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octoberlib

(14,971 posts)
Mon Jun 26, 2017, 03:39 PM Jun 2017

Gorsuch is Scalia 2.0 - Five Thirty Eight

Beyond the cases themselves, the decisions shed further light on Gorsuch, the court’s newest justice, whom Trump nominated in January and who took the bench in April. Gorsuch wanted the court to go even further in allowing all of the travel ban to go into effect. In this and his other decisions, Gorsuch has paid dividends for Trump more than perhaps any other move the president has made.

Gorsuch, 10 weeks in, has been one of the most conservative members on the high court. That isn’t necessarily surprising — when Gorsuch was first nominated we called him a likely “Scalia clone” based on his lower court record — but it was far from guaranteed. Other justices, such as David Souter, ended up with far more liberal records on the Supreme Court than court-watchers expected when they took their seat.

Gorsuch, in fact, may settle to the right of Scalia. In each of the 15 cases he’s weighed in on so far, Gorsuch has sided with the court’s single most conservative member, Justice Clarence Thomas. More than that, he’s joined every concurring opinion that Thomas has issued so far. That is, he didn’t just agree with Thomas on the outcomes of the case but also with the reasoning by which those outcomes were reached.


Of course, Gorsuch’s Supreme Court tenure is in its infancy. And some justices have become more liberal while on the bench. But the cases Gorsuch has seen so far have covered a wide menu of topics, including same-sex marriage, the right to counsel, patent infringement and citizenship. In two of them — Davila v. Davis and California Public Employees’ Retirement System v. ANZ Securities — Gorsuch’s vote was pivotal, leaving the final tally at five votes to four. The first of these dealt a blow to death penalty opponents, and the latter makes it more difficult to file certain class action claims.


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https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/neil-gorsuch-is-paying-off-for-trump-so-far/

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