Trump's new Supreme pick believes you don't
By
President Donald Trump has nominated Judge Brett Kavanaugh to
replace former Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy. Why should you care?
Because everything from reproductive rights to voting, education, and health care is now at stake.
Because everything from reproductive rights to voting, education, and health care is now at stake.
Kavanaugh, a judicial ideologue
committed to pulling the Court further to the right, may also reverse decades
of key rulings that uphold the constitutional right to personal liberty and
autonomy.
All Americans say they value
personal freedom, especially the right to make our own decisions about our
private lives.
Every day, we take that liberty for granted, from exercising our right to free speech to lighting up sparklers on the Fourth of July. Cherishing our liberties is as American as apple pie — but our right to exercise those liberties could be undone.
Every day, we take that liberty for granted, from exercising our right to free speech to lighting up sparklers on the Fourth of July. Cherishing our liberties is as American as apple pie — but our right to exercise those liberties could be undone.
Nowhere is the issue more
critical than on reproductive rights. Kavanaugh’s nomination will mean a major
battle to undo key protections in Roe v. Wade,
the landmark 1973 Supreme Court case that firmly established the right to
access safe, legal abortion.
Striking down Roe would
immediately outlaw abortion in states where pre-Roe anti-abortion laws are technically still on
the books.
As many as 22 states could be impacted over the course of two years.
As many as 22 states could be impacted over the course of two years.
That’s bad enough. But it’s also critical to remember the reasoning behind the historic 7-2 ruling: that people have a constitutional right to privacy.
Specifically, the Supreme Court upheld and enshrined the protections included in the First, Fourth, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments, holding that those protections applied to decisions a person might make about their own body.
Ultimately, that decision
informed several other critical rulings, including cases that forbade bans on same-sex romantic
relationships and affirmed the right to same-sex
marriage. According to Roe, the right to make your own choices is one of the
founding principles that govern this country.
If Roe is overturned, that could set off a chain
reaction that upends this critical foundation behind other landmark cases —
both those that came before and those that came after.
The constitutional right to
privacy informed Loving v. Virginia, which struck down criminalization
of interracial marriage, and Griswold v. Connecticut, which enabled the
legalization of contraceptives.
The constitutional right to privacy also played a key role in Carpenter v. United States, a recent ruling that prohibits warrantless collection of cellphone users’ data without reasonable cause.
The constitutional right to privacy also played a key role in Carpenter v. United States, a recent ruling that prohibits warrantless collection of cellphone users’ data without reasonable cause.
Judicial precedent set by the
Supreme Court has built a solid foundation for interpretation of the law — but
all it takes is a stacked court to have that foundation tumble like a house of
cards.
Supreme Court appointments are
for life. The rulings these justices make affect the entire judicial system for
decades, if not centuries, to come.
Each year, dozens of critical cases come before the court that deeply impact people’s rights and daily lives.
Each year, dozens of critical cases come before the court that deeply impact people’s rights and daily lives.
While outgoing Justice Anthony
Kennedy wasn’t perfect, he was committed to upholding the personal right to
privacy as enshrined in U.S. law. Kavanaugh, however, could roll back our
hard-won freedoms — and those of future generations.
The Senate will be voting soon on
whether to confirm Kavanaugh. A lot more than just a vacant bench hangs in the
balance.
Olivia Alperstein is the Deputy
Director of Communications and Policy at Congressional Progressive Caucus
Center. Distributed by OtherWords.org.