"On June 27, 2018, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy announced that, effective July 31, 2018, he
would retire from active service as an Associate Justice on the Supreme Court of the United
States. His decisive role on the Court, particularly since the Roberts Court era began in 2005,
cannot be overstated. The Roberts Court era has witnessed the Court issue a number of landmark
rulings, many of which have involved matters where the sitting Justices were closely divided.
Justice Kennedy typically voted with the majority of the Court in such cases. Since the October
2005 term that marked the beginning of the Roberts Court, Justice Kennedy voted for the
winning side in a case more often than any of his colleagues in 9 out of 12 terms.
Unlike several other Justices on the Court, Justice Kennedy did not necessarily subscribe to a
particular judicial philosophy, such as originalism or textualism. Instead, Justice Kennedy’s
judicial approach seemed informed by a host of related principles. First, Justice Kennedy’s views
on the law were often grounded in concerns for personal liberty, particularly freedom from
government interference with thought, belief, expression, and certain intimate conduct. His emphasis on liberty manifested
itself in a range of opinions he wrote or joined during his tenure on the Court, including on issues related to free speech,
religious freedom, and government policies concerning same-sex relationships. Second, the structural protections of the
Constitution—i.e., restraints imposed on the federal government and its respective branches by the doctrines of federalism
and separation of powers—also animated Justice Kennedy’s jurisprudence. For Justice Kennedy, separation of powers was a
“defense against tyranny,” and he authored or joined a number of Court opinions that invalidated on separation-of-powers
grounds intrusions on the executive, legislative, or judicial functions. Likewise, during the Rehnquist Court and Roberts
Court eras, Justice Kennedy joined several majority opinions that recognized federalism-based limitations on the enumerated
power of the federal government, established external limitations on Congress’s legislative powers over the states, and
reaffirmed protections for state sovereignty. Third, Justice Kennedy’s jurisprudence was undergirded by his view that the
Court often has a robust role to play in resolving issues of national importance. With Justice Kennedy casting critical votes,
over the last 30 years the Court has reasserted its role in a number of areas of law in which it was previously deferential to the
judgment of the political branches..."
Justice Anthony Kennedy
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