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Trump’s Big Wins, Strong Regulatory Rollback Marks Breakthrough Supreme Court Term – Marin Independent Journal

FILE – Members of the Supreme Court sit for a group portrait at the Supreme Court building in Washington, Oct. 7, 2022. Bottom row, from left: Justice Sonia Sotomayor, Justice Clarence Thomas, Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Samuel Alito and Justice Elena Kagan. Top row, from left: Justice Amy Coney Barrett, Justice Neil Gorsuch, Justice Brett Kavanaugh and Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson. As the U.S. Supreme Court is set to rule on a major case involving former President Donald Trump, 7 in 10 Americans believe its justices are more likely to shape the law to fit their own ideology than to serve as neutral arbiters of government power, according to a new poll. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Authors: MARK SHERMAN and LINDSAY WHITEHURST Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Donald Trump and the conservative interests that helped him reshape the Supreme Court got most of what they wanted this term, from significant help for Trump’s political and legal prospects to sharp blows to the administrative state they criticize.

The rulings reflect a deep and at times bitter division on the court, where conservatives, including three Trump-appointed justices, outnumber liberals by a two-to-one margin, and are likely to reinforce the view of most Americans that ideology, not neutral application of the law, determines the outcomes of the court’s most important cases.

Supreme Court Justice John Roberts, often viewed with suspicion by Trump and his allies because of concerns about the independence of the judiciary and fears about the court’s reputation, has issued the most significant decisions. They include the court granting broad immunity from criminal prosecution to former presidents and overturning a 40-year-old case that had been used thousands of times to uphold federal regulations.

“He has conflicting tendencies. One is to be a statesman and an institutionalist,” said Richard Hasen, a law professor at the University of California at Los Angeles. The other, Hasen said, is to delve “when it’s something that’s important enough for him.”

The end of the court’s term marked an unusual change of fortune for Trump, who is seeking a second term as president.

Six months ago, he was preparing for a criminal trial in early March in Washington on charges of interfering in the 2020 election after his loss to President Joe Biden, and he faced being disqualified from voting in several states.

In a final court order issued Monday, the justices granted him an indefinite stay of trial and narrowed the election interference case against him. Last week, they separately limited the use of the obstruction charge he faces, which should give him even more legal leverage months after the court reinstated Trump to the presidential election.

Each of the three cases arose from Trump’s actions following the 2020 election, which culminated in the attack on the Capitol by his supporters on Jan. 6, 2021. But Roberts’ opinions offered only a dry account of the events of Jan. 6, emphasizing that the court “cannot afford to focus … on the exigencies of the present.”

The court also overturned the Chevron decision, depriving the SEC of a key fraud-fighting tool and opening the door to repeated, broad regulatory challenges that, when combined with the end of Chevron, could lead to what Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson described as a “tsunami of lawsuits.”

The decisions also sparked heated, sometimes cutting, debates about judicial humility. “The principle of judicial humility is giving way to the principle of judicial hubris,” wrote Justice Elena Kagan in her dissent overturning Chevron.

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson chastised Roberts for his “feigned judicial humility” in his immunity opinion. Roberts ridiculed the dissenters’ “tone of terrified doom.”

In each of Trump’s cases, the majority was Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, two of Trump’s three appointees, and two others, Alito and Justice Clarence Thomas, who also rejected calls to dismiss Trump’s case. Those same justices, as well as Roberts and Justice Amy Coney Barrett, were the majority in the federal regulation cases. Conservatives also voted together in a major homelessness case that found that outdoor sleeping bans targeting homeless encampments do not violate the constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment — even when there is a shortage of shelter space.

But Roberts has repeatedly defended the court against accusations that its justices are nothing more than politicians in robes.