Thomas concurs with Trump: The time has come for SCOTUS to rethink Sullivan and defamation of public officials

Alternate headline: Clarence Thomas becomes Donald Trump’s new favorite Supreme Court justice. Should public figured have to surmount a higher level of evidence in order to prevail in libel and slander actions? Media outlets certainly want that to be the case, and public figures from Donald Trump on down often express their frustration over (allegedly) false reporting for which they have no resort.

Trump has at times insisted that Congress make it a lot easier for him and others similarly situated to sue for libel and slander. Today, in a lengthy concurrence on a refusal to grant cert in a defamation case filed by Katherine McKee against Bill Cosby, Justice Thomas says the Supreme Court should take action itself to fix the problem it created:

McKee filed suit in federal court for defamation under state law, but her case was dismissed. Applying New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254 (1964), and its progeny, the Court of Appeals concluded that, by disclosing her accusation to a reporter, McKee had “‘thrust’ herself to the ‘forefront’” of the public controversy over “sexual assault allegations implicating Cosby” and was therefore a “limited purpose public figure.” 874 F. 3d 54, 61–62 (CA1 2017) (citing Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U. S. 323, 345 (1974)). Under this Court’s First Amendment precedents, public figures are barred from recovering damages for defamation unless they can show that the statement at issue was made with “‘actual malice’—that is, with knowledge that it was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not.” New York Times, supra, at 280. Like many plaintiffs subject to this “almost impossible” standard, McKee was unable to make that showing. See Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. v. Greenmoss Builders, Inc., 472 U. S. 749, 771 (1985) (White, J., concurring in judgment).

McKee asks us to review her classification as a limited-purpose public figure. I agree with the Court’s decision not to take up that fact-bound question. I write to explain why, in an appropriate case, we should reconsider the precedents that require courts to ask it in the first place.

New York Times and the Court’s decisions extending it were policy-driven decisions masquerading as constitutional law. Instead of simply applying the First Amendment as it was understood by the people who ratified it, the Court fashioned its own “‘federal rule[s]’” by balancing the “competing values at stake in defamation suits.” Gertz, supra, at 334, 348 (quoting New York Times, supra, at 279).

We should not continue to reflexively apply this policy-driven approach to the Constitution. Instead, we should carefully examine the original meaning of the First and Fourteenth Amendments. If the Constitution does not require public figures to satisfy an actual-malice standard in state-law defamation suits, then neither should we.

Oh my. Not only does Thomas excoriate the Sullivan court for creating a standard that had never been considered by the original framers of the First Amendment, he points out that libel and slander had also been criminal violations during that period. The reason for that enforcement was to prevent breaches of peace, and that usually meant that enforcement was stricter when it came to public officials rather than looser:

Far from increasing a public figure’s burden in a defamation action, the common law deemed libels against public figures to be, if anything, more serious and injurious than ordinary libels. See 3 Blackstone *124 (“Words also tending to scandalize a magistrate, or person in a public trust, are reputed more highly injurious than when spoken of a private man”); 4 id., at *150 (defining libels as “malicious defamations of any person, and especially a magistrate, made public by either printing, writing, signs, or pictures, in order to provoke him to wrath, or expose him to public hatred, contempt, and ridicule” (emphasis added)). Libel of a public official was deemed an offense “‘most dangerous to the people, and deserv[ing of] punishment, because the people may be deceived and reject the best citizens to their great injury, and it may be to the loss of their liberties.’” …

The common law did afford defendants a privilege to comment on public questions and matters of public interest. Starkie *237–*238. This privilege extended to the “public conduct of a public man,” which was a “matter of public interest” that could “be discussed with the fullest freedom” and “made the subject of hostile criticism.” Id., at *242. Under this privilege, “criticism may reasonably be applied to a public man in a public capacity which might not be applied to a private individual.” Ibid. And the privilege extended to the man’s character “‘so far as it may respect his fitness and qualifications for the office,’” which was in the interest of the people to know. White, supra, at 290 (quoting Clap, supra, at 169).

But the purposes underlying this privilege also defined its limits. Thus, the privilege applied only when the facts stated were true. Starkie *238, n. 4; White, supra, at 290. And the privilege did not afford the publisher an opportunity to defame the officer’s private character.

Thomas doesn’t argue for a return of lèse majeste, but he does argue that the Sullivan court and the decisions that followed from it ignored 175 years of jurisprudence and common law. No one had promoted an actual-malice standard in relation to the First Amendment until then, when the Supreme Court created it on its own. That was an illegitimate action against the sovereignty of the states and their operation of libel and slander laws, Thomas writes; if states want to create that standard, they could do so legislatively.

Thomas makes a compelling case, one which should be read all the way through, and carefully. Even though I’m a conceptual supporter of Sullivan, the case Thomas makes for egregious judicial overreach is fairly convincing — especially as Thomas argues that the court could have found for the New York Times without inventing a higher threshold. Sullivan could easily join the pantheon of judicial-activist decisions that have become, as Amy Coney Barrett once put it, “super-precedents” despite a lack of true constitutional standing.

Could, that is, not will. There may be no end of public figures who would like to test Thomas’ resolve on reopening Sullivan, but don’t expect many of his colleagues to join him on the quest. Not only is Sullivan the kind of “settled law” for which stare decisis exists, it defends an undeniable public good — the ability to criticize our governing and celebrity classes, which have uncomfortably merged over the last few decades since Sullivan. If there was an immediate and handy replacement at hand for protection against lèse majeste attempts by public officials and the wealthy to shut down negative coverage, correcting the constitutional record might be worth it. But waiting for 50 states to take action would leave a lot of legitimate reporting at risk, even while truly malicious actions could still be remedied in court under the current standard.

I suspect that Thomas knows that this is going nowhere too. He’s just leaving an intellectual marker and warning against expanding Sullivan‘s boundaries even further. Having been the target of some very derogatory commentary himself, no doubt Thomas is also leaving a marker of a more personal kind here as well.

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Most Americans Can’t Pass a Basic Citizenship Test. Here’s Why We Should Be Worried.

Can a nation survive ignorant of its past? We are testing that very question right now.

According to a recent survey by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, most Americans would fail a basic citizenship test.

Axios published a roundup of how participants performed. The results weren’t good.

People did relatively well on the most basic questions. Seven out of 10 knew that Thomas Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence and that Franklin Roosevelt was president during World War II.

But only 43 percent knew that Woodrow Wilson was president during World War I (nearly one out of four thought it was Roosevelt), and only 56 percent knew which countries the U.S. fought in World War II.

Fewer than a third could correctly name three of the original 13 states.

More than six out of 10 incorrectly thought the Constitution was written in 1776. (It wasn’t written until 1787.)

Nearly four out of 10 thought Benjamin Franklin invented the light bulb.

Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., had the right response.

For sure, immigrants have some advantages in taking this test over native-born Americans. After all, they are likely studying to pass it as their citizenship depends on it.

There are, of course, plenty of other important aspects of citizenship besides knowing history. Even more important are the very ethos and ideas that ground our founding documents: the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.

It’s probably more consequential for our country, for instance, that the average citizen believes these documents to be fundamentally good, even if they don’t know what year they were written.

But the bottom line is this: Being ignorant of the past has real-world effects. It is inexcusable for Americans as a whole to be unaware of our past and the basic principles of our system of government.

It’s all the more concerning given that our celebration of “democracy.” Some, like former President Barack Obama, have even proposed mandating that all Americans vote.

Is it not concerning that as knowledge of our system, more Americans are being called upon to partake in that system by voting? Does that not flatly contradict the idea that democracy is the highest good?

That’s certainly the idea being pushed by those who want to abolish the Electoral College.

Given the decline of America’s historic and civic knowledge, perhaps we should consider how we ended up here.

Last October I covered the results of an equally depressing survey, and my conclusion was the same then as it is now:

As citizens, knowledge of the past and of civics is crucial. Lacking such knowledge is unhealthy for a free country, and even dangerous, given how bad political life can become.

One of our biggest problems today is that we often focus on tearing down our history rather than learning from it. That needs to change.

If these sobering test results tell us anything, it’s that we need to consider a fundamental change in how we approach education in the United States. And despite what some voices say, education funding is not the problem.

The U.S. ranks, globally, near the top in spending on elementary and secondary education, yet we don’t appear to be getting much bang for the buck. Perhaps it’s time we take a harder look at the public school monopoly that’s failing students and leaving generations of Americans without a basic understanding of our past.

More generally, we’ve failed to uphold Ronald Reagan’s call for an informed patriotism and more civic ritual—necessary qualities for the maintenance of a free country—in favor of negative and ideologically narrow accounts of America’s past now en vogue in our schools.

This is a recipe for a dark future and needs to change.

We need to fix this, for the sake of our republic.

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BREAKING: Brothers Make New Bombshell Allegation Against Jussie Smollett

Federal law enforcement officials are investigating a new allegation made by the two brothers in the Jussie Smollett case that Smollett was involved in sending a hate letter to himself a week prior to the alleged attack.

“The FBI and the US Postal Inspection Service are currently investigating whether Jussie Smollett played a role in sending a threatening letter addressed to him at “Empire’s” Chicago studio prior to the alleged attack,” ABC News reported, after confirming with two federal officials. “The accusation, made by the two brothers who were persons of interest, has not been confirmed.”

On Monday, CBS News reported that the attack on Smollett was allegedly concocted because Smollett was upset that the incident involving the letter did not get a “bigger reaction.”

In a separate development, Chicago Police “are investigating a tip that on the night ‘Empire’ actor Jussie Smollett reported being attacked by two masked men he was in an elevator of his apartment building with two brothers later arrested and released from custody in the probe,” the Associated Press reported.

Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said that tip came from someone who either lived in the building or was visiting someone in the building at the time.

The news comes as the brothers and their attorney left court where they were expected to testify against Smollett in front of a grand jury.

The Daily Mail reported on Monday that Smollett had participated in a play that was similar to the alleged attack hours before the attack happened.

“He had been in New York City for a reading of the play Take Me Out, with sources telling DailyMail.com that Smollett was being considered to appear in a possible revival of the Tony-winning production about a biracial baseball star who comes out as gay,” The Daily Mail reported. “The script for that play finds the lead character being attacked by a new pitcher who joins the team. That character uses the same racial slurs Smollett told police his attackers screamed at him, including ‘f****t’ and ‘n****r.'”

Over the weekend, TMZ reported that Chicago law enforcement officials were suspicious of Smollett early on in their investigation:

The sources say there were red flags from the get-go. Cops were extremely suspicious when Jussie took them out to the area where he said he was attacked and pointed to an obscure camera saying how happy he was that the attack was on video. Turns out the camera was pointing in the wrong direction. Cops thought it was weird he knew the location of that camera.

And, there’s this. We’re told investigators didn’t believe the 2 alleged attackers screamed, “This is MAGA country,” because, “Not a single Trump supporter watches ‘Empire.'”

Also on Monday, The Blast reported that whoever sent the letter to Smollett could receive upto five years in prison, if convicted. The Blast reported that the charge would be “mailing threatening communications,” which states:

Whoever knowingly so deposits or causes to be delivered as aforesaid, any communication with or without a name or designating mark subscribed thereto, addressed to any other person and containing any threat to kidnap any person or any threat to injure the person of the addressee or of another, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.

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How Many Times Trump’s Predecessors Declared a National Emergency

The push for a border barrier marks President Donald Trump’s fourth declaration of a national emergency–about a third as many as his three immediate predecessors in their two terms.

The number of declared emergencies puts Trump on a par with Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush.

President Gerald Ford, who signed the 1976 National Emergencies Act, did not declare an emergency under it. His successor, Jimmy Carter, made two such declarations during his single term–one of which is still in effect.

In all, 32 presidential declarations of a national emergency remain in effect, counting Trump’s action Friday, while 21 expired or were canceled.

The overwhelming majority of national emergencies involved either blocking access to U.S.-held assets for bad actors on the world stage or preventing financial transactions with those countries or with international entities and individuals.

Trump’s three immediate predecessors–Barack Obama, George W. Bush, and Bill Clinton–each served two four-year terms.

Obama declared a national emergency 13 times and nine of those emergencies are still in effect, according to the Congressional Research Service.

The younger Bush declared a national emergency a 14 times, and 10 are still in effect. Clinton made 14 declarations, six of which remain in effect.

Reagan, during two terms, and the elder Bush, during his single term, each declared four national emergencies. None is still in effect.

Although declaring a national emergency is nothing new, Trump’s action faces litigation in part because, unusually, it comes after Congress didn’t provide the amount of border wall funding he requested.

The president said Tuesday in the Oval Office that he isn’t  too concerned. He noted that he rightly predicted that a lawsuit would be filed in a district court under the jurisdiction of  the liberal 9th Circuit Court of Appeals.

“I have the absolute right to call a national emergency,” Trump said, adding: “I actually think we’ll do very well in the 9th Circuit … because it is an open-and-closed case.”

Previous national emergencies dealt primarily with economic sanctions on other countries.

Another report by the Congressional Research Service, from 2007, lays out the vast statutory powers a president has in a national emergency:

Under the powers delegated by such statutes, the President may seize property, organize and control the means of production, seize commodities, assign military forces abroad, institute martial law, seize and control all transportation and communication, regulate the operation of private enterprise, restrict travel, and, in a variety of ways, control the lives of United States citizens. Furthermore, Congress may modify, rescind, or render dormant such delegated emergency authority.

None of the presidents who declared an emergency under the 1976 law took such extreme measures as declaring martial law or controlling the means of production.

Other Trump Emergencies

In December 2017, his 12th month in office, Trump blocked “property of persons involved in serious human rights abuse or corruption.”

Last September, the president declared an emergency “imposing certain sanctions in the event of foreign interference in a United States election.” This came after he alleged that China was trying to interfere with the 2018 midterm elections.

In November, Trump declared an emergency “blocking property of certain persons contributing to the situation in Nicaragua.” The move followed abuses by Daniel Ortega’s regime, according to the State Department, and targeted Ortega’s vice president and other close associates.  

Obama’s 13 Emergencies

Most of the national emergencies declared by Obama are still in effect.

In 2010, Obama blocked transactions that would contribute to the conflict in Somalia. The next year, ahead of U.S. military intervention in Libya’s civil war, he blocked Libyan assets in the United States and prohibited certain transactions.

In 2011, Obama blocked access to assets by those threatening peace and stability in Yemen.

During his second term, in 2014, after Russia’s annexation of Crimea through military action, Obama blocked assets of “certain persons contributing to the situation in Ukraine.”

Later that year, he took similar actions by declaring separate emergencies regarding U.S.-held assets of persons contributing to conflicts in South Sudan and the Central African Republic.

In 2015, Obama declared emergencies to block assets of persons engaged in cyber crimes, and of those contributing to the conflict in Burundi.

No longer in effect is Obama’s emergency declaration from 2009 regarding the H1N1 virus and the swine flu, which he opted not to renew in 2010.

Obama also declared a national emergency to block access to enriched uranium for Russia, which his administration later dropped.

Bush’s 14 Emergencies

With five months in office, the younger Bush declared a national emergency on June 26, 2001, blocking access to assets for anyone threatening stabilization efforts in the Western Balkans.

Three days after 9/11, which saw the worst terrorist attacks in American history, Bush declared a national emergency “by reason of certain terrorist attacks.”

Just more than a week later, Bush declared another emergency to

block the assets of those who commit and threaten to commit or support terrorism.

In March 2003, Bush declared an emergency blocking property from anyone who would undermine democratic institutions in Zimbabwe.

By May, after the U.S.-led toppling of the Iraqi regime of Saddam Hussein, Bush declared an emergency protecting a development fund for Iraq and its anticipated new government.

The following year, Bush declared an emergency to prohibit the export of certain goods to Syria.

In 2006, Bush declared two separate emergencies to block assets of anyone who would undermine democracy in Belarus and in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The next year, he did the same regarding democratic institutions in Lebanon.

During his final year in office, Bush declared an emergency to continue existing restrictions on assets of North Korea’s communist government.

All of those emergencies remain in effect.

Among those actions revoked are prohibiting imports from Liberia and blocking property of of those contributing to the conflict in Côte d’Ivoire.

Clinton’s 14 Emergencies

In his first term, Clinton declared emergencies regarding proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, blocking transactions with terrorist entities that disrupt the Middle East peace process, blocking the assets of narcotics traffickers, and regarding movement of vessels in Anchorage, Alaska. All these remain in place.  

During his second term, Clinton blocked Sudanese government assets in the United States, an action that also remains in place.

Among the Clinton emergencies no longer in effect are prohibiting access to enriched uranium for Russia, forbidding investment in Burma, blocking the assets of Yugoslavia, and prohibiting transactions with the Taliban.

H.W. Bush’s 4 Emergencies

On Aug. 2, 1990, the elder Bush blocked Iraqi government assets in the United States from being accessed under dictator Saddam Hussein and prohibited any related financial transactions.

The action came months before Operation Desert Storm, in which the U.S. liberated Kuwait from an Iraqi invasion. The order was revoked in July 2004, after the second Iraq war and the toppling of Saddam.

Bush signed another order in November 1990 to block chemical and biological weapons proliferation, which was revoked in 1994. In 1991, he blocked financial transactions with Haiti, which was revoked in 1994.

In 1992, the elder Bush declared an emergency to block access to property in the U.S. owned by the governments of Yugoslavia, Serbia, and Montenegro.

Reagan’s 4 Emergencies

Reagan saved the move for his second term, when he declared national emergencies to prohibit trade and other financial transactions with certain countries who were bad actors.

In 1985, Reagan declared emergencies to block trade with Nicaragua and South Africa, both revoked in the early 1990s under his successor, the elder Bush.

In 1986, Reagan blocked trade with Libya, an action reversed in 2004 under the younger Bush. In 1988, Reagan issued an order regarding Panama that was revoked in 1990 under the elder Bush.

Carter’s 2 Emergencies

Carter declared a national emergency on Nov. 14, 1979, to block the Iranian government from accessing its property inside the United States while government-backed radicals held U.S. Embassy personnel in Tehran as hostages.

Although the Obama administration dropped some of these sanctions were dropped under its 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, this national emergency remains in place. Carter’s executive order has been continued annually, most recently by Trump in November.

On April 17, 1980, Carter issued another executive order declaring a national emergency with more prohibitions on transactions with Iran. The Reagan administration overturned the order in 1981, after release of the hostages following Reagan’s inauguration.

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NOW THIS… Chase Bank Suspends Conservative Jewish Activist Laura Loomer From Her Online Banking Account

THE TECH GIANTS CONTINUED THEIR WAR ON CONSERVATIVE AND ALTERNATIVE VOICES TODAY—

The Republican Party and conservative leaders are AWOL on this issue as the tech giants continue to ban, de-platform and demonetize conservative voices.

Conservative activist Laura Loomer was already banned from Twitter months ago. This was after Laura attacked Rep. Ilhan Omar on her own record and beliefs.
A CAIR activist was reportedly behind the silencing of Laura Loomer.

In January Laura Loomer was banned by PayPal.

Democrats are now going after commerce and and incomes of their political opposition.
This is America today.
This is like something you would read about in a banana republic.

And today Laura Loomer was blocked from her Chase Bank app.

Laura Loomer told The Gateway Pundit she spoke with the company today and she is not able to access her account online.

Laura told The Gateway Pundit:

Chase Bank targeting a Jewish Conservative activist and journalist is a disgusting attack on our rights as Americans. First they marginalized a colored man for his support of President Donald Trump. Then they targeted combat veteran Joe Biggs. Now they have suspended my access to the Chase app which I used to manage my bills. These censorship tactics that are being carried out by left leaning executives like Jamie Dimon, Jack Dorsey, and Mark Zuckerberg are disgusting and depraved. I’m the target today. Tomorrow, it could be any one of you who dares to have a conservative opinion or idea. These Nazi like censorship tactics send a clear message that supporting Donald Trump can bankrupt, silence, and marginalize people who ought to be considered a protected class. I’m sick to my stomach knowing that I am being targeted by billionaires who have now suspended my access to my online banking via the Chase App, and I am contemplating ways to fight back. The suspension of my chase app comes just weeks after I was banned by PayPal. Why am I being treated like a terrorist in my own country? Is it now a crime in America to be a supporter of President Donald Trump? It sure feels like it.

Republican leaders remain silent.

There is a petition at Change.org to restore Laura Loomer’s Paypal account.

Laura Loomer is planning a protest outside of the Twitter headquarters in New York City on Wednesday.

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Man Trying To Invade New Mother’s Home Ends Up in Nightmare When She & Neighbor Grab Their Guns

An intruder tried to break his way into a home in Federal Way, Washington on Thursday night but was unable to go a step further after he was confronted by an armed resident as well as an armed neighbor.

It was around midnight when homeowner Casandra Cooksey heard someone attempting to enter her house, KING reported. Her husband was at work and she was alone with her infant daughter.

Cooksey knew something was amiss when she heard a car door slam in the front of her house and her dog began to bark.

“When I heard my screen door open, and I just started panicking and instantly grabbed our firearm,” Cooksey said. “I saw a very tall man leaning against the door, and I saw the handle rattling, going up and down.”

Cooksey told KING she believed the man was intoxicated and said that despite her warnings, he wouldn’t leave.

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The young mother called her husband, as well as a neighbor, Daniel Wilson, who came out of his home with his own firearm.

“I said ‘you ain’t going nowhere, bud.’ I said, ‘leave the house alone,’” Wilson recalled. “Then he actually looked at me and said, ‘just go ahead and shoot me.’”

Wilson said this isn’t the first time he’s had such encounter — his own home was burglarized in 2017. “Gives you the chills for a little while,” he said.

As Cooksey waited for the police to arrive, she held the man at gunpoint through a nearby window, while Wilson held his spot in the yard.

Are you glad we enjoy the Second Amendment right to be armed to defend our homes from intruders?

Once police arrived, they took the unidentified man into custody. However, they ultimately determined that no crime had been committed, and transported him to his residence in Tacoma.

The police’s decision to release the man without any charges left Cooksey with several unanswered questions, though she declined to provide specifics and merely expressed her gratitude that she was able to defend her family.

“That’s the last thing I ever wanted to do, but the first thing that went through my mind when I heard the door trying to be opened, I just wanted to protect myself and my baby,” she said. “And yeah, there’s no doubt in my mind that I would have pulled the trigger to protect myself and her if he got in the house.”

Thankfully for Cooksey and her infant daughter, she didn’t have to pull the trigger, but she and her husband will no doubt rest easier knowing they have the means to do so if necessary.

RELATED: Baker Who Refused To Back Down over ‘Build the Wall’ Cookies Is Getting Huge Business Boost

That ability — to defend one’s own life, liberty and property — is one of the fundamental reasons why our nation’s Founders had the foresight to recognize and codify the natural right of all people to keep and bear arms.

Unfortunately, the Democratic-led state of Washington seems intent on whittling away at that foundational right. If Democrats in the state are ever successful in imposing strict gun control laws on the state’s citizenry, this situation could have ended up quite differently for Cooksey and other young mothers like her.

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HAMMER: Roberts And Kavanaugh’s Death Penalty Betrayal Again Shows Why Conservatives Never Win The Long Game On Judges

How many betrayals from Republican-nominated Supreme Court Justices will it take to finally convince conservatives that the judicial deck is systemically stacked against us in such a way that we will simply never ultimately prevail?

Harry Blackmun, who authored the murderous atrocity of Roe v. Wade, was a Republican judicial nominee. John Paul Stevens, a leftist lion for decades on the Supreme Court, was a Republican judicial nominee. Anthony Kennedy, who did more than anyone to disingenuously codify the homosexual rights agenda into the Fourteenth Amendment, was a Republican judicial nominee. The infamous turncoat David Souter was a Republican judicial nominee.

Alas, Chief Justice John Roberts was a Republican judicial nominee. And — take some deep breaths, judicial supremacists — Justice Brett Kavanaugh was a Republican judicial nominee.

Democrats, who nominate jurists based on the grotesque ruse of “living constitutionalism” and barely feign that their “jurisprudence” is inherently anything other than outcome-determinative, never miss with their Supreme Court nominees. In baseball terminology, their batting average is approximately 1.000. Republicans, at best, seem to bat .400.

Today, Roberts and Kavanaugh yet again demonstrated to the legal conservative movement the fallacy of putting all one’s eggs in the alluring basket of the Supreme Court.

In Moore v. Texas, released this morning, the Court summarily reversed the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals’ determination that Mr. Moore “did not have intellectual disability and consequently was eligible for the death penalty.” Summary reversal, as Ed Whelan notes at National Review’s “Bench Memos” blog, is “ordinarily reserve[d]…for situations in which a lower court has clearly failed to abide by the Court’s precedents.”

But that clear failure to abide by precedent plainly did not happen here. And the unsigned, per curiam opinion in Moore today itself suggests as much. The opinion merely states that the Texas court’s decision below “rests upon analysis too much of which too closely resembles what we previously found improper.” And, as Justice Alito’s dissent notes, “each of the errors that the majority ascribes to the state court’s decision is traceable” to the Court’s failure to provide a clear adjudicative rule in 2017, when Mr. Moore’s case was last in front of the nine robed oracles.

So the Supeme Court never should have summarily reversed the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. But it gets worse.

The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals’ determination had followed a previous remand from the Supreme Court in 2017 — a remand order from which, crucially, Chief Justice Roberts dissented. But today, the Chief Justice concurred with the Court’s liberal bloc in vacating the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals’ determination that Mr. Moore is eligible for the death penalty. Put simply, the Chief Justice completely flipped his stance in the same case, from two years earlier, in order to side with the Court’s liberals.

It seems the proverbial ink is barely dry from when I wrote this eleven days ago, about another instance of Chief Justice Roberts-induced legal jiggery-pokery:

Chief Justice Roberts has once again shown his true colors — that of an “institutionalist” committed to preserving the purported “integrity” of the U.S. Supreme Court, as an institution, against those who would opportunistically excoriate it as being too political or partisan.

And yet it once again gets even worse. Because not only did the Chief Justice concur in the summary reversal (!) of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals after registering his dissent only two years ago, but Justice Kavanaugh — who did not join Justice Alito’s dissent today — appears to have also silently joined the summary reversal.

These are utterly indefensible votes from the Chief Justice and from Justice Kavanaugh. For the Chief Justice, that he would switch his posture from dissenting to concurring in the same case merely two years later speaks volumes about his (erroneous) fealty to stare decisis norms. As Whelan says, “today the Chief treats as governing precedent the Court’s 2017 decision in Moore, in which he wrote the dissent (for himself, Thomas, and Alito).” As for Kavanaugh, he similarly would be mistaken to treat the 2017 Moore remand order as persuasive — let alone correct or even “binding.” Indeed, it is very difficult to see how Roberts and Kavanaugh could possibly agree to summary reversal today if they did not both view the 2017 Moore remand — from which, again, Roberts dissented (!) — as something closely approximating “binding” precedent.

It seems clear that the Chief Justice and Justice Kavanaugh are already duking it out to see who can better anoint himself the “new Anthony Kennedy.” I do hope they enjoy themselves. But what is not particularly enjoyable is to watch the legal conservative movement beclown itself time and time again by nominating — and placing institutional and political capital behind — judges who more often than not deeply disappoint conservatives.

In November 1996, the late Robert Bork penned the following at First Things:

Republican Presidents have used the nomination process in an effort to change the direction of the Court with almost zero results on the major issues. After twelve years of Presidents Reagan and Bush, each of whom made a determined effort to appoint Justices who would abide by the Constitution as originally understood, we seem farther than ever from a restrained Court. Between them, Reagan and Bush had five appointments. Only two try to relate their decisions to the Constitution as the men who wrote, proposed, and ratified it understood it. A majority of the Justices has become more arrogantly authoritarian than ever.

Sadly, 23 years later, our crisis is even worse. We will never, ever win the “long game” of judicial nomination wars with the Left.

What we can do, however, is work to end sycophantic judge-worship and self-destructive judicial supremacism in America.

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