Conservatives wanted the replacement
for Justice Antonin Scalia to have a similar judicial philosophy, and Donald
Trump and the Congress delivered such a man. In his first month as an associate
justice on the Supreme Court, Justice Neil Gorsuch is acting much as Scalia
once did.
John-Michael Seibler shared some of
the similarities between Scalia and Gorsuch in his article titled “In His First Criminal Cases, Neil Gorsuch Already Mirroring Scalia.” Although there is a lot of “lawyer speak” in his article, I will try to put it
in plainer language. Seibler begins by stating that Gorsuch “asked sharp
questions from the bench” in “several difficult criminal law cases” and then
shares some examples.
The
Death Penalty in Arkansas: In McGehee et
all. V. Hutchinson Gorsuch voted to deny several Arkansas death row inmates’
requests to halt their executions. [While the minority questions if “the death
penalty is consistent with the Constitution,” the majority – including Gorsuch –
might have relied on the reasoning of Scalia in a prior case. Scalia wrote that
“not once in the history of the American republic has this Court ever suggested
the death penalty is categorically impermissible.” “The reason is obvious: It
is impossible to hold unconstitutional that which the Constitution explicitly
contemplates.”] In McGehee, Gorsuch held firm, silently adopting Scalia’s
constitutionalist reasoning.
No
‘Linguistic Somersaults’: Gorsuch demonstrated his adherence to textualism through
some of the questions he posed to the advocates during oral argument in Maslanjak v. U.S. [This case is about whether
or not to revoke citizenship from a person who lied to a U.S. immigration
official in order to become a naturalized citizen. The decision may affect how
the government revokes citizenship for other people.] In the midst of this high
stakes argument, Gorsuch’s questions focused on one issue in particular: The
text of the law itself. The statute, Gorsuch noted, “doesn’t contain an express
materiality provision,” and Gorsuch was concerned about having to do “a lot of
linguistic somersaults to add” such a provision into the law. [This statement
is similar to Scalia’s dissenting opinion in King v. Burwell (2015) about Obamacare.] Scalia wrote that “[t]he
somersaults of statutory interpretation” that the majority “performed (‘penalty’
means tax … ‘established by the state’ means not established by the state) will
be cited by litigants endlessly, to the confusion of honest jurisprudence.”
Gorsuch appears sympathetic to Scalia’s disapproval of “linguistic somersaults”
and the idea that judges are empowered to rewrite laws that they may disagree
with.
The
Big Picture: Gorsuch
showed a keen awareness of how the Supreme Court’s rulings carry far-reaching
implications for future cases in Weaver
v. Massachusetts. [This case is about a man convicted of “unlicensed possession of a firearm and
premediated murder” at the age of 16. He “sought a new trial claiming that his counsel
was ineffective” because the courtroom was closed during selection of the jury.
“Chief Justice John Roberts pointed out” that the room was full of potential
jurors. The man was upset because his supporters were not allowed to enter the
courtroom.] At this point, Gorsuch entered the fray with a big picture
question. He asked whether a “triviality exception” might apply here, or
whether the Court should consider the potential unintended consequences that
can arise when it tries to prevent every injustice – no matter how small – by imposing
new procedural requirements across the entire criminal justice system…. [This
is similar to comments made by Scalia in several cases.] So far, Gorsuch is
modeling this Scalia-esque approach and honoring the rule of law.
Seibler’s article gives much more
information than I am able to share. He closes his commentary comparing the
similarities between Scalia and Gorsuch with this statement:
Throughout his nomination and
confirmation process, Heritage Foundation legal scholars noted Gorsuch’s striking
similarities to Scalia, which include a shared sensitivity to
overcriminalization, textualism, and the separation of powers.
In these first few cases, Gorsuch is
showing just how well he fits the Scalia mold of being a committed
constitutionalist and textualist on the High Court.
It appears that conservatives received
exactly what they wanted, a new Justice like Scalia.
We
wanted a Justice that would follow the Constitution in his rulings as Gorsuch seems
to be doing. Hopefully, President Trump will have more opportunities to select
Justices and will bring more such Justices to the High Court.
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