Posted on 07/05/2018 10:15:40 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Justice Anthony Kennedys retirement has given President Trump the chance to fill a second Supreme Court vacancy in less than two years. The president hit a home run with Justice Neil Gorsuch, who helped deliver conservatives and libertarians their best Supreme Court term in some time. Can Trump do it again? According to recent reports, he has interviewed seven candidates. All appear to be originalists and textualists of varying shades, and each could make an excellent justice. But keep your eye on Judge Amul Thapar, President Trumps first judicial nominee after Justice Gorsuch but someone I havent seen much written about beyond simple name-mentioning.
Thapar had already been on Trumps longer Supreme Court list as a federal district judge he was a semifinalist for the Gorsuch slot and was quickly elevated to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, which covers politically critical states in the middle of the country. That marked his third Senate confirmation, having also been the U.S. attorney (chief federal prosecutor) for eastern Kentucky, based across the river from Cincinnati.
If nominated and confirmed, Thapar would make history as the first Asian-American on the Supreme Court. His parents emigrated from India and have lived out the American dream (something that I personally can relate to). Thapars father worked at a Ford factory and started his own small heating and air conditioning business in Toledo. His mother owned a successful restaurant but sold it after 9/11 so that she could help troops transition back to civilian life. To top it off, Thapar was born in Michigan, grew up attending public schools in Ohio, and lives in Kentucky a Rust Belt trifecta.
Thapars background suggests he shares the values of ordinary citizens, including a deep appreciation for Americas opportunity. Thapar was on a plane on 9/11. After learning of the attacks mid-air, he vowed that if his plane landed safely, he would dedicate his career to serving the country he loved. Thapar promptly left his elite law firm and began what has now been 12 years of his public service.
Perhaps it's unsurprising given his background, but Thapars jurisprudence suggests he well understands a fundamental American truth worth repeating this week as we celebrate Independence Day: In the United States, we the people govern ourselves. In legal practice, individual liberty and self-governance require a commitment to textualism and originalism, such that judges stick to the text of the laws they apply and the original meaning of the Constitution.
But dont just take that from his biography its for his record that Thapar, at 49, is regarded as one of the nations brightest young judges. Take the separation of powers. When a criminal defendant argued that Thapar should oversee the Justice Departments internal procedures for prosecuting murderers, Thapar held that the Constitution prohibited a judge from micromanaging the executive branchs core law-enforcement powers. Thapar explained in United States v. Slone (2013) that federal courts may not direct the Executive Branch how to exercise its traditional prosecutorial discretion, which includes the decision whether to seek the death penalty. He specifically relied on the long American and English traditions of executive control over prosecution.
Or take federalism: In Bowling v. Parker (2012), Judge Thapar likewise relied on history when faced with a broad constitutional challenge to Congresss restrictions on habeas corpus relief for state prisoners. He rejected the argument that Congress unconstitutionally limited prisoner relitigation. He did so after examining how the writ was understood at the founding and explained why Congress acted consistently with the Constitutions original public meaning.
Thapar has an equally strong record on interpreting statutes. His comprehensive analysis of the criminal forfeiture statute in United States v. Solomon (2016) nicely showcases his principles, even in a highly technical case. Start with the text," he wrote. Binding precedent said the forfeiture statute imposed joint liability on criminals, so he did what the higher court required. But Thapar was not shy about explaining his contrary view. He looked to dictionary definitions, context, rules of interpretation, and the background law of criminal forfeiture going back to the founding to explain why that the precedent was wrong. The Supreme Court ultimately vindicated Judge Thapar, unanimously rejecting the Sixth Circuits atextual approach in Honeycutt v. United States (2017).
Given our vast administrative state, Judge Thapar has warily guarded against the temptation to deem a complex law ambiguous so that an agency can rewrite the provision to mean whatever the agency would like. In Duncan v. Muzyn (from 2018, one of his first cases as a Sixth Circuit judge), he aptly explained that simply calling something ambiguous does not make it so, even if interpretation is no easy task. To apply the provisions plain language, Thapar rigorously examined the text using dictionary definitions and surrounding context to conclude that one sides interpretation better account[ed] for the language at issue. Indeed, he has even questioned whether deferring to agencies interpretations of their own regulations makes sense at all see M.L. Johnson Family Properties v. Jewell (2017) echoing the concerns raised in recent years by Justices Gorsuch and Clarence Thomas.
These are just a few examples from a stellar record. Over the last decade, Thapar has issued over 600 opinions, being reversed only 11 times. He even wrote 36 opinions (and joined 84 others) as an appellate judge sitting by designation while he was still on the trial bench meaning that he sought out and was asked to undertake far more work and greater responsibility than was required.
Choose one of his writings at random and the same principle always shines through: a judge holding himself to the judiciarys proper role by hewing closely to the text of the law. And hes done so in a stylish way, even having an opinion selected as one of the best judicial opinions of 2015 by The Green Bag, a respected quirky legal journal. (Full disclosure: Theyve honored me for brief-writing, so I may have a soft spot for their rankings.)
I particularly like the accessibility of Thapars opinions, which also hearkens to Gorsuchs appeal. For example, a dry insurance dispute that turned on whether the amount claimed reached the minimum required for federal jurisdiction included a description of the humble penny, which tend[s] to sit at the bottom of change jars or vanish into the cracks between couch cushions. Elsewhere, Thapar wrote that if a barkeep promised to pour the man a glass of Pappy Van Winkle [a rare, expensive bourbon] but gave him a slug of Old Crow [cheap swill] instead, well, that would be fraud.
President Trump has many great choices for the Supreme Court and in other circumstances I might be writing about one of them. But if he decides to nominate Thapar, the nation will get a young, charismatic, personable, textualist and originalist who could serve on the court for three decades or more.
Sounds like a very Constitutional fellow - a refreshing change for the Supreme Court.
I”m sorry, the vast majority of Asians don’t count Indians as Asian. They are from the Indian subcontinent. It seems to be something carrying over from the Brits who consider Indians, Pakistanis and Bangladeshis as Asian. That said, since he’s American born I consider him American.
The south Asians are getting a bigger influence in this country. Might as well promote it.
Hell no.
Last time I checked a map India was still part of Asia.
When I woke up this morning the last thing on my mind was appointing an Asian to the SCOTUS.
Frankly, after thinking about it. I had it about right when I woke up.
Look, I don’t mind if a person of Asian decent is selected. It’s just not of any interest to me to consider that in the process.
Pick the best person.
Maybe so; but I didn’t see anything especially conservative or better said, strict constitutionalist in him...and I live in Cincy where he is...so, to show lack of bias, Indian food is my favorite, too...if someone can show me otherwise on his rulings, writings, I’d like to be wrong.
True but in the US they have not traditionally been referred to as “Asians”. How about we just refer to him as American? If he subscribes to identity politics then he wouldn’t be right for the SC in the first place.
“Thapar would make history as the first Asian-American on the Supreme Court.”
This now endless “first” label on anything that serves as a resume enhancement has always been tiring to me.
I guess we need the Supreme Court filled up with “firsters”, the first trannie, first openly gay, the first Apache, etc. to achieve judicial perfection. Forget competence.
totally agree that hyphenizing Americans is divisive and in a perfect world such would not be a ‘thing’ (as the youts like to say).
He is. Thapar is one of the seven he’s interviewed. Since we’re supposed to have a nominee on Monday, I’m sure the seven are being seriously considered, vetted, and evaluated.
He has a number of good choices (and a couple who are more dubious.) I wouldn’t be surprised if Thapar remains on the “short list” if he’s not nominated this time.
RE: Hell no.
Can you elaborate why not?
RE: I didnt see anything especially conservative or better said, strict constitutionalist in him
Doesn’t the reasons presented in this article indicate that he will be a strict constitutionalist?
Le’s just say I’m a software engineer and leave it at that. Yes, I’m bitter.
RE: Les just say Im a software engineer and leave it at that. Yes, Im bitter.
Hey, I’m a software engineer too and I have AMERICAN colleagues who are very good at what they do in IT.
And yes, they happen to be of Indian ancestry.
Didn’t affect my career, just had to clean up a LOT of messes over the years.
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