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Bitter partisan battle wounded Kavanaugh and the Supreme Court he’s joined

As the newest justice prepared for his Tuesday debut, his colleagues on the bench already had moved quickly to paper over the damage.

© Fred Schilling/AP Chief Justice John Roberts, right, administers the Constitutional Oath to Judge Brett Kavanaugh in the Justices' Conference Room of the Supreme Court Building. Ashley Kavanaugh holds the Bible. In the foreground are their daughters, Margaret, left, and Liza. (Fred Schilling/Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States via AP)

By Robert Barnes, The Washington Post

It is easy to answer the question of how Brett M. Kavanaugh will be received by his fellow justices at the Supreme Court after a historically bitter and tumultuous confirmation battle: as one of nine equals, with whom they will work for the rest of their careers.

The tougher question is how months of partisan warfare will affect the court’s image. Can the justices convince the public that their solidified 5-to-4 split — with conservative Republican-nominated justices on one side and liberal Democratic-appointed justices on the other — is any different from the 50-to-48 vote across the street in Congress that elevated Kavanaugh?

“At an earlier point in the hearings, [Kavanaugh] insisted that ‘the Supreme Court must never, never be viewed as a partisan institution,’ ” said Deborah Rhode, director of the Center on the Legal Profession at Stanford Law School. “That train has left the station.”

Kavanaugh was at the Supreme Court Sunday with his law clerks — he has made good on his promise at the hearings to become the first justice to hire women for all four positions — preparing for his Tuesday debut. But his new colleagues had already moved to paper over the damage.

Liberal justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Elena Kagan joined conservatives Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr. at Kavanaugh’s hastily called private swearing-in ceremony Saturday night to witness Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. administer the oath.

That some colleagues were missing was a matter of scheduling, not protest.

The justices can resemble a family in that way: They can harshly criticize each other — at least in the confined spaces of legal opinions — but form a solid perimeter when the attacks come from outside the Marble Palace.

“There is a very strong norm of congeniality on the Supreme Court, which I think has only gotten stronger,” said Kermit Roosevelt, a law professor at the University of Pennsylvania. who clerked for Justice David Souter, now retired. “I expect that whatever goes on behind the scenes, we’ll never know.”

Justice Sonia Sotomayor reflected that even before Kavanaugh was confirmed.

“We have to rise above partisanship in our personal relationships,” Sotomayor said Friday in a joint appearance with Kagan at their alma mater, Princeton University.

“We have to treat each other with respect and dignity and with a sense of amicability that the rest of the world doesn’t often share.”

There’s a practical aspect to that, as well, Roosevelt noted: “There are serious costs to alienating your fellow justices.”

This would be especially true for liberal justices, of which Sotomayor and Kagan are two, who could be presumed to be most aggrieved by Kavanaugh’s nomination and confirmation. They simply can’t prevail on an issue without convincing one of the conservatives to join their side.

Thomas, whose own divisive confirmation process in 1991 was the last to polarize the nation as Kavanaugh’s did, has recalled Justice Byron White’s words to him when he was finally confirmed:

“It doesn’t matter how you got here. All that matters now is what you do here.”

Thomas has gone from wearing a bulletproof vest, as he recounted in his memoir, to seeing his once idiosyncratic legal views embraced by new members of the court. His clerks have risen to prominent positions in the Trump administration and choice jobs on the nation’s appeals courts.

His strained relationship with his law school alma mater, Yale, has been repaired in recent years, largely because of efforts by the school’s liberal faculty and deans.

The exception to the bonhomie for Kavanaugh came from retired Justice John Paul Stevens. The 98-year-old Stevens took the highly unusual step of saying he thought Kavanaugh’s angry and emotional testimony at a hearing confronting allegations of a teenage sexual assault were enough to disqualify the judge from the Supreme Court.

He also somewhat tartly dismissed comparisons of Kavanaugh to Thomas, saying he had served — and disagreed with — Thomas for years.

“You cannot help but like Clarence Thomas,” Stevens said, “which I don’t think necessarily would be true of this particular nominee.”

There’s no evidence that current members of the court feel that way. Kavanaugh has been a prominent member of the federal judiciary, with 12 years on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and ties to each member of the court.

He served with Roberts in the George W. Bush administration, and championed Roberts’s elevation to the Supreme Court. Kagan hired him to teach a class when she was dean of Harvard Law School. Fellow Trump nominee Neil M. Gorsuch was also a fellow classmate at Georgetown Prep, two years junior. Kavanaugh’s clerks are routinely hired at the Supreme Court.

But Kavanaugh faces some obstacles even Thomas did not.

Thomas’s hearings “didn’t manage to get quite as ugly as this one or get quite as partisan as this one,” said Barry Friedman, a law professor at New York University who writes about the court and public opinion.

Trump had something to do with that. He mimicked Kavanaugh’s accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, at a political rally, where there were chants of “We want Kavanaugh!”

Thomas, nominated by President George H.W. Bush, was approved by a Democratic-controlled Senate, and public opinion polls showed voters favored his nomination, even after charges of sexual harassment, which he denied.

Polls did not show Kavanaugh with majority support, and his vote was almost exclusively along party lines. Some House Democrats have vowed impeachment proceedings for what they consider his untruthfulness during the Senate hearings.

Documents from his service in the Bush White House, which Senate Republicans said were not relevant to Kavanaugh’s confirmation, will become public at some point.

“I don’t imagine muckraking about his life ceases” with his confirmation, Friedman said. “He’s under a microscope.”

And Kavanaugh’s own words could cause problems. His retort that the charges against him were retribution by those who couldn’t accept Trump’s 2016 election and that he was a victim of “revenge on behalf of the Clintons” will return when he is called upon to decide politically sensitive cases. (Kavanaugh in an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal said he had gone too far in some of his remarks, but did not say which ones.)

Justices usually recuse from cases when they have a conflict involving family or finances, and make the decision for themselves. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has not recused herself from cases involving the Trump administration after making derogatory comments about Trump before the election, which she said she should not have made.

Michael McConnell, a former federal appeals court judge and head of Stanford’s Constitutional Law Center, said he did not think Kavanaugh had anything to apologize for.

“I do not share the premise that Kavanaugh’s anger was out of place,” he said. “And I cannot imagine the issue on which his testimony would require recusal.”

But McConnell’s colleague Rhode said that if Kavanaugh does not recuse in some cases, it will only highlight the system of justices making such decisions on their own.

“Rarely do justices recuse themselves because of prior statements or partisan positions or affiliations,” she said. “If Justice Kavanaugh continues in this tradition, his participation in cases involving the president or his political opponents, or issues on which he worked in the Bush White House, will surely raise concerns about his capacity to be disinterested.”

The court’s docket, at this point, does not contain those kinds of issues. But the unconstitutionality of partisan gerrymandering, which carries major implications for the political parties, will be back. Questions of executive power are inevitable.

Sometimes the court has control over the issues it hears, and sometimes not.

The discretionary part of the docket will be an important thing to monitor, said Richard Lazarus, a Harvard law professor who closely watches the court.

“One bellwether might be the nature of the legal issues the justices accept for review in the near future,” he said.

Speculation has been that the newly energized right side of the court might want to take cases that push the envelope, now that the more moderate Justice Anthony M. Kennedy has been replaced by conservative Kavanaugh, Lazarus said.

“Perhaps now those four, including Kavanaugh, might decide it is prudent for the court, for the good of the nation, to reduce the court’s profile,” he said.

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Politics News: Bitter partisan battle wounded Kavanaugh and the Supreme Court he’s joined
Bitter partisan battle wounded Kavanaugh and the Supreme Court he’s joined
As the newest justice prepared for his Tuesday debut, his colleagues on the bench already had moved quickly to paper over the damage.
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