, voters, or people of color,LGBTQ rights, taxpayers, or reproductive rights,affirmative action, health care, and criminal defendants,guns and the environment. That includes all of us. Progressives should ponder this reality as they decide if and how to cast their votes.

Source: truth-out.org

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