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If Kavanaugh And Coney Barrett Betray Pro-Lifers, We Must Blow Up The Conservative Legal Movement
The Federalist ^ | 11/05/2021 | Rachel Bovard

Posted on 11/05/2021 8:32:52 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

If we don't have justices who are comfortable overturning outrageously unconstitutional abortion rulings, it will be proof of the conservative legal movement's utter failure.

Less than a handful of years after their hard-won elevation to the Supreme Court, Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett are sending a chill down the spines of conservatives with a string of bad signals from their seats on the court.

In July, Kavanaugh and Barrett joined the court’s leftist majority in declining to hear Arlene’s Flowers v. Washington, a critical religious liberty case. They again sided with the court’s left in a similar decision to turn away a religious exemption challenge to Maine’s vaccine mandate — which Justices Neil Gorsuch, Samuel Alito, and Clarence Thomas took pains to note was staggering in its hypocrisy.

“A State may not assume ‘the best of individuals engaged in their secular lives while assuming ‘the worst’ about the habits of religious persons,” the trio wrote.

Just this week, Barrett and Kavanaugh embraced a theory of judicial supremacy out of step with a more conservative tradition when they both appeared openly skeptical of the construction of the Texas abortion law, which bans the practice after six weeks of pregnancy.

All of this should make the guts of conservatives churn in the leadup to next month’s oral arguments in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health, the biggest abortion case the court has heard in decades. I’ve written about the importance of this case before:

While abortion cases post-Roe have tricked up to the Supreme Court on rare occasions, none have presented the clear and fundamental question that Dobbs now brings: whether or not bans on pre-viability elective abortions violate the Constitution.

In ruling on this case, the Court will have the opportunity to overturn both Roe and Casey, which together form the architecture for a constitutional entilement to abortion.

It is not an understatement to say this is the case pro-life conservatives have been waiting for. It’s why many in our movement willingly shed blood in the vicious fight for the confirmations of Kavanaugh, Barrett, and Gorsuch. The prospect of a majority conservative court was a key reason millions of Republicans turned out to vote for Donald Trump.

So the trepidation conservatives now feel about where Kavanaugh and Barrett may end up on Dobbs is both unexpected and unwelcome. There is a distinct possibility that Barrett, Kavanaugh, and possibly the George W. Bush-appointed Chief Justice John Roberts will find a way to hedge; to “both sides” their way into a narrow and distorted opinion in a case that, as Mississippi’s Attorney General Lynn Fitch has laid out, demands a clear imperative with regard to the dubious constitutional standing of Roe and Casey.

To be clear, with a 6-3 allegedly conservative court, anything less than a decision ringing with clarity on the dismissal of Roe and Casey should be viewed as a failure. Despite the goal-post-shifting going on in establishment Republican legal circles, there is no “long game” here. Although some will argue that any ruling that chips away at Casey is good enough, Roe is the case that created the constitutional entitlement. It is the architecture upon which the legal abortion structure is built. Both Roe and Casey must go.

As Notre Dame law professor Sherif Girgis argued recently, “Upholding the Mississippi law without overruling the court’s previous abortion cases would lack support in any legal source, send even more abortion cases to the court and curb the justices’ ability to overrule Roe down the road.”

We have played the long game for the last 50 years. And we have finally arrived at the decision point, with a case that demands a clear accounting of rulings that Justice Thomas has criticized as “creat[ing] the right to abortion out of whole cloth.” Here to litigate it is a Supreme Court that doesn’t again require “just one more justice,” but is finally positioned to address the question.

If the outcome of Dobbs is indeed a hedge that splits the court’s conservatives — or, to put it more bluntly, if the conservative legal movement has failed to produce Supreme Court justices who are comfortable overturning two outrageously constitutionally defective rulings on abortion — we will be left to justifiably wonder what the whole project has been for.

The Judges Are Our Politicians Now

That we are even in the position to openly speculate where Kavanaugh, Barrett, and Roberts might end up on such a foundational conservative legal question should itself prompt reflection, not only about the expanded role the court now plays in our self-government, but also about how we select our judicial masters.

The court has become an extension of our politics, and that is just as much a choice from Republicans as it has been from Democrats. It wasn’t supposed to be this way. The American founders envisioned a judiciary that was largely subject to a muscular legislature, not the branch that ruled it. But this inversion is what the modern Congress has come to prefer.

The profound questions of our social order — immigration policy, questions of human dignity and the sanctity of life, of marriage, religious liberty, and civil rights — are no longer determined by the legislature, but by unelected and thus unaccountable jurists.

As a case study in congressional preference for judicial decisionmaking, view the collective shrug that resounded from Republicans in Congress when Gorsuch tossed sex and gender identity into the 1965 Civil Rights Act in 2020. Or consider the lack of comprehensive effort among congressional Republicans to challenge President Joe Biden’s sweeping and unprecedented vaccine mandate, now that the Supreme Court has repeatedly sidestepped it.

Also consider the limp non-response from congressional Republicans to the court upholding President Obama’s clear abuse of rulemaking in creating the illegal amnesty program known as the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA. Add the one pro-life vote Republican majorities allow each year in lieu of an energized campaign to persuade, expose, defund, and actively legislate on one of their key platform issues.

Republicans in the Senate, in particular, will huff about not having 60 votes as a reason none of these policies would be possible. But such a position ignores the actual work of lawmaking: using a majority to vote relentlessly on priority issues, messaging constantly toward a specific policy end, and creating a voting record unfavorable to the opposition.

The last legislative pro-life victory, the ban on partial-birth abortion in 2003, invoked nearly all of these methods. Today, it’s a rarity for the Senate, regardless of party control, to show up for work more than 2.5 days a week.

A New System of Judicial Vetting

In 2018, this largely implicit preference to outsource policy-making to the courts became explicit when then-Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell decided to forgo using the Senate GOP majority to try and legislate, but rather to confirm as many judges as possible.

There were pros and cons to this choice, but the clear upshot of asking judges to make every consequential determination about how the country will be ruled is that judges become, effectively, our politicians — unelected politicians with lifetime appointments, but politicians nonetheless. Yet on the right, we do not vet them as such. Not even close.

I’ve addressed the contradictory and self-defeating aspects of this position before:

…expecting judges to rule on matters of policy and politics while simultaneously refusing to vet them for their beliefs in those matters is both contradictory and unsustainable. A party cannot on one hand expect judges to issue the correct policy decrees while on the other hand studiously fail to take any steps to guarantee that outcome.

While the left has not been shy about their practice of nominating stone-cold activists, the right has always held to the norm that judges should be interpreters of the text in front of them rather than ideologues who use the bench to invent new values-driven legal theories that impose their own views on the country.

This is, of course, the prudent and correct standard of judging and of judicial interpretation, writ large. But it fails to account for the intentional shift of expectations that have taken place from the “judge-as-textualist-interpreter” to our current conception of the “judge-as-legislator.” In many ways, the right’s ideological position of applying the normative standard of restrained judicial vetting seems out of step with the current post-normative reality of how the country is actually ruled.

The left accounted for this shift long ago, and it is why they never suffer a surprise decision from their nominees. They already know exactly where their judges stand on every issue, minuscule to monumental. But since the right is now a regular and active participant in placing the burden of self-government onto the judiciary, it would seem as though we should do more to ensure that the people we place in those positions will actually uphold our interests.

For starters, this should mean that the imprimatur of the Federalist Society requires more questions, not less. We should applaud, not condemn, Republican senators who do their jobs and vigorously question the nominees of both the right and the left, and who hold exacting standards for nominees on constitutional questions. Also, the conservative movement as a whole, not just a select few, should be welcome to offer input into the selection process for nominations to key judicial positions.

If Congress is going to continue passing off the questions of self-government to the court — that is, if they are going to force judges into making choices that are inherently political — then perhaps the cleanest response is to simply put the politicians on the court.

Among Republicans in the Senate, there are three former Supreme Court clerks: Sens. Mike Lee, Ted Cruz, and Josh Hawley. If another vacancy presents itself under a Republican administration, perhaps it’s time we skip the backroom Federalist Society coronation of some pre-selected circuit court judge and simply elevate a senator to the Supreme Court.

At least senators have a record of votes we can examine. Unlike Kavanaugh, Barrett, and even Gorsuch on transgender issues, there will be mercifully few surprises about where they actually stand. The conservative movement cannot afford bitter surprises, at least not when the Supreme Court has taken for itself, with the willing encouragement of the legislature, a dual role of interpreting the law as well as making it.


Rachel Bovard is The Federalist's senior tech columnist and the senior director of policy at the Conservative Partnership Institute.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: abortion; conservatism; scotus
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1 posted on 11/05/2021 8:32:52 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Speaking very generally, conservative (or at least ostensibly conservative lawmakers) still very much trust the swamp.

This certainly means the Federalist Society, which has had a hand in every “conservative” Judge’s nomination for the past 40 years.

But Trump’s persecution showed me its even worse for anyone who has connections to the DOJ, FBI and intelligence agencies and most of the military-industrial-complex.


2 posted on 11/05/2021 8:40:38 AM PDT by PGR88
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That wouldn’t surprise me if they didn’t act on abortion, but they have been awful on the other rulings.


3 posted on 11/05/2021 8:40:49 AM PDT by TakebackGOP
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To: SeekAndFind

Both of them have been compromised and brought to heel of the deep state. Having young children makes a parent very protective.


4 posted on 11/05/2021 8:41:17 AM PDT by Buckeye Battle Cry (Progressivism is socialism. Venezuela is how it ends.)
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To: SeekAndFind

If I were president, I would asking potential nominees “Would you try to overturn Roe v Wade?” and “Would you try to eliminate all gun control laws in the country?”.

The answer to both is Yes, or else the interview is over. And if they hemm and haww and try to respond in a proper “legalistic” manner — then the interview is REALLY over because I would be looking for a politician on the Supreme Court, NOT a judge.

It’s our turn.


5 posted on 11/05/2021 8:41:35 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (Alec Baldwin has killed more people than the Jan 6 protesters. And he will serve less jail time.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The conservative legal movement was blown up by the assassination of Antonin Scalia. These judges are too young to know what the rule of law looks like.

They were trained in law schools by law professors who ridiculed the language of the constitution and believe the “body of work” by the Supreme Court has some sort of supernatural primacy. I know because I went to one of those law schools. Even ostensibly “conservative” attorneys live in the paradigm of the Warren/Burger courts’ distortion of traditional constitutional precepts and result-driven reasoning. They are like fish in an aquarium who cannot conceive of life outside this framework.

It takes unbelievable guts for a judge to rule against this orthodoxy and face the inevitable ridicule of peers and academia. I don’t think either one of these two has the moxy and guts to be true to conservative principles.


6 posted on 11/05/2021 8:43:26 AM PDT by con-surf-ative
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To: con-surf-ative

RE: The conservative legal movement was blown up by the assassination of Antonin Scalia

Has this been confirmed?


7 posted on 11/05/2021 8:46:13 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
At least senators have a record of votes we can examine. Unlike [judges], there will be mercifully few surprises about where they actually stand

Except that's not true. As senators, they voted knowing that their votes would be judged by the electorate. As Justices, they would be beholden to nobody except the high bar of impeachment. Expect surprises no matter who is selected.

8 posted on 11/05/2021 8:46:22 AM PDT by cmj328 (We live here.)
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To: SeekAndFind

What both these Judges are saying is:
“You want something...pass a law...we are not here to write laws from the bench”
Right now nothing is going to get out of Congress so we will have to deal with rulings as the go.


9 posted on 11/05/2021 8:48:06 AM PDT by Zathras
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To: SeekAndFind

Gee, I wonder how they got on the Supreme Court.


10 posted on 11/05/2021 8:48:19 AM PDT by AppyPappy (How many fingers am I holding up, Winston? )
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To: AppyPappy

RE: Gee, I wonder how they got on the Supreme Court.

Trump believed they were true constitutionalist and nominated them. The rest is history.


11 posted on 11/05/2021 8:50:32 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

If? Forgedaboudit, it’s not an “if”.


12 posted on 11/05/2021 8:51:16 AM PDT by SaxxonWoods (I'm Massively Offended by People Who Are Massively Offended Over Nothing. )
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To: con-surf-ative

The Government is not the answer to anything.

If you are looking there, you are very confused, or just stupid.

CHOOSE the Red Pill.

Freedom says you do what you want, and I do what I want.

Eff you if you don’t like me or what I do.

And I have no place in ruling over you.

EVERYTHING else is a corruption of Freedom.

Simple.

Freedom = Peace


13 posted on 11/05/2021 8:51:24 AM PDT by Macoozie (Handcuffs and Orange Jumpsuits)
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To: SeekAndFind

Kavanaugh was getting hammered here before he was nominated


14 posted on 11/05/2021 8:55:37 AM PDT by AppyPappy (How many fingers am I holding up, Winston? )
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To: SeekAndFind

Barrett has been a real disappointment.

Something happens when they become a SCOTUS justice.


15 posted on 11/05/2021 8:58:47 AM PDT by proud American in Canada ("Fear is a reaction; Courage is a decision." Winston Churchill)
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To: SeekAndFind

“If Kavanaugh And Coney Barrett Betray Pro-Lifers”

Headline should read, “WHEN Kavanaugh And Coney Barrett Betray Pro-Lifers,” as it’s fait accompli from those two establishment hacks.


16 posted on 11/05/2021 9:05:30 AM PDT by irishjuggler
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To: con-surf-ative

Scalia, Thomas and Alito stood by silently while the ineligible Kenyan from Indonesia was sworn in in direct violation of the Constitution.


17 posted on 11/05/2021 9:06:20 AM PDT by Lurkinanloomin ( (Natural born citizens are born here of citizen parents)(Know Islam, No Peace-No Islam, Know Peace)
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To: SeekAndFind

No, to my knowledge it has not been confirmed, but neither has it been disproven. I put it in the same category as other mysterious deaths of conservatives like Breitbart and others.

The comment represents my opinion, not a factual assertion.


18 posted on 11/05/2021 9:07:19 AM PDT by con-surf-ative
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If we don't have justices who are comfortable overturning outrageously unconstitutional abortion rulings, it will be proof of the conservative legal movement's utter failure

This sounds like something I would have written. I completely agree.

19 posted on 11/05/2021 9:07:27 AM PDT by JonPreston (Q: Never have so many, been so wrong, so often)
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To: proud American in Canada

We basically have a 7-2 or 6-3 leftist court now. Alito and Thomas are the only true conservatives and constitutionalists. Gorusch we can count on occasionally. The rest are either closet liberals or full-on Marxists.
Just my take.


20 posted on 11/05/2021 9:08:00 AM PDT by Deo volente ("When we see the image of a baby in the womb, we glimpse the majesty of God's creation." Pres. Trump)
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