Gorsuch shows how much 1 vote matters on Supreme court
WASHINGTON — Justice Neil Gorsuch’s role in his first full term on the Supreme Court offers a striking illustration of the difference a single justice can make, and why both sides are gearing up for a titanic fight over replacing retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy.
The term that roared to its finish Wednesday — before it was overshadowed by Kennedy’s announcement of his retirement — was a triumphal one for conservatives. In Kennedy’s last term and the first for Gorsuch, Kennedy’s former law clerk, both justices were part of 5-4 conservative majorities to uphold President Donald Trump’s travel ban, deal labour unions a major financial setback, affirm Ohio’s aggressive purge of its voter rolls and prohibit millions of workers from banding together to complain about pay.
Those cases probably all would have come out differently — if they even had made their way to the Supreme Court — had the seat Gorsuch holds instead been filled by Judge Merrick Garland, whom President Barack Obama nominated after Justice Antonin Scalia’s death in 2016.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions was quick to trumpet the decision in the union case because it was one of four where his Justice Department flipped the position taken in the Obama administration and won. “The favourable Supreme Court decisions in all four cases reflect that we took the proper course of action. The decisions speak for themselves,” Sessions said.