Contra Ben Shapiro on Judge Kavanaugh
By Ed Whelan
June 28, 2018 4:53 PM
I have no interest in favoring one outstanding Supreme Court candidate over another, so I dont intend to say much about any of the candidates before a nominee is selected. But I also dont like to see unfair or mistaken charges made, so I might occasionally weigh in. Such as now.
The estimable Ben Shapiro offers what is super-ambitiously titled The Run-Down: Heres What You Need To Know About Trumps Top 5 Possible Nominees. To my great surprise, he concludes that Judge Brett Kavanaugh has the most red flags. As it turns out, thoughperhaps because he has taken on a herculean task in a very tight time framehis red flags on examination lose their color.
I present here Shapiros full bill of particulars against Kavanaugh:
1. Kavanaugh is, on the downside, a general believer in Chevron deference the notion that administrative agencies ought to be granted deference by the judicial branch.
Surely this couldnt be the same Kavanaugh who, in a Harvard Law Review piece (p. 2150), says that Chevron has no basis in the Administrative Procedure Act and seems to flout the language of the Act? The same Kavanaugh who calls Chevron an atextual invention by courts and [i]n many ways
nothing more than a judicially orchestrated shift of power from Congress to the Executive Branch? The same Kavanaugh who has been credited with cabining the Chevron doctrine by developing the major questions exception?
2. Kavanaugh reportedly does not use textualist methods nearly as much as conservatives might wish.
Reportedly? Hmmm, who reported it? It would be good to be given at least one example of Kavanaughs supposed deviation from textualism.
As one lawyer tweeted, Shapiros charge against Kavanaugh is news to anyone who has ever appeared before him, clerked for him, or read a single one of his opinions.
3. Worst, Kavanaugh upheld Obamacare in Sissel v. Department of Health and Human Services as well as in Seven-Sky v. Holder, in which he stated that the Obamacare penalties were actually taxes.
Sissel presented a very adventuresome Origination Clause challenge to Obamacare. In an opinion dissenting from the D.C. Circuits denial of en banc rehearing of the panels rejection of the challenge, Kavanaugh (joined by the three other Republican appointees on the court) did indeed conclude that Obamacare complied with the Origination Clause, even as he faulted the reasoning of the panel. Does Shapiro think that Kavanaugh got it wrong? If so, how?
In his separate opinion in Seven-Sky, Kavanaugh did not uphold Obamacare. Rather, he explicitly dissented as to jurisdiction and refrained from deciding the merits. He concluded that the Anti-Injunction Act precluded the panel from deciding the case because Obamacare provided that the tax penalty for violation of the individual mandate had to be assessed and collected in the same manner as taxesnot because the penalty was itself a tax. At the same time, he called Obamacares individual mandate unprecedented on the federal level in American history. There is plenty of room for debating the merits of Kavanaughs position, but mischaracterizing it is not a good place to start.
4. Kavanaugh seems far more likely to be a second Roberts than a second Gorsuch.
This conclusion (Im not sure what it means) apparently is supposed to follow from Shapiros previous statements, and it falls with them.
(Shapiro also claims that Third Circuit judge Thomas Hardiman has red flags of his own. I havent had time to review his claimsI have very high regard for Hardiman, whose record I reviewed carefully when he was a candidate for the Scalia vacancyand my failure to address them should not be mistaken as acquiescing in them.)