July 2, 2023

The Supreme Court handed down three major decisions this week, limiting an executive order that fabricated presidential authorization to forgive billions of dollars in school loans; denying governmental authority to compel people to create works that violate their free speech and freedom of religion; and prohibiting schools from considering the race of applicants in admissions in public and private institutions.

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There are two very good summaries of these three cases, here on AT by Andrea Widberg and in Real Clear Politics by Professor Charles Lipson. Dissents by justices Elena Kagan, Sonia Sotomayor, and Ketanji Brown Jacksonwere so badly written and reasoned that law professor Ilya Somin was inspired to tweet, ”Having read the dissents, I’m even more against affirmative action in judicial selection.” 

For most of us these were welcome outcomes, and while Senators Charles Grassley and Mitch McConnell played an important role in keeping Merrick Garland off the court and allowing President Trump to get three justices confirmed, the main honor goes to him.

As Mike David reminds us:

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Trump’s flawless Gorsuch nomination and confirmation united weak and wobbly Senate Republicans to run over the Democrats’ filibuster and lower the vote threshold from 60 to 51.

This comforted Kennedy enough to retire, so Trump could replace Kennedy with his protégé — and still keep weak and wobbly Senate Republicans onboard.

(There’s no chance another Alito or Thomas could have been confirmed in 2018, with Collins, Murkowski, Flake, and others being so weak and wobbly.)

If Kavanaugh’s nomination failed, Republicans would’ve lost the Senate in 2018 and the Court after 2020.

Trump never blinked, even when almost every Senate Republican did.

Instead, we pulled the rabbit out of the hat.