It’s not just the Roe decision that caused trust in the Supreme Court to slip | Guest Opinion

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Public trust in the Supreme Court has dropped sharply, a Gallup poll found this fall. It’s hardly surprising, given an array of recent factors involving the justices, their opinions and supporters.

They include the political power plays that helped transform the court’s ideological makeup from balanced to conservative, a controversial decision reversing a historic ruling, an embarrassing leak, the misleading testimony of two justices and the political activity of a justice’s wife.

For the first time in 50 years, more Americans disapprove of the high court than approve of it.

The problems really started with Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell’s 2016 power play after longtime conservative Justice Antonin Scalia’s death in the final year of the Obama administration.

Invoking their Senate majority, McConnell and GOP Judiciary Committee members vowed to withhold action on any nominee by the retiring Democratic president.

Obama nominated Merrick Garland, a well-regarded moderate appeals judge, but McConnell refused to consider him. Garland would have given Democratic appointees their first court majority in 45 years.

Conservative concerns over that prospect helped Donald Trump score his unexpected victory against Hillary Clinton. Many religious conservatives cool to Trump voted for him to keep the vacant seat in conservative hands.

Once inaugurated, he nominated conservative Appeals Judge Neil Gorsuch for the vacancy. That maintained the court’s 5-4 conservative majority, but it depended on Justice Anthony Kennedy, a GOP nominee who sometimes voted with the liberals.

In 2018, the White House persuaded Kennedy to retire and nominated Appeals Judge Brett Kavanaugh, his onetime clerk. He was confirmed after highly contentious hearings, 50-48-1, solidifying the conservative majority.

The decisive change occurred when liberal stalwart Ruth Bader Ginsburg died in September 2020, two months before the presidential election. Contending his 2016 precedent didn’t apply because Trump was seeking re-election, McConnell speeded consideration of conservative Appeals Judge Amy Coney Barrett over Democratic protests. She was confirmed 52-48, with all Republican votes.

Her impact was evident in last June’s ruling overturning the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortions, a decision that polls show most Americans oppose.

Two months earlier, a political storm erupted when Politico published the court’s draft opinion by Justice Samuel Alito reversing Roe v. Wade. The court is investigating the leak but has not yet reported any findings.

Politically, the decision, which conservative Republicans long advocated, backfired. Exit polls indicated it played a role in the GOP’s poorer-than-expected showing in the 2022 midterm elections.

More recently, reports surfaced of another apparent leak. A longtime abortion foe, the Rev. Rob Schenk, said leaders of the conservative company Hobby Lobby learned from Alito in 2014 that they had won a case involving contraception and religious rights weeks before the court issued it, though Alito denied it.

Meanwhile, some critics feel Ginni Thomas, the wife of Justice Clarence Thomas, compromised the court’s independent standing by her openly political role in Trump’s effort to reverse the 2020 election.

While improper, none of this is illegal. Unlike other federal courts, the Supreme Court is not bound by specific ethics rules. Justices have lifetime appointments and can only be removed by impeachment.

Still, the recent controversies have taken a toll.

The September Gallup poll showed fewer than half of those sampled said they had a “great deal” or a “fair amount” of confidence in the federal government’s judicial branch. Approval stood at an all-time low of 40%, with disapproval at 59%.

Liberal calls to add justices are a political nonstarter, so it may take the departure of one or two conservatives during a Democratic administration to restore better balance. The oldest current justices are conservatives Thomas, 74, and Alito, 72.

But neither shows any sign of leaving, so recognition of the need for the judicial restraint that conservatives always tout might be the only way the court could restore some of its lost public standing.

Carl P. Leubsdorf is the former Washington bureau chief of the Dallas Morning News.

©2022 The Dallas Morning News

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