Roberts delivers for president who had opposed him
Topics: From the Wires, Politics News
FILE - In this Jan. 27, 2010 file photo, President Barack Obama greets Chief Justice John Roberts before he delivered his State of the Union Address on Capitol Hill in Washington. Breaking with the court's other conservative justices, Roberts announced the judgment that allows the law to go forward with its aim of covering more than 30 million uninsured Americans. Roberts explained at length the court's view of the mandate as a valid exercise of Congress' authority to "lay and collect taxes." The administration estimates that roughly 4 million people will pay the penalty rather than buy insurance. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File) (Credit: AP)WASHINGTON (AP) — As a junior senator, Barack Obama voted against John Roberts’ nomination to the Supreme Court, fearing he would favor the powerful over the weak.
Now it is Roberts who has saved the signature achievement of Obama’s presidency, the health care overhaul, in a ruling that challenges critics’ assertions that the chief justice is nothing more than a conservative ideologue.
Roberts had pledged at his 2005 confirmation hearing to act as a judicial umpire, calling balls and strikes without taking sides. On Thursday, he threw conservatives a curveball.
In a 5-4 ruling upholding the health care law, Roberts wrote for the majority that it’s not the court’s job to decide whether Obama’s plan “embodies sound policies. That judgment is entrusted to the nation’s elected leaders.”
After all the speculation that the Republican-leaning court would strike down the law, Roberts’ opinion startled even Paul Clement, the lawyer who had made the case against the law in oral arguments before the high court in March.
“If you told people that there were four solid votes to strike down the whole thing, you know, I think most people … would have been surprised to find that among the four were Justice (Anthony) Kennedy and not the chief justice,” Clement said.
The 57-year-old chief justice hasn’t gotten this much attention since he flubbed the oath of office that he administered to Obama on Inauguration Day in 2009. His mangled wording of the inaugural oath prompted a presidential do-over the next day.
Thursday’s ruling induced an instant role reversal.
Liberals sang Roberts’ praises. Conservatives suddenly were less enamored. Roberts had been their darling since President George W. Bush picked the federal judge to replace Chief Justice William Rehnquist.
For a second time in the court’s final week of its term, Roberts had aligned himself with the liberal justices. In a decision Monday, he had voted to invalidate parts of Arizona’s crackdown on illegal immigrants.
Roberts “saved the day — and perhaps the court,” in the health care ruling, said Harvard law professor Laurence Tribe, a constitutional scholar who once hired Obama as a research assistant and also had the chief justice as a student.
Democratic Rep. Brad Sherman of California chimed in: “Today I am proud to be a member of the Harvard Law School class of 1979, the class that included Chief Justice Roberts.”




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