Brett Kavanaugh says unpopular rulings can later become 'fabric of American constitutional law'

bnew

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Brett Kavanaugh says unpopular rulings can later become 'fabric of American constitutional law'​

The Supreme Court justice said that some decisions from the 1950s and ‘60s on civil and criminal rights, free speech and school prayer were unpopular when they were issued.

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Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh answers questions during a judicial conference, in Austin, Texas, on Friday.Eric Gay / AP

May 10, 2024, 10:58 PM EDT / Source: The Associated Press

By The Associated Press

AUSTIN, Texas — Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh said Friday that U.S. history shows court decisions unpopular in their time later can become part of the “fabric of American constitutional law.”

Kavanaugh spoke Friday at a conference attended by judges, attorneys and other court personnel in the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi and is one of the most conservative circuits.

In a question-and-answer session, he was not asked about any of the current court’s nationally divisive rulings, such as the overturning of Roe v. Wade federal abortion protections in 2022 that has become a key political issue in elections across the country this year. He was part of the conservative majority in that ruling.

However, he was asked how judges and the courts can help boost public confidence in the judiciary.

In his answer, Kavanaugh said some high court decisions from the 1950s and ‘60s on monumental issues spanning civil and criminal rights, free speech and school prayer — including the iconic Brown v. Board of Education case that ended legal segregation in public schools — were unpopular when they were issued.

“The Warren court was no picnic for the justices. … They were unpopular basically from start to finish from ’53 to ’69,” Kavanaugh said. “What the court kept doing is playing itself, sticking to its principles. And you know, look, a lot of those decisions (were) unpopular, and a lot of them are landmarks now that we accept as parts of the fabric of America, and the fabric of American constitutional law.”

He said federal judges “stay as far away from politics as possible.”

“It’s an everyday thing. I don’t think it’s a ‘flip the switch.’ It’s showing up every day in the courtroom and trying to be respectful of the parties in a way that is clear and understandable,” he said.

Kavanaugh was asked about his personal security, which he said protects his family 24 hours a day, and about protesters that have shown up at his house. In 2022, a man carrying a gun, a knife and zip ties was arrested at the justice’s house in Maryland.

When asked if protesters still show up, Kavanaugh said, “Depends on the day. ... Not as much. I think I’ll leave it there,.”

Kavanaugh’s daughters were in seventh and fifth grade when he was confirmed in 2018 and are now in high school.

“They have grown up understanding what it means and ride in the car, and at the basketball games pick out the security guy in the stands. Hopefully, you know, you pray that it’s not a long-term impact on them,” he said.
 

tuckgod

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ChatGPT summary

-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh spoke at a Texas conference, highlighting how controversial court decisions can evolve into fundamental American law.

-He referenced historic cases like Brown v. Board of Education as examples.

-Kavanaugh emphasized the judiciary's role in maintaining principles and staying detached from politics to preserve public trust.

-He also addressed personal security measures for his family due to previous threats.

-Kavanaugh's discussion underlined the judiciary's dynamic role and the personal impacts of serving on the Supreme Court.
 

Kyle C. Barker

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ChatGPT summary

-Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh spoke at a Texas conference, highlighting how controversial court decisions can evolve into fundamental American law.

-He referenced historic cases like Brown v. Board of Education as examples.

-Kavanaugh emphasized the judiciary's role in maintaining principles and staying detached from politics to preserve public trust.

-He also addressed personal security measures for his family due to previous threats.

-Kavanaugh's discussion underlined the judiciary's dynamic role and the personal impacts of serving on the Supreme Court.


Use chat gippity summarizer for 500 word articles brehs
 

bzb

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this guy and all the far right conservatives on the sc are full of shyt.

the expansion of rights (like the cra, voting, etc) and protecting civil liberties (roe, etc) was wildly popular among the general public and in the legislature at the time. those protections were always the right thing to do.

this azzhole trying to cast those decision as "unpopular" is bullshyt. this is the ultra right conservative court trying to use alternative facts and reverse precedent to prop up their orange god and the maga agenda.
 

MajesticLion

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The same Brett Ah-Lahkbeer who swore during his confirmation hearings that he'd uphold Roe as law of the land?:pachaha:
 

Scustin Bieburr

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We about to enter a new era if Trump wins and solidifies the courts to be wholly ultra-rightwing

:francis:
Courts will have to go. While we're at it, fukk the electoral college. The two shyttiest presidents of my life time so far lost the popular vote and still became president. Does that shyt sound democratic?

The constitution is a living document. Time for some ammendments
 
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