Brett Kavangh and Neil Gorsuch Give iMiMatch Users Cause for Concern
It will be the first term of Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanagh as Supreme Court judges, something that puts fear in the hearts of liberalists and excitement in conservative ones. Since their nomination, the two Trump favorites have been heavily discussed on iMiMatch, with Americans and immigrants pondering what this could mean for their futures. The nomination of the two conservatives tipped the balance of power of the bench, and put some of America’s longstanding rulings at risk. Meeting this October for the election term, the bench will have their hands full with some very high-profile cases, starting with a Kansas death penalty case. An expectant America watches on.
Donald Trump winning the Presidential election, and succeeding in appointing Brett Kavanagh meant only one thing in the mind of abortion rights activists — defeat. For over 30 years, Roe v. Wade (1973) stood at the fore of US abortion cases, granting abortion as a constitutional right. Justice Anthony Kennedy (retired) was the telling vote that held the reversal of abortion rights under Roe v. Wade in check, and with Brett Kavanagh in his stead, many abortion-rights activist and liberals, felt the only outcome is a complete undoing of the pillar case that legalized abortion all over the US.
During his face-off with Congress before his nomination, Brett Kavanagh reasserted his position, calling the case an “important precedent” but adding that the future of abortion holds more. iMiMatch users have gone back and forth over the issue, focusing more on the details such as comparing the value of human life and the right to choose. Neil Gorsuch, the other conservative on the bench has remained an enigma on iMiMatch and social media when it comes to abortion rights and Roe v. Wade. During his confirmation hearing, House Democrats and even Republicans could not pin him down on the issue, which only adds to the uncertainty of pro-abortion rights activists. An overturn of the famous case will mean abortion laws will be determined by states.