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How Will the Supreme Court Treat Donald Trump?

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David Cole,
老澳门开奖结果 Legal Director
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May 10, 2018

This piece was originally published at .

On April 25, the Supreme Court heard its final argument for the current term鈥攆ittingly, in , the challenge to President Trump鈥檚 so-called 鈥淢uslim ban.鈥 That case will provide the first direct Supreme Court test of this administration鈥檚 excesses. But it is only one of the many blockbuster cases still to be decided this term鈥攊n nearly all of which the administration has urged the Court to adopt radical positions, overruling or disregarding precedent to further the White House鈥檚 political ends. By the end of June, when it recesses for the summer, we will have a much better sense of whether the newly reconstituted Roberts Court, joined by Neil Gorsuch last term, will prove a brake on the president, or an aider and abettor in his radical schemes. (Disclaimer: The 老澳门开奖结果, where I serve as national legal director, is counsel in several of the cases discussed here and has filed friend-of-the-court briefs in most of the others.)

In the Muslim-ban case, the administration argues that the Court should simply ignore abundant evidence that Trump intended to ban Muslims by using nations as proxies for religion. This argument breaks from precedent instructing that, in assessing whether the government has violated the establishment clause by favoring or disfavoring a particular religion, judges must review all 鈥減ublicly available evidence鈥 and cannot 鈥渢urn a blind eye to the context in which [the] policy arose.鈥 Solicitor General Noel Francisco sought to close his oral argument with a flourish by claiming that Trump had been 鈥渃rystal-clear鈥hat he had no intention of imposing the Muslim ban.鈥 But the opposite is true, and the following week Trump insisted, yet again, that he would not apologize for the ban. To side with the president and uphold an unprecedented bar to entry for 150 million people, virtually all of them Muslim, would mark a radical and disturbing departure from the Court鈥檚 establishment-clause precedent.

In Carpenter v. United States, the Trump administration鈥檚 position would mark the end of privacy in the digital age. The specific dispute concerns whether the government needs a warrant to obtain records of the cell towers that an individual鈥檚 phone connected to over the course of several months. The data allows the government to construct a map of everywhere an individual traveled 24/7 as long as he or she was carrying the phone. The administration argues that because we 鈥渧oluntarily鈥 give this information to our cell-phone service providers when we use a phone, there is no Fourth Amendment protection for it. By that reasoning, all information shared digitally鈥攊ncluding e-mails, Web searches, and the Internet sites one reads or views鈥攚ould become an open book for the government. It would end privacy as we have known it for the past 200 years.

In Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission, the Trump administration yet again broke with precedent to further its political agenda. Never before in its history has the Justice Department supported a constitutional exemption from a nondiscrimination statute. One of the department鈥檚 principal responsibilities is to enforce civil-rights laws, and it has always opposed arguments that businesses have a constitutional right to discriminate. But not this time. The Trump administration filed a brief arguing that bakers should have a First Amendment right to refuse to make a cake for a same-sex wedding, even if they would make the same cake for an opposite-sex wedding.

The fate of public-sector unions is in the Court鈥檚 hands this term as well, and again the Trump administration has urged it to depart from precedent. The Court is considering a First Amendment to a law common in many states that requires workers who are not members of a union to pay fees to cover the services that the union must provide by law to all employees, such as collective bargaining and the processing of grievances. More than 40 years ago, the Court upheld such fees as long as they were not used for political advocacy. The First Amendment, the Court reasoned, does not give non-members the right to impose the cost of services they receive on others. But Trump has asked the Court to overrule that precedent and deal what could be a fatal blow to public-sector unions.

In Lucia v. Securities and Exchange Commission, the Trump administration has even challenged the constitutionality of its own executive officials鈥攂ecause doing so furthers the right鈥檚 attack on the administrative state. Ever since the New Deal, the federal government has operated in large measure through administrative agencies, like the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Environmental Protection Agency, that issue rules, punish violations, and often adjudicate cases. In order to assure independence, the administrative-law judges who preside over the individual cases for these agencies are often insulated, much like the civil service, from direct hiring and firing by the president or other political actors. But conservatives opposed to 鈥渂ig government鈥 have urged that these individuals must be direct political appointees, a result that would raise serious fairness and integrity concerns. The Justice Department successfully defended the SEC鈥檚 independence from political interference in the lower courts, but switched sides before the Supreme Court when Trump took office. A broad ruling could call into question the legality of administrative-law judge appointments in many other federal agencies.

In Husted v. A. Philip Randolph Institute, the Justice Department also switched sides after Trump came to power, but in doing so also reversed more than 20 years of department precedent. In the lower courts, the department had sided with challengers to Ohio鈥檚 practice of removing voters from the rolls if they fail to vote and fail to respond to a single mailed notice, even where there鈥檚 no basis to believe that the individual has become ineligible to vote. Under both Republican and Democratic administrations, the Justice Department had maintained that such practices violate the federal 鈥渕otor voter鈥 law. But the Trump administration, in keeping with the Republican Party鈥檚 tactic of suppressing voter turnout where high turnout favors Democrats, has urged the Court to stand with voter suppression. And in another voting case to be decided this term, Abbott v. Perez, the Justice Department, which originally sued Texas for racially discriminatory voting maps, has yet again switched sides, and now defends the very state it sued.

The pattern that emerges reflects an administration that cares little for precedent, and that will switch sides in a case at the drop of a hat if it serves the agenda of its radical base. Politics at the Justice Department is not exactly new, but the brazenness of this administration鈥檚 positions is unprecedented. The solicitor general is sometimes referred to as the 鈥渢enth justice,鈥 because he or she is supposed to be more loyal to the law than to politics. That tradition, like so many others, has been abandoned by this administration and this solicitor general. The question now is whether the Supreme Court will go along for the ride, or stand up for the rule of law when the executive branch has so radically thrown it overboard.

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