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The Supreme Court's conservative judicial revolution is taking on a recognizable, three-pronged structure.
On big-ticket, hot button issues, like abortion and affirmative action, the court blows precedent out of the water and replaces it with a ruling that the conservative legal movement has been demanding for half a century.
On major Democratic initiatives, like climate policy and President Joe Biden's student loan forgiveness program, the court blocks executive action using Chief Justice John Roberts's brainchild, the major questions doctrine.
In the third category, the revolution takes a breather as each of President Donald Trump's three appointees gets the chance to emphasize a specific legal issue he or she cares about. Roberts and the court's three liberals provide the rest of the votes. The result is a reasonable ruling that avoids major doctrinal upheaval — and doesn't undermine the rest of the revolution.
Examples of this third category include the court's rejection of the scary-dangerous independent legislature theory (driven by Justice Brett Kavanaugh's interest in protecting elections); the restoration of Biden's immigration powers (driven by Justice Amy Coney Barrett's Scalian interest in protecting standing); and upholding the Indian Child Welfare Act (driven at least partly by Justice Neil Gorsuch's sincere concern for the sovereignty of Native American tribes).
Some observers might think these category-three cases show Roberts's moderating influence. They don't. In these cases, Roberts is no more powerful than the liberals. In these cases, one of the Trump appointees always provides the decisive fifth vote.