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Neil Gorsuch
Neil Gorsuch
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Key Information

Neil McGill Gorsuch (/ˈɡɔːrsʌ/ GOR-sutch;[1] born August 29, 1967) is an American jurist who serves as an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. He was nominated by President Donald Trump on January 31, 2017, and has served since April 10, 2017.

Gorsuch spent his early life in Denver, Colorado. After graduating from Columbia University, where he became an established writer, Gorsuch received his legal education at Harvard Law School and earned a doctorate in jurisprudence from Oxford University in 2004 as a Marshall Scholar. His doctoral thesis concerned the morality of assisted suicide and was written under the supervision of legal philosopher John Finnis. He was a law clerk for Judge David B. Sentelle, Justice Byron White, and Justice Anthony Kennedy.

From 1995 to 2005, Gorsuch was in private practice with the law firm of Kellogg, Hansen, Todd, Figel & Frederick. He was the principal deputy associate attorney general at the United States Department of Justice from 2005 until his appointment to the Tenth Circuit. President George W. Bush nominated Gorsuch to the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit on May 10, 2006, to replace Judge David M. Ebel, who achieved senior status that same year.

Gorsuch is a proponent of textualism in statutory interpretation and originalism in interpreting the United States Constitution.[2][3][4] Along with Justice Clarence Thomas, he is an advocate of natural law jurisprudence.[5] He is the first Supreme Court justice to serve alongside a justice for whom he once clerked (Kennedy).[6] During his tenure on the Supreme Court he has written the majority opinion in landmark cases such as Bostock v. Clayton County on LGBT rights, McGirt v. Oklahoma on Indian law, Kennedy v. Bremerton School District on personal religious observance while serving in an official capacity, and Ramos v. Louisiana on juries' guilty verdicts.

Early life and education

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Gorsuch was born on August 29, 1967, in Denver, Colorado.[7] His parents were Anne Gorsuch Burford (née McGill) and David Ronald Gorsuch.[8] He was the eldest of three children,[9] and is a fourth-generation Coloradan.[10] John McGill, his maternal grandfather, was a surgeon, and his paternal grandfather, John Gorsuch, was an established lawyer in Denver, Colorado.[11] Both of Gorsuch's parents were also attorneys.[12] They encouraged their children to engage in debate, often spontaneously.[13] From 1976 to 1980, Anne Burford served in the Colorado House of Representatives. In 1981, she was appointed by President Ronald Reagan as the first woman to serve as administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.[14][13] Her conservative views contrasted with those of her husband, who was a liberal.[15]

Gorsuch attended Christ the King Roman Catholic School, a private grade school in Denver. The school's moral lessons influenced him and he was remembered by classmates for assuming strong stances. He assisted his mother in her campaign for the Colorado legislature at age nine.[13] After her appointment, Gorsuch's family moved to Bethesda, Maryland. He enrolled in Georgetown Preparatory School,[16] a selective Jesuit college-preparatory school, arriving as a freshman in 1981.[17] He was two years junior to future justice Brett Kavanaugh, a classmate he later clerked with at the Supreme Court. Gorsuch was a member of Georgetown Prep's debate, forensics, and international relations clubs,[18] and served as a United States Senate page in the early 1980s.[19] He graduated in 1985 as student body president; in contrast to Kavanaugh, he was described as a fairly outgoing and extroverted student.[18][20]

Gorsuch attended Columbia University after high school, graduating in 1988 with a Bachelor of Arts, cum laude, in history and politics. He undertook a heavier courseload to graduate in three years.[21] As an undergraduate, he wrote for the Columbia Daily Spectator[22] and co-founded the satirical student publication The Fed in 1986.[23][24] Gorsuch distinguished himself as an active debater and an ardent conservative, publishing pieces that criticized left-wing politics. After a brief stint as a writer for a short-lived journal, he led efforts to establish The Fed as a conservative alternative to liberal campus newspapers.[21] He was a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity[25] and was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa honor society.[26][21][27]

After graduating from Columbia, Gorsuch attended Harvard Law School on a Harry S. Truman Scholarship.[28][29] He was an editor of the Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy[30][26] and was a member of the Lincoln's Inn Society, the Harvard Prison Legal Assistance Project, and the Harvard Defenders program.[31][32] Gorsuch was described as a committed conservative who supported the Gulf War and congressional term limits on "a campus full of ardent liberals".[33] Despite his contrasting political views, he was generally well-liked by students.[34] Philip C. Berg, a classmate and close friend, remembered him as "very sensitive" and non-confrontational, recalling when he received Gorsuch's support in coming out as gay.[31] Gorsuch graduated in 1991 with a Juris Doctor, cum laude. Future president Barack Obama was among his classmates.[35]

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Clerkships

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Gorsuch served as a law clerk for Judge David B. Sentelle of the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit from 1991 to 1992. After spending a year at Oxford, later earning a doctorate as a Marshall Scholar, Gorsuch clerked for Justices Byron White and Anthony Kennedy from 1993 to 1994.[26][29][36] His work with White occurred right after White retired from the Supreme Court; therefore, Gorsuch assisted White with his work on the Tenth Circuit, where White sat by designation.[26] Gorsuch was part of a group of five law clerks assigned that year that included Brett Kavanaugh, who described Gorsuch at the time, saying: "He fit into the place very easily. He's just an easy guy to get along with. He doesn't have sharp elbows. We had a wide range of views, but we all really got along well."[37]

Private law practice

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Instead of joining an established law firm, Gorsuch decided to join the two-year-old boutique firm of Kellogg, Huber, Hansen, Todd, Evans & Figel (now Kellogg, Hansen, Todd, Figel & Frederick), where he focused on trial work.[13] After winning his first trial as lead attorney, a jury member told Gorsuch he was like Perry Mason.[13] He was an associate in the Washington, D.C., law firm from 1995 to 1997 and a partner from 1998 to 2005.[26][38] Gorsuch's clients included Colorado billionaire Philip Anschutz.[39] At Kellogg Huber, Gorsuch focused on commercial matters, including contracts, antitrust, RICO, and securities fraud.[26]

In 2002, Gorsuch wrote an op-ed criticizing the Senate for delaying the nominations of Merrick Garland and John Roberts to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, writing, "the most impressive judicial nominees are grossly mistreated" by the Senate.[40]

In 2004, Gorsuch received a Doctor of Philosophy in legal philosophy from the University of Oxford, where he completed research on assisted suicide and euthanasia as a postgraduate student at University College.[41][30][26] A Marshall Scholarship enabled him to study at Oxford in 1992–93, where he was supervised by the natural law philosopher John Finnis.[42] His thesis was also supervised by Canadian legal scholar Timothy Endicott of Balliol College, Oxford.[41][43] In 1996, Gorsuch married Louise, an Englishwoman and champion equestrienne on Oxford's riding team whom he met during his stay there.[13][44]

U.S. Department of Justice

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Gorsuch served as Principal Deputy to the Associate Attorney General, Robert McCallum, at the United States Department of Justice from June 2005 until July 2006.[26][45] As McCallum's principal deputy, he assisted in managing the Department of Justice's civil litigation components, which included the antitrust, civil, civil rights, environment, and tax divisions.[26]

While managing the United States Department of Justice Civil Division, Gorsuch was tasked with all the "terror litigation" arising from the president's War on Terror, successfully defending the extraordinary rendition of Khalid El-Masri, fighting the disclosure of Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse photographs, and, in November 2005, traveling to inspect the Guantanamo Bay detention camp.[46]

Gorsuch helped Attorney General Alberto Gonzales prepare for hearings after the public revelation of NSA warrantless surveillance (2001–07), and worked with Senator Lindsey Graham in drafting the provisions in the Detainee Treatment Act that attempted to strip federal courts of jurisdiction over the detainees.[47]

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit (2006–2017)

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Gorsuch as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit

In January 2006, Philip Anschutz recommended Gorsuch's nomination to Colorado's U.S. senator Wayne Allard and White House Counsel Harriet Miers.[39] On May 10, 2006, President George W. Bush nominated Gorsuch to the seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit vacated by Judge David M. Ebel, who was taking senior status.[30] Like Ebel, Gorsuch was a former clerk of Justice White. The American Bar Association's Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary unanimously rated him "well qualified" in 2006.[26][48][49]

On July 20, 2006, Gorsuch was confirmed by unanimous voice vote in the U.S. Senate.[50][51] He was Bush's fifth appointment to the Tenth Circuit.[52] When Gorsuch began his tenure at Denver's Byron White United States Courthouse, Justice Kennedy administered the oath of office.[40]

During his time on the Tenth Circuit, ten of Gorsuch's law clerks went on to become Supreme Court clerks, and he was sometimes regarded as a "feeder judge".[53] One of his former clerks, Jonathan Papik, became an associate justice of the Nebraska Supreme Court in 2018.[54]

Freedom of religion

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Gorsuch advocates a broad definition of religious freedom that is inimical to church–state separation advocates.[55][56][57]

In Hobby Lobby Stores v. Sebelius (2013), Gorsuch wrote a concurrence when the en banc circuit found the Affordable Care Act's contraceptive mandate on a private business violated the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.[58] That ruling was upheld 5–4 by the Supreme Court in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. (2014).[59] When a panel of the court denied similar claims under the same act in Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged v. Burwell (2015), Gorsuch joined Judges Harris Hartz, Paul Joseph Kelly Jr., Timothy Tymkovich, and Jerome Holmes in their dissent to the denial of rehearing en banc.[60] That ruling was vacated and remanded to the Tenth Circuit by the per curiam Supreme Court in Zubik v. Burwell (2016).[59]

In Pleasant Grove City v. Summum (2007), he joined Judge Michael W. McConnell's dissent from the denial of rehearing en banc, taking the view that the government's display of a donated Ten Commandments monument in a public park did not obligate the government to display other offered monuments.[61] The Supreme Court subsequently adopted most of the dissent's view, reversing the Tenth Circuit's judgment.[59] Gorsuch has written, "the law [...] doesn't just apply to protect popular religious beliefs: it does perhaps its most important work in protecting unpopular religious beliefs, vindicating this nation's long-held aspiration to serve as a refuge of religious tolerance".[62]

Administrative law

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Gorsuch has called for reconsideration of Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. (1984), in which the Supreme Court instructed courts to grant deference to federal agencies' interpretation of ambiguous laws and regulations. In Gutierrez-Brizuela v. Lynch (2016), Gorsuch wrote for a unanimous panel finding that court review was required before an executive agency could reject the circuit court's interpretation of an immigration law.[63][64]

Alone, Gorsuch added a concurring opinion, criticizing Chevron deference and National Cable & Telecommunications Ass'n v. Brand X Internet Services (2005) as an "abdication of judicial duty" and writing that deference is "more than a little difficult to square with the Constitution of the framers' design".[65][66]

In United States v. Hinckley (2008), Gorsuch argued that one possible reading of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act likely violates the nondelegation doctrine.[67] Justices Antonin Scalia and Ruth Bader Ginsburg had held the same view in their 2012 dissent in Reynolds v. United States.[68]

Interstate commerce

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Gorsuch has been an opponent of the dormant Commerce Clause, which allows state laws to be declared unconstitutional if they too greatly burden interstate commerce. In 2011, Gorsuch joined a unanimous panel finding that the dormant Commerce Clause did not prevent the Oklahoma Water Resources Board from blocking water exports to Texas.[69] A unanimous Supreme Court affirmed that ruling in Tarrant Regional Water District v. Herrmann (2013).[70]

In 2013, Gorsuch joined a unanimous panel finding that federal courts could not hear a challenge to Colorado's internet sales tax.[71] A unanimous Supreme Court reversed that ruling in Direct Marketing Ass'n v. Brohl (2015).[70] In 2016, the Tenth Circuit panel rejected the challenger's dormant commerce clause claim, with Gorsuch writing a concurrence.[72]

In Energy and Environmental Legal Institute v. Joshua Epel (2015), Gorsuch held that Colorado's mandates for renewable energy did not violate the commerce clause by putting out-of-state coal companies at a disadvantage.[73] He wrote that the Colorado renewable energy law "isn't a price-control statute, it doesn't link prices paid in Colorado with those paid out of state, and it does not discriminate against out-of-staters".[74][75]

Campaign finance

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In Riddle v. Hickenlooper (2014), Gorsuch joined a unanimous panel of the Tenth Circuit in finding that it was unconstitutional for a Colorado law to set the limit on donations for write-in candidates at half the amount for major party candidates.[76] He added a concurrence noting that although the standard of review of campaign finance in the United States is unclear, the Colorado law would fail even under intermediate scrutiny.[77]

Civil rights

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In Planned Parenthood v. Herbert (2016), Gorsuch wrote for the four dissenting judges when the Tenth Circuit denied a full rehearing of a divided panel opinion that had ordered the Utah governor to resume the organization's funding, which Herbert had blocked in response to a video controversy.[78][79]

In A.M. v. Holmes (2016), the Tenth Circuit considered a case in which a 13-year-old child was arrested for burping and laughing in gym class. The child was handcuffed and arrested based on a New Mexico statute that makes it a misdemeanor to disrupt school activities. The child's family brought a federal § 1983 civil rights action against school officials and the school resource officer who made the arrest, arguing that it was a false arrest that violated the child's constitutional rights. In a 94-page majority opinion, the Tenth Circuit held that the defendants enjoyed qualified immunity from suit.[80] Gorsuch wrote a four-page dissent, arguing that the New Mexico Court of Appeals had "long ago alerted law enforcement" that the statute that the officer relied upon for the child's arrest does not criminalize noises or diversions that merely disturb order in a classroom.[80][81][82]

Criminal law

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In 2009, Gorsuch wrote for a unanimous panel finding that a court may still order criminals to pay restitution even after it missed a statutory deadline.[83] The Supreme Court affirmed that ruling 5–4 in Dolan v. United States (2010).[70]

In United States v. Games-Perez (2012), Gorsuch ruled on a case where a felon owned a gun in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), but alleged that he did not know that he was a felon at the time. Gorsuch joined the majority in upholding the conviction based on Tenth Circuit precedent, but filed a concurring opinion arguing that said precedent was wrongly decided: "The only statutory element separating innocent (even constitutionally protected) gun possession from criminal conduct in §§ 922(g) and 924(a) is a prior felony conviction. So the presumption that the government must prove mens rea here applies with full force."[84] In the 2019 case Rehaif v. United States, the Supreme Court overruled this decision, with Gorsuch joining.

In 2013, Gorsuch joined a unanimous panel finding that intent does not need to be proven under a bank fraud statute.[85] A unanimous Supreme Court affirmed that ruling in Loughrin v. United States (2014).[70] In 2015, Gorsuch wrote a dissent to the denial of rehearing en banc when the Tenth Circuit found that a convicted sex offender had to register with Kansas after he moved to the Philippines.[86] A unanimous Supreme Court reversed the Tenth Circuit in Nichols v. United States (2016).[70]

Death penalty

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Gorsuch favors a strict reading of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA).[59] In 2015, he wrote for the court when it permitted Oklahoma attorney general Scott Pruitt to order the execution of Scott Eizember, prompting a 30-page dissent by Judge Mary Beck Briscoe.[87][88] After the state's unsuccessful execution of Clayton Lockett, Gorsuch joined Briscoe when the court unanimously allowed Pruitt to continue using the same lethal injection protocol. The Supreme Court upheld that ruling 5–4 in Glossip v. Gross (2015).[89]

List of judicial opinions

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During his tenure on the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, Gorsuch authored 212 published opinions.[90] Some of those are:

Nomination to Supreme Court

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President Donald Trump introduces Gorsuch, accompanied by his wife Marie Louise Gorsuch, as his nominee for the Supreme Court at the White House on January 31, 2017.

During the 2016 U.S. presidential election, candidate Donald Trump included Gorsuch, as well as his circuit colleague Timothy Tymkovich, in a list of 21 judges whom Trump would consider nominating to the Supreme Court if elected.[91][92] After Trump took office in January 2017, unnamed advisers listed Gorsuch in a shorter list of eight, who they said were the leading contenders to be nominated to fill the seat left vacant by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia.[93]

On January 31, 2017, Trump announced his nomination of Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.[94] Gorsuch was 49 years old at the time of the nomination, making him the youngest nominee to the Supreme Court since the 1991 nomination of Clarence Thomas, who was 43.[95] It was reported by the Associated Press that, as a courtesy, Gorsuch's first call after the nomination was to President Obama's pick for the same position, Merrick Garland, Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Obama had nominated Garland on March 16, 2016, but Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Chuck Grassley did not schedule a hearing for him, leaving Garland's nomination to expire on January 3, 2017.[96] Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell invoked the so-called "Biden Rule" (of 1992) to justify the Senate's refusal to consider Garland's nomination in a general election year.[97][98][99]

Trump formally transmitted his nomination to the Senate on February 1, 2017.[100] The American Bar Association unanimously gave Gorsuch its top rating—"Well Qualified"—to serve as Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.[101] His confirmation hearing before the Senate started on March 20, 2017.[102]

On April 3, the Senate Judiciary Committee approved his nomination with a party-line 11–9 vote.[103] On April 6, 2017, Democrats filibustered (prevented cloture) the confirmation vote, after which Republicans invoked the "nuclear option", allowing a filibuster of a Supreme Court nominee to be broken by a simple majority vote.[104]

On April 4, BuzzFeed and Politico ran articles highlighting similar language occurring in Gorsuch's book The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia and an earlier law review article by Abigail Lawlis Kuzma, Indiana's deputy attorney general. Academic experts contacted by Politico "differed in their assessment of what Gorsuch did, ranging from calling it a clear impropriety to mere sloppiness."[105][106][107][108]

John Finnis, who supervised Gorsuch's dissertation at Oxford, said, "The allegation is entirely without foundation. The book is meticulous in its citation of primary sources. The allegation that the book is guilty of plagiarism because it does not cite secondary sources which draw on those same primary sources is, frankly, absurd." Kuzma said, "I have reviewed both passages and do not see an issue here, even though the language is similar. These passages are factual, not analytical in nature, framing both the technical legal and medical circumstances of the 'Baby/Infant Doe' case that occurred in 1982."[106] In his book on Gorsuch, John Greenya described how Gorsuch was challenged during his confirmation hearings concerning some of his dissertation advisor's more strident views, which Gorsuch generally disagreed with.[109]

On April 7, 2017, the Senate confirmed Gorsuch's nomination to the Supreme Court by a 54–45 vote, with three Democrats (Heidi Heitkamp, Joe Manchin, and Joe Donnelly) joining all Republicans in attendance.[110][111]

Gorsuch received his commission on April 8, 2017.[112] He was sworn into office on Monday, April 10, 2017, in two ceremonies. The chief justice of the United States administered the constitutional oath of office in a private ceremony at 9 a.m. at the Supreme Court, making Gorsuch the 101st associate justice of the Court. At 11 a.m., Justice Kennedy administered the judicial oath of office in a public ceremony at the White House Rose Garden.[113][114][115]

U.S. Supreme Court (2017–present)

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According to The New York Times, Gorsuch's time on the Supreme Court has been defined by his "folksy demeanor and a flashy writing style" with Jonathan H. Adler presenting Gorsuch and fellow Trump-appointed justice Kavanaugh as "a study in contrasts".[116] The Los Angeles Times described his rulings as those of "a wild card" and wrote that Gorsuch tends "to go his own way and chart a course that does not always align with the traditional views on the right or the left". Vox has called him the court's "most libertarian" justice.[117][118]

According to CNBC, Gorsuch's rulings address "historical injustice in a way that seems at odds with Republican attacks on 'woke' history's being taught in schools",[119] particularly on questions involving Native Americans and tribal law.[120] Gorsuch has a reputation as the most defendant-friendly justice on the court's conservative wing,[121][122] with Slate calling him and Ketanji Brown Jackson "the Supreme Court's oddest pairing" owing to their occasional tendency to side together on cases involving defendants' rights in criminal trials;[123] Gorsuch sided with criminal defendants in 45 percent of cases the court heard.[118] In corporate law, Gorsuch's rulings have exemplified "procedural originalism", what Slate has called "taking the history of jurisdiction seriously, and applying the original meaning even when it leads to results that rankle the highest-paid corporate litigators in the game".[124]

Vox's Ian Millhiser has written that, while Gorsuch's rulings sometimes depart from orthodoxy on areas where there is philosophical disagreement among conservatives, they "reliably align with the consensus" in areas where there is unanimity in conservative ideology.[125] A 2024 quantitative analysis of Gorsuch's rulings found that he broadly tended to side with justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito more than any other two justices.[126]

Banking regulation

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Gorsuch wrote his first U.S. Supreme Court decision for a unanimous court in Henson v. Santander Consumer USA Inc., 582 U.S. ___ (2017). The Court ruled against the borrowers, holding that Santander in this case was not a debt collector under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act since it purchased the original defaulted car loans from CitiFinancial for pennies on the dollar, making Santander the owner of the debts and not merely an agent.[127] When the act was enacted, regulations were put on institutions that collected other companies' debts, but the act left unaddressed businesses collecting their own debts.[128][129]

First Amendment

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Gorsuch joined the majority in National Institute of Family and Life Advocates v. Becerra and Janus v. AFSCME, which both held unconstitutional certain forms of compelled speech.[130][131]

Gorsuch authored the majority opinion in Kennedy v. Bremerton School District (2022), which concerned a public high school football coach who was fired for praying on the field after games. The opinion held that the coach's conduct was protected by both the Free Speech and Free Exercise clauses of the First Amendment, and that the school's attempt to stop him was not mandated by the amendment's Establishment Clause.[132]

Gorsuch wrote the majority opinion in 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis (2023), which held that the Free Speech Clause protected a web designer's freedom to sell custom wedding websites only for opposite-sex weddings, notwithstanding a Colorado law prohibiting businesses from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation.

LGBT rights

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In 2017, in Pavan v. Smith, the Supreme Court "summarily overruled" the Arkansas Supreme Court's decision to deny same-sex married parents the same right to appear on the birth certificate.[133] Gorsuch wrote a dissent, joined by Thomas and Alito, arguing that the Court should have fully heard the arguments of the case.[134]

In 2020, Gorsuch wrote the majority opinion in the combined cases of Bostock v. Clayton County, Altitude Express Inc. v. Zarda, and R.G. & G.R. Harris Funeral Homes Inc. v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, ruling that businesses cannot discriminate in employment against LGBTQ people. He argued that discrimination based on sexual orientation was illegal discrimination on the basis of sex, because the employer would be discriminating "for traits or actions it would not have questioned in members of a different sex".[135] The ruling was 6–3, with Gorsuch joined by Chief Justice Roberts and the Court's four Democratic appointees.[136][137] Justices Thomas, Alito, and Kavanaugh dissented from the decision, arguing that it improperly extended the Civil Rights Act to include sexual orientation and gender identity.[138]

In October 2020, Gorsuch agreed with the justices in an "apparently unanimous" decision to deny an appeal from Kim Davis, a county clerk who refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples.[139] In June 2021, he joined the justices in the unanimous Fulton v. City of Philadelphia decision, ruling in favor of a Catholic adoption agency that had been denied a contract by the City of Philadelphia due to the agency's refusal to adopt to same-sex couples.[140] Gorsuch and Thomas joined Alito's concurrence, which argued for reconsidering, possibly overturning, Employment Division v. Smith, "an important precedent limiting First Amendment protections for religious practices."[141] Also in 2021, Gorsuch was one of three justices, with Thomas and Alito, who voted to hear an appeal from a Washington State florist who had refused service to a same-sex couple based on her religious beliefs against same-sex marriage.[142][143][144] In November 2021, Gorsuch dissented from the Court's 6–3 decision to reject an appeal from Mercy San Juan Medical Center, a hospital affiliated with the Roman Catholic Church, which had sought to deny a hysterectomy to a transgender patient on religious grounds.[145] The decision to reject the appeal left in place a lower court ruling in the patient's favor; Thomas and Alito also dissented.[146][147] In November 2023, Gorsuch voted with the 6–3 majority to decline to hear a case against Washington State's ban on conversion therapy for minors, allowing the law to stand; Kavanaugh, Thomas, and Alito dissented.[148][149]

Second Amendment

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Gorsuch at the LBJ Presidential Library in 2019

Gorsuch joined Thomas's dissent from denial of certiorari in Peruta v. San Diego County, in which the Ninth Circuit had upheld California's restrictive concealed carry laws.[150]

Gorsuch wrote a statement regarding the denial of an application for a stay presented to Roberts in Guedes v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives, a 2019 D.C. Circuit case challenging the Trump administration's ban on bump stocks. In his statement Gorsuch criticized the Trump Administration's action as well as the justification the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit used for upholding the ban.[151][152]

Vagueness doctrine

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In Sessions v. Dimaya (2018), the Supreme Court ruled 5–4 to uphold the Ninth Circuit's decision that the residual clause in the Immigration and Nationality Act was unconstitutionally vague. Gorsuch joined Justices Kagan, Ginsburg, Breyer, and Sotomayor in the opinion, and wrote a separate concurrence reiterating the importance of the vagueness doctrine within Scalia's 2015 opinion in Johnson.[153] In United States v. Davis (2019), Gorsuch wrote the Opinion of the Court striking down the residual clause of the Hobbs Act based on the rationale used in Dimaya.[154][155]

Abortion

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In December 2018, Gorsuch dissented when the Court voted against hearing cases brought by the states of Louisiana and Kansas to deny Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood.[156] He and Alito joined Thomas's dissent arguing that it was the Court's job to hear the case.[157]

In February 2019, Gorsuch sided with three of the Court's other conservative justices, rejecting a stay to temporarily block a law restricting abortion in Louisiana.[158] The law that the court temporarily stayed, in a 5–4 decision, would require that doctors performing abortions have admitting privileges in a hospital.[159] In June 2020, the Supreme Court struck down Louisiana's abortion restriction in June Medical Services, LLC v. Russo, a 5–4 decision; Gorsuch was among the four dissenters.[160][161] In September 2021, the Supreme Court declined a petition to block a Texas law banning abortion after six weeks; the vote was 5–4 with Gorsuch in the majority, joined by Thomas, Alito, Kavanaugh, and Barrett.[162]

In June 2022, Gorsuch was among the five justices who formed the majority opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, which ruled there is no constitutional right to abortion, overturning Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey.[163]

American Indian law & relations

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Gorsuch is regarded as an authority on American Indian law.[164] During his time on the Supreme Court, he has frequently affirmed tribal rights; his appointment to the Court was supported by multiple tribes and Native American organizations due to his favorable rulings as a Tenth Circuit judge.[165][166]

In March 2019, Gorsuch joined the four liberal justices (in two plurality opinions) in a 5–4 majority in Washington State Dept. of Licensing v. Cougar Den, Inc.[167] The Court's decision sided with the Yakama Nation, striking down a Washington state tax on transporting gasoline, on the basis of an 1855 treaty in which the Yakama ceded a large portion of Washington in exchange for certain rights.[168] Gorsuch ended his concurrence by writing: "Really, this case just tells an old and familiar story. The State of Washington includes millions of acres that the Yakamas ceded to the United States under significant pressure. In return, the government supplied a handful of modest promises. The state is now dissatisfied with the consequences of one of those promises. It is a new day, and now it wants more. But today and to its credit, the Court holds the parties to the terms of their deal. It is the least we can do."[169]

In May 2019, Gorsuch again joined the four more liberal justices in a decision favorable to Native Americans' treaty rights, signing on to Justice Sotomayor's opinion to reach a 5–4 decision in Herrera v. Wyoming. The case held that hunting rights in Montana and Wyoming, granted by the U.S. government to the Native American Crow people by an 1868 treaty, were not extinguished by the 1890 grant of statehood to Wyoming.[170]

In July 2020, Gorsuch again joined the liberal justices to make a 5–4 majority in McGirt v. Oklahoma. The case considered whether much of eastern Oklahoma still remained under the jurisdiction of the "Five Civilized Tribes", given that the Native American Treaties that had designated the region as under their reservation status had never been dissolved by Congress, and, if so, whether crimes committed by Native Americans against other Native Americans on tribal land were under the jurisdiction of Native Courts.[171] The landmark decision in the affirmative, written by Gorsuch, found that "For Major Crimes Act purposes, land reserved for the Creek Nation since the 19th century remains 'Indian country.'"[172][173] In the opinion, he wrote: "Today we are asked whether the land these treaties promised remains an Indian reservation for purposes of federal criminal law. Because Congress has not said otherwise, we hold the government to its word."[173] The case was later reviewed in the June 2022 case Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta, which considered whether non-Natives who committed crimes against Natives on Native American territory can be charged under the jurisdiction of Native American tribal courts.[174][175] While the state of Oklahoma had initially argued for the overturning of McGirt, the Court agreed to hear only issues relating to the impacts of McGirt.[176] The 5–4 decision by Justice Brett Kavanaugh opposed the more expanded viewpoint of non-Native criminal jurisdiction, with the opinion giving jurisdiction over such crimes to both tribal and federal/state governments. Gorsuch derided the opinion in his dissent, writing, "Where this Court once stood firm, today it wilts."[177][178]

On June 15, 2022, Gorsuch, Barrett, and the three liberal justices ruled in favor of the Native American Tribes of Texas in the case Ysleta del Sur Pueblo v. Texas. The case concerned a dispute over whether Texas could control and regulate gambling on Texan Native American reservations. The initial conflict had developed from the tribes' having been in a trust with Texas from 1968 to 1987 before being granted a federal trust, resulting in a statute governing the tribes' subjugation to Texas's gambling restrictions.[179] The ruling emphasized that the tribes have the power to regulate electronic bingo games on their land regardless of the state's prohibition of non-prohibited gambling. Thus, as long as a game is not outright prohibited by the state of Texas, the state government cannot impose regulations upon tribal games. Gorsuch emphasized in his opinion that "None of this is to say that the Tribe may offer gaming on whatever terms it wishes [...] Other gaming activities are subject to tribal regulation and must conform to the terms and conditions set forth in federal law."[180]

COVID-19 restrictions

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On November 26, 2020, Gorsuch joined the majority opinion in Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo, which struck down COVID-19 restrictions imposed by the state of New York on houses of worship.[181]

On May 18, 2023, Gorsuch issued a statement about the Court's decision to dismiss a lawsuit by several states aimed at continuing Title 42 expulsions of immigrants, a policy instituted to prevent the introduction of COVID-19 cases to the United States. His statement criticized many of the restrictions the government had imposed since the pandemic started and said, "Since March 2020, we may have experienced the greatest intrusions on civil liberties in the peacetime history of this country."[182]

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Gorsuch is a proponent of originalism, the idea that the Constitution should be interpreted as perceived at the time of enactment, and of textualism, the idea that statutes should be interpreted literally, without considering the legislative history and underlying purpose of the law.[2][3][4] An editorial in the National Catholic Register opined that Gorsuch's judicial decisions lean more toward natural law philosophy.[183]

In January 2019, Bonnie Kristian of The Week wrote that an "unexpected civil libertarian alliance" was developing between Gorsuch and Sotomayor "in defense of robust due process rights and skepticism of law enforcement overreach."[184]

Voting alignment

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FiveThirtyEight used Lee Epstein et al.'s Judicial Common Space scores[185] (which are not based on a judge's behavior, but rather the ideology scores of either home state senators or the appointing president) to find a close alignment between the conservatism of other appellate and Supreme Court judges such as Kavanaugh, Thomas, and Alito.[186] The Washington Post's statistical analysis estimated that the ideologies of most of Trump's announced candidates were "statistically indistinguishable" and also associated Gorsuch with Kavanaugh and Alito.[187]

Judicial activism

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Gorsuch in 2019

In a 2016 speech at Case Western Reserve University, Gorsuch said that judges should strive to apply the law as it is, focusing backward, not forward, and looking to text, structure, and history to decide what a reasonable reader at the time of the events in question would have understood the law to be—not to decide cases based on their own moral convictions or the policy consequences they believe might serve society best.[188]

In a 2005 National Review article, Gorsuch argued that "American liberals have become addicted to the courtroom, relying on judges and lawyers rather than elected leaders and the ballot box, as the primary means of effecting their social agenda" and that they are "failing to reach out and persuade the public". He wrote that, in doing so, American liberals are circumventing the democratic process on issues like gay marriage, school vouchers, and assisted suicide, and this has led to a compromised judiciary, which is no longer independent. Gorsuch wrote that American liberals' "overweening addiction" to using the courts for social debate is "bad for the nation and bad for the judiciary".[50][189]

Federalism and state power

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Justin Marceau, a professor at the University of Denver's Sturm College of Law, called Gorsuch "a predictably socially conservative judge who tends to favor state power over federal power". Marceau added that this is important because federal laws have been used to try to reel in "rogue" state laws in civil rights cases.[190]

Assisted suicide

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In July 2006, Gorsuch's book The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia, developed from his doctoral thesis, was published by Princeton University Press.[41][191][192][193] In the book, Gorsuch makes clear his personal opposition to euthanasia and assisted suicide, arguing that the U.S. should "retain existing law [banning assisted suicide and euthanasia] on the basis that human life is fundamentally and inherently valuable, and that the intentional taking of human life by private persons is always wrong."[62][192][194]

Statutory interpretation

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Gorsuch has been considered to follow in Scalia's footsteps as a textualist in statutory interpretation of the plain meaning of the law.[195][196] This was exemplified in his majority opinion in Bostock v. Clayton County, 590 U.S. ___ (2020), which ruled that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 grants protection from employment discrimination due to sexual orientation and gender identity. Gorsuch wrote in the decision, "An employer who fired an individual for being homosexual or transgender fires that person for traits or actions it would not have questioned in members of a different sex. Sex plays a necessary and undisguisable role in the decision, exactly what Title VII forbids."[197][198][199]

Personal life

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Gorsuch and family with Donald Trump, Anthony Kennedy, and Mike Pence prior[200] to his swearing-in

Gorsuch and his wife, Marie Louise Gorsuch,[201] a British citizen, met at Oxford. The two married at St. Nicholas' Anglican Church in Henley-on-Thames in 1996.[202][203] They live in Boulder, Colorado, and have two daughters, Emma and Belinda.[204][205][206]

Gorsuch enjoys the outdoors and fly fishing; he went fly fishing on at least one occasion with Justice Scalia.[10][207] He raises horses, chickens, and goats, and often arranges ski trips with colleagues and friends.[59]

He has authored three nonfiction books. The first, The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia, was published by Princeton University Press in July 2006.[208] He is a co-author of The Law of Judicial Precedent, published by Thomson West in 2016.[38] In 2024, Gorsuch co-wrote Over Ruled: The Human Toll of Too Much Law, a critique of overregulation and mass incarceration.

In 2017, after his announcement as a Supreme Court nominee, the New York Times reported that Gorsuch owned a timeshare outside Granby, Colorado, with associates of Philip Anschutz, that was later sold the same year.[39] Reporting from Politico in April 2023 revealed that Gorsuch had sold the cabin to Brian Duffy, the CEO of the law firm Greenberg Traurig, which litigates cases before the Supreme Court, but failed to disclose the purchaser's identity on his federal disclosure forms.[209] The property was listed for sale for a few years but did not go under contract until the week after Gorsuch joined the Supreme Court.[209][210] Since 2017, Greenberg Traurig has been involved in at least 22 cases before or presented to the Supreme Court.[209][211]

Gorsuch has been active in several professional associations throughout his legal career,[26] including the American Bar Association, the American Trial Lawyers Association, Phi Beta Kappa, the Republican National Lawyers Association, and the New York, Colorado, and District of Columbia Bar Associations.[26] In May 2019, it was announced that Gorsuch would become the new chairman of the board of the National Constitution Center, succeeding former vice president Joe Biden.[212]

Religion

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Gorsuch was the first member of a mainline Protestant denomination to sit on the Supreme Court since the retirement of John Paul Stevens in 2010.[213][214][215] He and his two siblings were raised Catholic and attended weekly Mass.[216][204] His wife, Louise, is British-born; the two met while Neil was studying at Oxford. Louise was raised in the Church of England.[217]

When the couple returned to the United States they joined Holy Comforter, an Episcopal parish in Vienna, Virginia, attending weekly services. Gorsuch volunteered there as an usher.[215] The Gorsuch family later attended St. John's Episcopal Church in Boulder, Colorado, a liberal church with a longstanding open-door policy for the LGBT community.[94][218][219] During his 2017 confirmation hearing, responding to a senator's question about his faith, Gorsuch replied, "I attend an Episcopal church in Boulder with my family, senator."[220][221][222] After marrying in a non-Catholic ceremony and joining an Episcopal church, Gorsuch has not publicly clarified his religious affiliation.[217]

Ethics controversy

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In 2017, Gorsuch sold a property he co-owned for $1.8 million to the CEO of a prominent law firm, Greenberg Traurig.[223] This has raised ethics questions, including why Gorsuch did not list the buyer on his ethics form when reporting a profit of between $250,000 and $500,000.[223][224][225]

Selected works

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Books

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  • Gorsuch, Neil (2004). The right to receive assistance in suicide and euthanasia, with particular reference to the law of the United States (DPhil thesis). University of Oxford.
  • — (2009). The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. doi:10.1515/9781400830343. ISBN 978-1-4008-3034-3.
  • — (2019). A Republic, If You Can Keep It. New York: Crown Forum. ISBN 978-0-525-57678-5.
  • —; Nitze, Janie (2024). Over Ruled: The Human Cost of Too Much Law. New York: Harper. ISBN 9780063238473.

Articles

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Other

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Speeches

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See also

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References

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Further reading

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Videos

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Neil McGill Gorsuch (born August 29, 1967) is an American jurist serving as an Associate Justice of the of the United States since 2017. Appointed by President to succeed the late , Gorsuch previously sat on the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit from 2006 to 2017. His judicial philosophy emphasizes in interpreting the —construing it according to its original public meaning—and in statutory cases, prioritizing the ordinary meaning of enacted text over legislative intent or policy outcomes. Born in , , Gorsuch earned a B.A. from in 1988, a J.D. cum laude from in 1991, and a D.Phil. in legal philosophy from Oxford University in 2004. Early in his career, he clerked for D.C. Circuit Judge , as well as Justices and . He then practiced law at firms including Kellogg, Huber, Hansen, Todd & Evans, and held positions in the Department of Justice under President , including as Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General. Trump nominated Gorsuch on January 31, 2017, amid debates over the prior administration's refusal to consider for the Scalia vacancy. Democrats filibustered the , prompting Republicans to invoke the —altering filibuster rules for justices—to secure confirmation by a 54-45 vote on April 7, 2017, with Gorsuch sworn in on April 10. On the , Gorsuch has authored majorities in cases advancing religious liberty, Second rights, and limits on agency deference, while applying strict in rulings.

Early Life and Education

Family Background and Childhood

Neil Gorsuch was born on August 29, 1967, in , , to parents (née McGill) and David Ronald Gorsuch, both attorneys and graduates of the . As the eldest of three children—followed by siblings in 1969 and J.J. in 1973—Gorsuch grew up in a family with deep roots, tracing back four generations in the state. His early childhood unfolded in Denver, where the family resided until 1981, when his mother was appointed by President as the first female Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). This led to the family's relocation to the , area, specifically , amid her high-profile role, which ended in 1983 after she resigned citing disputes over agency documents. In , Gorsuch attended , a Jesuit institution in North Bethesda, graduating in 1985; the move exposed him to the political environment of the capital during his formative adolescent years. His upbringing emphasized outdoor activities, reflecting familial interests in inherited from his father and grandfather, though the family's prominence drew public scrutiny tied to his mother's tenure.

Academic Training and Influences

Gorsuch earned a degree in from in 1988. During his time at Columbia, he engaged in student journalism, serving as a staff writer and later editor for the Spectator, the university's oldest student publication. He then attended , graduating cum laude with a in 1991. At Harvard, Gorsuch was classmates with future President and participated in the Harvard , reflecting early interest in conservative legal thought. His emphasized rigorous textual analysis, though specific faculty mentors from this period are not prominently documented in biographical accounts. Following Harvard, Gorsuch pursued advanced study at the as a Marshall Scholar, earning a in legal in 2004. His doctoral work focused on the moral and legal dimensions of and , supervised by , a prominent theorist known for integrating Aristotelian-Thomistic ethics with contemporary jurisprudence. Finnis's influence shaped Gorsuch's emphasis on originalist interpretation and skepticism toward expansive judicial policymaking, as evidenced in Gorsuch's later writings critiquing judicial overreach in end-of-life cases. This Oxford training reinforced a commitment to first-principles reasoning in law, prioritizing statutory text and over evolving societal norms.

Judicial Clerkships

Following his graduation from cum laude in 1991, Gorsuch served as a to Judge of the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit from 1991 to 1992. Sentelle, a Reagan appointee noted for his conservative , presided over the during a period involving significant cases on executive power and regulatory authority, though specific assignments handled by Gorsuch remain undocumented in . In 1993, Gorsuch advanced to a prestigious clerkship at the U.S. , serving primarily for Associate Justice during the 1993-1994 term. White, a Kennedy appointee who served from 1962 to 1993 and was known for his textualist approach and dissents in landmark decisions like Roe v. , had recently announced his retirement; Gorsuch's service extended into the transition period under White's successor. During this time, Gorsuch also assisted Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, who assumed White's seat in 1993 and later developed a reputation for swing voting on issues like and . Gorsuch later described White as a formative influence, crediting him with instilling principles of and literal . These clerkships provided Gorsuch with direct exposure to high-stakes appellate work, including drafting bench memos, opinions, and analyses of constitutional and statutory questions, though no particular cases are publicly attributed to his contributions.

Department of Justice Service

In June 2005, Neil Gorsuch joined the as Principal Deputy to the Associate Attorney General, serving in that capacity until May 2006. In this role, he acted as the top aide to the department's third-ranking official, exercising supervisory authority over several divisions, including the Civil Division, which manages affirmative and defensive civil litigation on behalf of the federal government in areas such as contracts, torts, antitrust, and constitutional claims. Gorsuch also temporarily performed the duties of Acting Associate Attorney General during periods of transition or absence in department leadership. His responsibilities encompassed coordinating policy and litigation strategies across civil matters, including oversight of thousands of cases handled by the Civil Division's sections, such as commercial litigation involving contracts and claims. During this period, Gorsuch contributed to internal deliberations defending administration's policies, particularly those related to detainee treatment and military commissions at . He participated in discussions shaping the Detainee Treatment Act of 2005, which limited rights for detainees and established standards for interrogation techniques short of "," as well as the subsequent Military Commissions Act of 2006. These efforts involved coordinating with other executive branch components to align DOJ positions amid congressional and judicial scrutiny of enhanced interrogation methods and practices. Gorsuch's DOJ tenure concluded with his nomination by President to the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit on May 10, 2006, after which he transitioned from the department. His service emphasized advancing executive branch interests in high-stakes civil and policy litigation, reflecting a focus on robust defense of federal authority in contested domains.

Private Practice and Advocacy

From 1995 to 2005, Gorsuch practiced law as an associate and then partner at the Washington, D.C.-based firm Kellogg, Huber, Hansen, Todd, Evans & Figel, PLLC, specializing in complex commercial litigation. The firm, known for its appellate advocacy before federal courts including the , handled matters such as antitrust disputes, claims, securities litigation, breaches of fiduciary duty, fraud allegations, and shareholder disputes on behalf of corporate clients. Gorsuch contributed to these efforts, representing parties in and appellate proceedings across various federal jurisdictions. During this period, Gorsuch participated in advocacy opposing expansive class actions in securities cases, filing an amicus brief arguing such actions impose undue burdens on businesses. Colleagues at the firm described him as an exceptional litigator who demonstrated strong analytical skills and commitment to client representation throughout his decade there. In 2005, Gorsuch departed the firm—forgoing a reported annual compensation exceeding $1 million—to return to at the Department of Justice.

Tenth Circuit Judgeship (2006–2017)

Religious Liberty Adjudications

During his tenure on the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, Neil Gorsuch participated in several cases interpreting the (RFRA) and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA), statutes designed to protect religious exercise from substantial government burdens unless justified by a compelling interest and pursued via the least restrictive means. In these adjudications, Gorsuch consistently emphasized textual fidelity to the statutes, skepticism toward speculative government justifications, and deference to claimants' sincere religious beliefs without judicial second-guessing of their doctrinal validity. In Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. v. Sebelius (723 F.3d 1114, 10th Cir. 2013), Gorsuch concurred in the panel's reversal of a district court denial of preliminary injunctive relief to closely held for-profit corporations challenging the Affordable Care Act's contraception mandate under RFRA. The mandate required employers to provide health plans covering certain contraceptives without cost-sharing, which the court found substantially burdened the owners' religious exercise by facilitating practices they viewed as morally complicit in abortion. Gorsuch's concurrence criticized Chevron deference to agency interpretations in the RFRA context, arguing it would undermine Congress's intent to restore strict scrutiny for religious burdens post-Employment Division v. Smith (1990), and stressed that penalties for noncompliance—up to $1.3 million daily per affected employee—evidenced a cognizable harm. The Supreme Court affirmed this approach in 2014, extending RFRA protections to for-profit entities. Gorsuch authored the majority opinion in Yellowbear v. Lampert (741 F.3d 48, 10th Cir. 2014), reversing for officials who denied a Northern Arapaho inmate's request for supervised access to a ceremony under RLUIPA. Andrew Yellowbear Jr., serving life without parole for murdering his three-year-old daughter, asserted the lodge was central to his 's purification rituals; officials cited safety risks from his maximum-security status and history of violence. Gorsuch held that the denial imposed a substantial burden by preventing sincere exercise, rejecting officials' evidentiary shortfall—mere assertions of danger without affidavits or data on comparable programs elsewhere—as insufficient to meet RLUIPA's standard. He underscored that RLUIPA demands "more than rote recitation of the magic words" like "," requiring of compelling need and least restrictive alternatives, such as temporary accommodations tested in other facilities. This ruling, which Gorsuch later listed among his most significant, protected a minority faith practice despite the claimant's grave crimes. In related RLUIPA prisoner litigation, Gorsuch applied a balanced framework, ruling for claimants where burdens were substantial and defenses evidentiary but denying in cases lacking proof of sincerity or impact, such as dismissed claims by Muslim and Jewish over grooming policies or dietary needs when alternatives existed. For instance, he joined opinions rejecting speculative burdens while enforcing the statute's protections for verifiable exercises across faiths. Gorsuch also dissented in Little Sisters of the Poor Home for the Aged, Denver v. Burwell (No. 13-1540, 10th Cir. 2015), joining five judges in opposing denial of rehearing after a panel affirmed rejecting a preliminary for the Catholic order against the contraception mandate's accommodation. The dissent argued the self-certification form still coerced complicity in providing objectionable coverage via third-party administrators, imposing a substantial RFRA burden unmet by interests, contrasting the panel's view that administrative tasks posed no violation. The later vacated the decision and remanded in light of Zubik v. Burwell (2016), facilitating broader exemptions. These cases illustrate Gorsuch's textualist commitment to shielding diverse religious exercises—corporate, institutional, and individual—from regulatory overreach absent robust justification.

Administrative and Regulatory Rulings

During his tenure on the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, Neil Gorsuch authored or joined opinions demonstrating skepticism toward expansive administrative deference and agency overreach, emphasizing constitutional , in rulemaking, and the limits of executive authority in interpreting statutes. In cases involving agency interpretations, particularly by the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA), Gorsuch stressed that agencies must adhere to notice-and-comment procedures for substantive policy changes and cannot retroactively impose new rules without judicial scrutiny. A prominent example is De Niz Robles v. Lynch, 803 F.3d 1165 (10th Cir. 2015), where Gorsuch wrote the majority opinion for a panel holding that the BIA violated by retroactively applying a 2013 interpretive rule to deny cancellation of removal for a long-term resident alien. The court found the rule constituted a substantive shift from prior BIA , requiring formal notice-and-comment under the (APA), as it altered eligibility criteria without adequate process or reliance interests considered. Gorsuch reasoned that allowing such retroactivity would undermine settled expectations and the , rejecting the agency's argument that the change was merely interpretive. In Gutierrez-Brizuela v. Lynch, 834 F.3d 1142 (10th Cir. 2016), Gorsuch concurred separately in a unanimous decision granting eligibility for adjustment of status based on overruling prior agency precedent, but used the concurrence to launch a broader critique of Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984). He argued that Chevron deference permits agencies to exercise "purely subjective" policymaking under the guise of interpretation, effectively allowing unelected officials to bind citizens with shifting rules lacking democratic accountability or stare decisis constraints. Gorsuch contended this doctrine concentrates legislative power in the executive, contravenes the Administrative Procedure Act's directive for courts to decide "all relevant questions of law," and raises serious constitutional concerns under principles, as it diminishes Congress's role and . He advocated for courts to interpret statutes independently using traditional tools, without deferring to agency views absent explicit congressional delegation. Gorsuch's approach extended to regulatory challenges involving for-profit entities, as seen in his concurrence in Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc. v. Sebelius, 723 F.3d 1114 (10th Cir. 2012) (en banc), where he supported exemption from the Affordable Care Act's contraceptive mandate under the , arguing that regulatory burdens on religious exercise apply equally to closely held corporations without distinction from nonprofits. This stance reflected a textualist resistance to agency expansions of regulatory scope beyond statutory limits, later affirmed by the . Overall, these rulings positioned Gorsuch as a critic of administrative aggrandizement, prioritizing statutory text and procedural regularity over agency expertise.

Criminal Law and Sentencing Decisions

In United States v. Sabillon-Umana, 772 F.3d 1328 (10th Cir. 2014), Gorsuch authored the majority opinion affirming a district court's sentencing calculation in a drug conspiracy case involving methamphetamine distribution. The panel upheld attribution of 4.5 kilograms of methamphetamine to the defendant based on his role as a mid-level distributor, rejecting arguments that co-conspirators' statements were unreliable or that the quantity exceeded his reasonably foreseeable involvement; Gorsuch emphasized the district judge's fact-finding authority under a preponderance standard post-United States v. Booker, 543 U.S. 220 (2005), while noting the defendant's minimal role warranted a below-guidelines sentence of 108 months. Gorsuch concurred separately in United States v. Mendiola, 696 F.3d 1033 (10th Cir. 2012), agreeing to vacate a two-year sentence imposed for violating supervised release conditions after a prior drug conviction. Citing Tapia v. , 564 U.S. 319 (2011), he reasoned the district court's explicit focus on rehabilitation—ordering detention to facilitate drug treatment—violated 18 U.S.C. § 3582(a)'s directive against using for that purpose, as sentences must prioritize punishment, deterrence, or incapacitation; the stressed textual limits on judicial discretion to prevent conflating civil commitment with criminal sanctions. In habeas corpus reviews under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), Gorsuch frequently upheld denials of relief to state prisoners challenging convictions or sentences, applying strict deference to state court findings. For instance, in Wackerly v. Workman, 580 F.3d 1171 (10th Cir. 2009), he authored the opinion denying a death row inmate's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel for failing to present mitigating evidence of fetal alcohol syndrome, concluding under Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), that such evidence would not have altered the sentencing outcome given aggravating factors like premeditated murder. Similarly, in Williams v. Jones, 571 F.3d 1086 (10th Cir. 2009), Gorsuch dissented from granting habeas relief on a Sixth Amendment claim of deficient plea advice, arguing the defendant's subsequent fair trial cured any prejudice, as AEDPA precludes relief absent a state court's unreasonable application of clearly established law. Gorsuch's sentencing emphasized fidelity to statutory text and guidelines, often deferring to district courts' factual determinations while rejecting expansive interpretations that deviated from congressional , as seen in his reversal of a guidelines enhancement in an unpublished opinion critiquing overbroad applications of loss calculations in cases. This approach aligned with post-Booker advisory guidelines but critiqued rigid mandatory minimums in separate advocacy, though his opinions prioritized procedural regularity over leniency.

Interstate Commerce and Federalism Cases

During his tenure on the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, Neil Gorsuch authored opinions that reflected a textualist approach to the , prioritizing the constitutional text over judge-made doctrines like the , which he viewed as an extra-constitutional imposition on state regulatory authority. In Energy & Env't Legal Inst. v. Epel, 793 F.3d 1169 (10th Cir. 2015), Gorsuch wrote the majority opinion upholding Colorado's , a state law requiring 20% of retail electricity sales from renewables by 2020, against a challenge claiming it violated the by discriminating against out-of-state coal producers and regulating extraterritorially. The panel held that the standard neither facially discriminated nor imposed undue burdens on interstate commerce, as it applied evenhandedly to in-state and out-of-state generators without controlling prices or terms of sale beyond Colorado's borders. In a , Gorsuch criticized the doctrine itself as a "judge-made negative command" lacking any basis in the Constitution's affirmative grant of congressional power to regulate among the states, arguing it allowed unelected judges to second-guess democratic state laws under balancing tests that invite policy preferences rather than textual fidelity. He described it as the "most dormant" of doctrines, selectively invoked without consistent principle, and suggested its abandonment to respect by deferring to states unless explicitly acts. This stance aligned with Gorsuch's broader views, which emphasized preserving state sovereignty against implied federal constraints absent clear textual authorization. Gorsuch applied similar reasoning in Feinberg v. Commissioner, 808 F.3d 813 (10th Cir. 2015), where he authored the opinion rejecting a challenge to 's notice-and-reporting requirements for out-of-state retailers with over $100,000 in annual in-state sales, aimed at facilitating tax collection without directly imposing taxes. The court found no or excessive burden, as the rules targeted only economic activity with substantial to and mirrored congressional allowances under the Internet Tax Freedom Act. These rulings underscored Gorsuch's reluctance to expand judicial oversight of state economic regulations, favoring enumerated federal powers and state autonomy in areas not preempted by . His opinions consistently avoided deference to precedents where they conflicted with originalist interpretations, promoting a that limits federal judicial intervention in interstate economic matters to explicit constitutional or statutory grounds.

Supreme Court Nomination (2017)

Presidential Selection Process

Following the death of Justice on February 13, 2016, and the Senate's refusal to consider President Obama's nominee , President-elect pledged during his 2016 campaign to appoint a justice from a list of conservative judges vetted by and the . On May 2, 2016, Trump released an initial list of 11 potential nominees, which included , then a on the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. This list was expanded to 21 names during the campaign, emphasizing originalist and textualist jurists aligned with 's judicial philosophy. After Trump's inauguration on January 20, 2017, the selection process accelerated, involving consultations with advisors such as and conservative legal experts including of the . Trump interviewed several finalists from the list, including Gorsuch, Tenth Circuit Judge , and Seventh Circuit Judge Diane Sykes, at in New York. Gorsuch emerged as the top choice due to his reputation for rigorous , his unanimous confirmation to the Tenth Circuit in 2006, and his relatively young age of 49, which promised long-term influence on the Court. On January 31, 2017, President Trump formally announced Gorsuch's nomination in the of the , praising his "superb intellect" and commitment to interpreting the according to its original text and meaning. The described the process as marked by unprecedented transparency, fulfilling Trump's campaign promise to involve the public through the pre-vetted list and avoiding surprise picks outside conservative orthodoxy. The nomination was transmitted to the that same day, positioning Gorsuch to fill the vacancy left by Scalia.

Senate Filibuster and Confirmation Dynamics

Democrats in the launched a against Neil Gorsuch's nomination shortly after the Committee advanced it on March 30, 2017, by an 11-9 party-line vote, arguing that his judicial record indicated insufficient deference to administrative agencies and potential threats to precedents like . Minority Leader and others contended that Gorsuch's elevation would shift the Court's balance in a manner inconsistent with bipartisan norms, particularly in light of the Republican refusal to consider Merrick Garland's 2016 nomination. Republicans, including Majority Leader , countered that Gorsuch's qualifications—evidenced by unanimous circuit court confirmations and broad legal acclaim—warranted an up-or-down vote without obstruction, framing the as an unprecedented partisan tactic against a mainstream nominee. On April 6, 2017, a motion to end debate on Gorsuch failed twice, with votes of 55-45, falling short of the 60-vote threshold required under prior rules for nominations. In immediate response, McConnell invoked the "," proposing a to interpret Rule XXII as requiring only a simple majority for on such nominations; the upheld this 52-48 along party lines, effectively eliminating the for future confirmations and reversing the 60-vote tradition that had persisted since 1987. This procedural shift, which Republicans justified as a necessary counter to Democratic obstructionism following their own 2013 elimination of filibusters for lower-court nominees, allowed Gorsuch's nomination to advance without further delay. Critics from the Democratic side, including Schumer, decried it as a degradation of deliberative norms, while proponents emphasized that it restored consistent with constitutional appointment processes. The rule change paved the way for a final confirmation vote on April 7, 2017, where the Senate approved Gorsuch 54-45, with Republicans Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins joining Democrats Joe Manchin, Heidi Heitkamp, and Joe Donnelly in support—the latter three citing Gorsuch's intellect and independence despite ideological reservations. This tally reflected deep partisan divides, as no other Democrats crossed over, underscoring the nomination's role in escalating confirmation battles; Gorsuch was sworn in later that day, filling the vacancy left by Justice Antonin Scalia's death. The dynamics highlighted a Senate transformed by reciprocal procedural maneuvers, with the Gorsuch filibuster marking the first sustained effort against a Supreme Court nominee since Robert Bork's 1987 rejection, though Bork's was not filibustered but defeated outright.

Supreme Court Justiceship (2017–present)

Overturning Administrative Deference (e.g., Loper Bright)

Prior to his Supreme Court appointment, Gorsuch expressed strong reservations about Chevron deference, under which courts defer to reasonable agency interpretations of ambiguous statutes. In a 2016 concurrence in Gutierrez-Brizuela v. Lynch, he contended that the doctrine "allow executive bureaucracies to swallow huge amounts of core judicial and legislative power" and creates uncertainty by inviting agencies to shift positions without judicial constraint, urging its reconsideration as inconsistent with Article III and . On the Supreme Court, Gorsuch contributed to narrowing related deference regimes. In Kisor v. Wilkie (2019), he joined the majority limiting Auer deference to agencies' own regulations but concurred separately, criticizing deference doctrines broadly for "encourag[ing] agencies to adopt intentionally vague regulations" that evade meaningful review. He further critiqued Chevron in concurrences like Guedes v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives (2020), arguing it improperly waives judicial independence in statutory interpretation. These views culminated in (June 28, 2024), where the Court, in a 6-3 decision authored by Roberts, explicitly overruled Chevron, holding that courts must independently interpret statutes without deferring to agencies, as " remains the domain of the ." Gorsuch joined the and authored a reinforcing that stare decisis yields when precedent proves "grievously or egregiously wrong," as with Chevron, which had deviated from foundational principles in (1803) by transferring interpretive authority from courts to executives. The ruling arose from challenges by herring fishermen against rules requiring them to pay for onboard monitors, costing up to $700 daily per vessel, without explicit statutory authorization. Gorsuch's longstanding advocacy positioned him as a key intellectual force in dismantling the framework, which had justified agency actions in thousands of cases since 1984.

Textualist Interpretations of Rights (First, Second Amendments)

Justice Neil Gorsuch has consistently applied textualism to the First Amendment, interpreting its protections for speech and religion according to the ordinary public meaning of the text at the time of ratification, while eschewing judicial balancing tests that subordinate enumerated rights to policy preferences. In 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis (June 30, 2023), Gorsuch authored the 6-3 majority opinion, ruling that Colorado's public accommodations law violated the Free Speech Clause by compelling a website designer to create expressive content affirming same-sex marriages, contrary to her beliefs; he emphasized that the First Amendment prohibits the government from "dictat[ing] the content of individuals’ expression," drawing on historical precedents against coerced speech rather than modern interest-balancing. Similarly, in his concurrence in Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd. v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission (June 4, 2018), Gorsuch argued that the baker's refusal to design custom cakes for same-sex weddings implicated both free exercise and free speech protections under the First Amendment's plain text, criticizing the state's application of its law as viewpoint discrimination that flouted neutrality and general applicability requirements. Gorsuch's textualist approach extends to religious liberty claims, where he has advocated for robust enforcement of the First Amendment's without deference to secular exemptions from neutral laws. In (June 27, 2022), he joined the majority opinion abandoning 's endorsement test in favor of a history-and-tradition framework, upholding a public school coach's right to post-game prayer based on the Establishment Clause's original public meaning, which permits "much religious expression in the public square" without coercion. This reflects his broader view, expressed in dissents and concurrences, that the First Amendment's text demands for burdens on religious practice, prioritizing fidelity to founding-era understandings over evolving judicial standards. Regarding the Second Amendment, Gorsuch adheres to a textualist-originalist methodology, insisting that the right to keep and bear arms—understood as an individual pre-existing right—limits regulatory schemes to those with historical analogues, rejecting post-hoc means-ends scrutiny. He joined the 6-3 majority in New York State Rifle & Pistol Association, Inc. v. Bruen (June 23, 2022), which invalidated New York's "proper cause" requirement for concealed carry licenses, establishing that modern firearm regulations must align with the Amendment's text and the nation's historical tradition of firearm regulation, rather than contemporary policy rationales. In United States v. Rahimi (June 21, 2024), Gorsuch's concurrence in upholding a narrow federal ban on firearms possession by those under domestic violence restraining orders underscored that such restrictions demand precise historical matching, cautioning against vague "sensitive places" or categorical disarmaments without founding-era evidence, as the Amendment's text protects law-abiding citizens' carry rights beyond the home. This approach aligns with his pre-Supreme Court rulings on the Tenth Circuit, where he affirmed Second Amendment claims against overbroad restrictions, viewing the right as presumptively individual and not contingent on legislative grace. In Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization (2022), Gorsuch joined the 5-4 majority opinion authored by Justice Alito, which held that the Constitution makes no reference to abortion and thus confers no right to it, overruling Roe v. Wade (1973) and Planned Parenthood v. Casey (1992). The decision upheld Mississippi's 2018 law prohibiting most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, reasoning that rational-basis review applies to abortion regulations absent a constitutional basis for heightened scrutiny. Gorsuch also authored a concurrence, joined by Justices Thomas and Kavanaugh, critiquing the Court's prior reliance on stare decisis to sustain Roe and Casey. He argued that stare decisis demands respect for precedent but not blind adherence, particularly where precedents lack grounding in text, history, or tradition, or where the Court has acted as an unelected policy-maker rather than interpreter. Gorsuch emphasized that Casey's undue-burden standard exemplified flawed super-legislative balancing, urging abandonment of unworkable and unprincipled doctrines that undermine judicial legitimacy. Gorsuch's concurrence in Dobbs aligned with his textualist approach, prioritizing constitutional text over evolving societal norms or judicial inventions of rights not enumerated. He rejected the view that overruling Roe disrupted reliance interests, noting that abortion access had always varied by state and that democratic processes, not judicial fiat, should resolve moral questions about fetal life. This stance echoed his pre-judicial scholarship, such as his 2006 book The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia, where he contended that human life possesses intrinsic moral value independent of subjective quality assessments, opposing intentional termination as a category distinct from refusing treatment. In v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine (2024), Gorsuch concurred in the 9-0 judgment dismissing a challenge to FDA approvals of , an abortion-inducing drug, on standing grounds. Joined by Justice , he agreed that plaintiffs—anti-abortion organizations and doctors—lacked injury-in-fact due to their indirect, non-consented involvement in administering the drug post-approval. However, Gorsuch criticized the lower courts' use of "universal vacatur" under the to nullify agency rules nationwide, arguing it exceeds statutory text authorizing relief only to prevailing parties and risks judicial overreach by substituting courts for legislatures in policy disputes. He advocated narrower remedies tied to proven harms, preserving agency accountability without blanket invalidation. Gorsuch has not authored majority opinions in other Supreme Court cases directly addressing or related issues like , though his Dobbs and FDA contributions reflect a consistent emphasis on textual limits to federal judicial power over life-and-death matters traditionally reserved to states and legislatures. Prior to his Supreme Court tenure, as a Tenth Circuit judge, Gorsuch did not rule on direct challenges to restrictions, though he participated in cases involving fetal questions certified to state courts, such as whether wrongful-death claims extend to nonviable fetuses.

LGBT Rights and Title VII Applications (e.g., Bostock)

In Bostock v. Clayton County, decided June 15, 2020, Justice Neil Gorsuch authored the 6-3 majority opinion holding that an employer who discharges an individual for being homosexual or violates Title VII of the , which prohibits "because of ... ." The consolidated cases involved Bostock, fired from his Georgia child welfare role after participating in a gay recreational softball league; Aimee Stephens, a funeral home employee terminated upon announcing her transition; and Donald Zarda, a skydiving instructor dismissed after disclosing his to a client. Gorsuch applied a but-for causation standard derived from Title VII's text, reasoning that "it is impossible to discriminate against a person for being homosexual or without discriminating against that individual based on ," as the employer's decision would differ if the employee's were changed while holding other traits constant. He emphasized fidelity to the statute's ordinary public meaning in 1964, rejecting arguments that Congress intended to exclude or , and distinguished the ruling's scope from unrelated areas like sex-segregated bathrooms or sports, which he noted fall under other laws. The opinion drew sharp dissents, with Justice , joined by , arguing that Gorsuch's produced "a that is at war with reality and ," as the 1964 Congress viewed "sex" as biological distinctions unrelated to or status, and the decision disrupted settled expectations in areas like religious employers and competitive athletics. Justice concurred but criticized the but-for test's rigidity, while Justice Brett Kavanaugh's separate dissent acknowledged textual ambiguities but warned of policy overreach in preempting legislative fixes. Gorsuch's approach aligned with his textualist philosophy, prioritizing enacted words over legislative history or evolving norms, though critics from conservative perspectives contended it effectively amended the statute beyond its original scope. Post-Bostock, Gorsuch has addressed Title VII's intersections with religious liberty, noting in the opinion that the (RFRA) may provide exemptions for faith-based employers facing substantial burdens, and that the decision does not compel employers to fund or endorse specific conduct. In related anti-discrimination contexts, Gorsuch's 6-3 majority opinion in (June 30, 2023) reinforced First Amendment limits on , ruling that Colorado's public accommodations law could not force a web designer to create content celebrating same-sex marriages, distinguishing expressive services from pure conduct and applying to viewpoint —principles that inform Title VII's application to artistic or custom employment outputs. These rulings reflect Gorsuch's consistent emphasis on statutory text and constitutional protections against government overreach, balancing anti-discrimination mandates with individual rights without deference to policy preferences.

Vagueness Doctrine and Rule of Law

Neil Gorsuch has consistently applied the to enforce the , arguing that statutes must provide fair notice of prohibited conduct and prevent arbitrary enforcement by government officials, thereby preserving and . In his view, vague laws delegate legislative authority to judges, prosecutors, and juries, undermining predictability and inviting abuse, as he stated in a key : "Vague laws invite arbitrary power." This stance reflects his textualist commitment to interpreting laws based on their enacted clarity rather than post-hoc judicial expansion. A pivotal example is his 2018 concurrence in Sessions v. Dimaya, where the Court invalidated the Immigration and Nationality Act's residual clause defining "crime of violence" as unconstitutionally vague, 5-4. Gorsuch joined the majority but wrote separately to emphasize that the doctrine's roots in the Fifth Amendment demand rigorous scrutiny even in civil immigration contexts, rejecting lesser standards for non-criminal penalties. He critiqued the clause's reliance on indeterminate factors like risk of "physical force," which forced judges into subjective guesswork about hypothetical scenarios, violating fair notice and risking inconsistent application. This opinion extended vagueness protections beyond traditional criminal law, aligning with Gorsuch's broader rule-of-law concerns about overcriminalization and executive overreach. Gorsuch further invoked vagueness to safeguard defendants in United States v. Davis (2019), authoring the that struck down a federal firearms statute's residual clause for failing to specify conduct with sufficient definiteness, thus shielding against arbitrary prosecutions. He has linked these principles to related doctrines like the , advocating its use to resolve ambiguities in criminal statutes against the government, as seen in dissents and concurrences promoting strict construction to deter vague overreach. In Gundy v. United States (2019), while dissenting on non-delegation grounds, Gorsuch referenced critiques of statutes that impermissibly shift policy judgments to agencies, reinforcing his view that unclear laws erode legislative accountability. Through these rulings, Gorsuch positions the doctrine as a constitutional bulwark against the erosion of rule-of-law tenets, prioritizing enacted text over interpretive flexibility.

Federalism, Indian Law, and State Powers

Gorsuch has applied a textualist methodology to federalism disputes, prioritizing the Constitution's enumerated powers and the Tenth Amendment's reservation of authority to the states, while critiquing judicial or administrative expansions of federal reach that encroach on state prerogatives. In pre-Supreme Court writings and opinions, he has described federalism as a structural safeguard against centralized power, enabling policy experimentation among states and protecting liberty through divided sovereignty. This approach manifests in his support for anti-commandeering principles, prohibiting Congress from coercing states into enforcing federal regulatory programs. In Murphy v. National Collegiate Athletic Assn. (May 14, 2018), Gorsuch joined the unanimous opinion striking down the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act of 1992, which had authorized in select states but barred others from legalizing it. The Court held the law unconstitutional under the Tenth Amendment as an impermissible command to states to prohibit , rather than regulating private conduct directly; this reinforced state autonomy in legislative choices, allowing jurisdictions like to repeal bans and generate revenue from legalized betting, which expanded to over 30 states by 2023. Gorsuch's opinions in Indian law cases illustrate federalism's complexities in the federal-tribal-state triad, where treaties and statutes delineate sovereignty without presuming state dominance over tribal lands. He has emphasized strict adherence to historical texts, rejecting implied disestablishment or erosion of tribal jurisdiction. In McGirt v. Oklahoma (July 9, 2020), Gorsuch authored the 5-4 majority opinion ruling that the Muscogee (Creek) Nation's reservation—encompassing roughly 3 million acres or half of modern Oklahoma—remained intact under the Major Crimes Act of 1885 and prior treaties, as Congress enacted no statute explicitly extinguishing it. The decision invalidated Oklahoma's jurisdiction over major crimes by or against Native Americans in that territory, reverting authority to federal prosecutors and tribes; it prompted resentencing for over 150 death-row inmates and reshaped prosecutions in the region, with federal caseloads surging by 20-30% in affected districts. Building on McGirt, Gorsuch dissented in Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta (June 27, 2022), a 5-4 decision permitting states concurrent jurisdiction to prosecute non-Natives for crimes against Natives in Indian country. He contended that 18 U.S.C. § 1152(a)(2)(B) precludes state authority absent explicit congressional consent, preserving Indian country as a federal enclave where tribal self-governance and federal oversight prevail; overriding this, he argued, invites state overreach and undermines treaty-based sovereignty without textual warrant. This position aligns with his broader insistence on clear statutory boundaries to avoid judicially blurring federal-state-tribal lines. On state regulatory powers, Gorsuch has defended legislative discretion against dormant Commerce Clause challenges, viewing the clause as a textual prohibition on state rather than a license for courts to impose national economic uniformity. In National Pork Producers Council v. Ross (May 11, 2023), he concurred in judgment with Roberts, upholding California's Proposition 12—which bans sales of pork from operations confining sows in cramped spaces—against out-of-state producers' claims of undue burden on interstate commerce. Gorsuch criticized balancing test as an unmoored judicial policy tool, urging abandonment of jurisprudence where it substitutes judges' views for elected branches'; this preserved states' capacity to enact welfare standards affecting national markets, provided no overt occurs.

COVID-19 Restrictions and Emergency Powers

In Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo, decided on November 25, 2020, Justice Gorsuch joined the Court's per curiam opinion granting injunctive relief against New York's imposing capacity limits of 10 persons on houses of worship in certain zones, while permitting secular businesses like liquor stores and casinos to operate at higher capacities. In his concurrence, Gorsuch asserted that "Government is not free to disregard the First Amendment in times of crisis," rejecting arguments for diminished scrutiny during emergencies and criticizing the state's discriminatory treatment of religious exercise, which he likened to permitting "liquor retailers to sell alcohol to 'in-person' patrons but religious establishments to serve only 'delivery' worship." He distinguished the 1905 case —often invoked to justify broad deference—by noting it did not authorize singling out religion for disfavored treatment, and emphasized that even under rational-basis review, the restrictions failed as they burdened core constitutional rights without comparable limits on comparable secular activities. Gorsuch extended his critique of pandemic-era overreach in a solo statement on May 8, 2023, respecting the denial of in Arizona v. Mayorkas, a case involving the Title 42 public-health orders restricting . There, he described the emergency decrees issued across federal, state, and local governments since March 2020 as operating on a "breathtaking scale," authorizing restrictions on internal movement, speech, association, religious exercise, and property rights that affected "almost every aspect of our lives" and often persisted far beyond initial justifications. Gorsuch attributed these excesses to systemic failures: executives exploiting vague statutory delegations without time limits; legislatures abdicating oversight through permanent emergency frameworks; and courts exhibiting undue deference, misapplying precedents like Jacobson to uphold measures lacking the tailored, temporary nature of historical quarantines. He characterized the episode as potentially "the greatest intrusions on in the peacetime history of this country," urging renewed commitment to to prevent recurrence. Throughout these opinions, Gorsuch underscored the risks of indefinite emergency rule eroding democratic accountability, arguing that constitutional limits on government authority—rooted in enumerated powers and individual rights—must apply even amid public-health threats, lest crises become pretexts for unchecked authority. His stance aligned with the Court's 5-4 and 6-3 majorities in related religious-freedom challenges, including Tandon v. Newsom (April 9, 2021), where similar California restrictions were enjoined for comparable reasons, though Gorsuch did not author a separate opinion there.

Recent Sentencing and Jury Trial Expansions (2023–2025)

In Erlinger v. United States, decided June 21, 2024, Justice Gorsuch authored the 6-3 majority opinion holding that the Fifth and Sixth Amendments entitle a defendant to a jury determination, beyond a reasonable doubt, on whether prior convictions qualifying under the Armed Career Criminal Act (ACCA) occurred on "occasions different from one another." The ACCA mandates a 15-year minimum sentence for certain felons in possession of firearms if they have three prior convictions for violent felonies or serious drug offenses committed on separate occasions, but the Court ruled that judges cannot make this factual finding alone, as it functions as an element of the offense exposing the defendant to punishment beyond the otherwise applicable statutory maximum. Gorsuch's opinion rejected the government's position that the "occasions" inquiry involves only traditional sentencing facts exempt from jury requirements, reasoning instead that it demands individualized assessment of historical events akin to elements historically reserved for juries, consistent with precedents like Apprendi v. New Jersey (2000) and Alleyne v. United States (2013). This ruling extends Sixth Amendment protections by mandating involvement in findings that trigger ACCA enhancements, potentially affecting thousands of sentences where judges had previously resolved such disputes unilaterally. Gorsuch emphasized the historical and textual basis of the right, noting its role in preventing unchecked judicial and preserving the boundary between judge and functions in criminal adjudication. Roberts and Thomas filed concurring opinions, with Roberts underscoring the decision's narrow application to ACCA's structure and Thomas advocating broader historical scrutiny of ; Justices Kavanaugh, Alito, and Jackson dissented, arguing the occasions clause permits judicial fact-finding as a non-elementary sentencing consideration. The Erlinger decision represents a significant recent expansion of guarantees in federal sentencing, aligning with Gorsuch's textualist approach to enforcing constitutional limits on judicial power, though its full implications for other enhancement statutes remain subject to future litigation. No comparable Gorsuch-authored opinions on sentencing or expansions emerged in the Court's 2024-2025 term through October 2025.

Judicial Philosophy

Originalism and Textualism Foundations

Neil Gorsuch's commitment to originalism stems from its alignment with the rule of law and democratic accountability, positing that the Constitution's meaning is fixed by the public understanding of its text at the time of ratification. This approach, he argues, ensures judges apply enduring principles rather than evolving societal values, thereby preventing unelected officials from usurping legislative functions. In a 2019 essay excerpted from his book A Republic, If You Can Keep It, Gorsuch explained that originalism recognizes the Constitution's original meaning as ascertainable, akin to interpreting historical texts like Shakespeare, and allows for novel applications to modern contexts—such as applying the Eighth Amendment's prohibition on "cruel" punishments to emerging technologies—without altering the core text. He contrasted this with living constitutionalism, citing historical misapplications like Dred Scott v. Sandford (1857) and Korematsu v. United States (1944) as evidence that departing from fixed meaning invites judicial overreach and regretted outcomes. Gorsuch grounds in respect for , viewing it as essential to preserving the republican framework established by the Framers. As he wrote in A Republic, If You Can Keep It, "respect for the separation of powers implies originalism in the application of the ," ensuring fidelity to the document's original public meaning rather than subjective judicial updates. This philosophy echoes the influence of Justice , whose advocacy elevated originalism and with whom Gorsuch shared a friendship and intellectual affinity, though Gorsuch did not clerk for him directly. During his 2006-2017 tenure on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, Gorsuch applied originalist principles in cases involving , critiquing deference doctrines that subordinated textual analysis to agency interpretations. Complementing , Gorsuch embraces for , emphasizing the ordinary public meaning of enacted words at the time of passage, divorced from legislative intent or policy consequences. He has described himself as a "proud textualist," arguing that this method respects and presentment by holding Congress accountable for clear drafting rather than allowing judges to divine unspoken purposes. In linking the two methodologies, Gorsuch maintains that for statutes and for the together form "the surest guides" to neutral adjudication, subordinating judicial discretion to democratic processes. This framework, articulated consistently in his opinions and writings, prioritizes textual fidelity to constrain judicial power and uphold .

Opposition to Living Constitutionalism

Neil Gorsuch has consistently critiqued living constitutionalism, the interpretive approach positing that the U.S. Constitution's meaning evolves with societal changes and contemporary values, arguing instead that it invites judges to substitute personal policy preferences for the document's fixed original public meaning. In his 2019 book A Republic, If You Can Keep It, Gorsuch described living constitutionalism as fostering "philosopher-king judges" who "swoop down from their marble palace to ordain answers" rather than deferring to democratic processes like or constitutional amendments. He contended that this method undermines by encouraging courts to revise laws for perceived efficiency or popularity, rather than applying their enacted meaning equally to all. Gorsuch illustrated the perils of living constitutionalism through historical examples of judicial overreach, asserting that "virtually the entire anticanon of we look back upon today with regret came about when judges chose to follow their own impulses rather than follow the ’s original meaning." He specifically cited the 1857 decision, where a majority disregarded originalist principles to rule that lacked authority to prohibit in federal territories, thereby exacerbating national divisions leading to the Civil War. Similarly, he referenced (1944), which upheld Japanese American internment, as a product of judges prioritizing wartime exigencies over textual fidelity. These cases, in Gorsuch's view, demonstrate how departing from original meaning enables ideologically driven outcomes untethered from democratic accountability. In public addresses, such as a September 2019 discussion at the promoting his book, Gorsuch reiterated that —interpreting the based on its meaning at —avoids the subjectivity of living constitutionalism by grounding decisions in verifiable historical evidence, much like routine in lower courts. He dismissed claims that the 's age renders original meaning unknowable, countering that "living constitutionalists often complain we can’t know the original understanding because the document’s too old and cryptic. Hardly." Gorsuch maintained that this approach preserves the 's adaptability to modern contexts—such as applying free speech protections to the —without altering its core text, thereby upholding and preventing courts from usurping legislative roles. His philosophy aligns with in statutory cases, extending to constitutional interpretation by prioritizing enacted language over evolving judicial glosses.

Voting Patterns and Conservative Consistency

Neil Gorsuch has consistently ranked among the more conservative justices on the , as evidenced by his Martin-Quinn ideological score of 1.12 following the 2023-2024 term, positioning him as the third-most conservative member behind and . This score, derived from of justices' voting patterns in non-unanimous cases, reflects a reliable alignment with conservative outcomes across , economic regulation, and disputes. During his inaugural 2016-2017 term, Gorsuch voted in full agreement with , the court's most conservative justice, in all decided cases, establishing an early pattern of ideological solidarity. Agreement rates with fellow conservatives underscore this consistency, though principled textualist divergences prevent lockstep uniformity. For instance, Gorsuch aligned with at rates of 81 percent (2017-2019 terms) to 88 percent (2020-2021), with Alito at 83-88 percent across similar periods, and with at 78-91 percent post-2020. Lower alignments, such as 70 percent with in 2018-2019, often stem from interpretive disagreements rather than ideological shifts, as in administrative law cases where Gorsuch's skepticism of agency exceeds some peers'. Overall, he joined the majority in approximately 82 percent of cases through 2024, frequently authoring or joining opinions that advance and originalist readings favoring conservative results. Gorsuch's voting exhibits conservative reliability in high-stakes ideological divides, including 5-4 decisions on Second Amendment rights, regulatory rollbacks, and religious liberty exemptions, where he sides with the conservative bloc over 80 percent of the time against liberal dissenters. While occasional cross-ideological votes occur—such as in select matters emphasizing textual limits on prosecutorial power—these reflect methodological consistency rather than moderation, maintaining his placement within the court's right-leaning . Empirical analyses confirm this pattern, portraying Gorsuch as committed to conservative without the institutionalist compromises seen in .

Advocacy for Limited Government and Federalism

Neil Gorsuch has articulated a judicial philosophy that prioritizes constitutional limits on federal authority, viewing expansive administrative power as a threat to separation of powers and individual liberty. In his 2016 concurrence in Gutierrez-Brizuela v. Lynch, while serving on the Tenth Circuit, Gorsuch criticized Chevron deference as allowing administrative agencies to assume legislative and judicial functions, thereby eroding the structural safeguards against concentrated power envisioned by the Framers. He argued that such deference invites "power grabs" by the executive, undermining democratic accountability since unelected officials effectively rewrite statutes. This skepticism of carried into his tenure, exemplified by his 2024 concurrence in , where he joined the majority in overruling Chevron and emphasized that judges must independently interpret statutes to prevent agencies from exercising "policy-laden" beyond congressional intent. Gorsuch contended that allowing agencies unchecked leeway risks transforming into an "imperial presidency," contravening Article I's vesting of legislative power in . Similarly, in his 2019 dissent in Gundy v. United States, he invoked the to challenge 's broad delegation of sentencing authority to the Attorney General, asserting that only can enact laws restricting , not executive officials filling in "major decisions." On , Gorsuch has defended states' sovereignty against federal encroachments, promoting a system where states serve as "" to foster innovation and restrain national overreach. In National Pork Producers Council v. Ross (2023), he authored the majority opinion upholding California's animal welfare law against challenges, rejecting petitioners' proposed "virtually per se" rule that would unduly restrict state regulatory autonomy and disrupt the federal balance. He underscored that the allocates primary regulatory power to states unless explicitly preempted, warning that aggressive judicial invalidation of state laws would "eviscerate" federalism's core protections. Gorsuch has echoed these principles in public writings, noting federalism's role in diffusing power, enabling experimentation, safeguarding liberties through competitive governance, and checking federal excess—benefits he traces to the Framers' deliberate design. In A Republic, If You Can Keep It (2019), a compilation of his speeches and opinions, Gorsuch reinforces that the Constitution's enumerated powers limit federal scope, with federalism ensuring states retain residual authority to address local needs without national uniformity. He has cautioned against eroding this balance through overbroad federal grants or emergencies, as in a 2024 discussion where he stressed maintaining equilibrium to avoid destroying state prerogatives while curbing federal overextension. These views align with his broader critique of "too much law" from centralized sources, advocating restraint to preserve self-government.

Personal Life

Family, Religion, and Values

Neil Gorsuch was born on August 29, 1967, in , , to David Gorsuch, a , and Anne Gorsuch Burford, an attorney who served as the first female Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency from 1981 to 1983 under President . His parents divorced in 1983, after which his mother remarried Norman Burford, a professor of equine at . Gorsuch has two siblings: a younger sister, Stephanie, born in 1969, and a younger brother, J.J., born in 1973. Gorsuch met his wife, Marie Louise Gorsuch (née Burton), while studying abroad at Oxford University on a ; she is English-born and the couple married in 1996 after more than a decade of acquaintance. They have two daughters, Emma, born in 1999, and Belinda, born in 2001. The family resides in a near , where they maintain a small farm with animals including goats, chickens, and bees, reflecting an interest in self-sufficient, outdoor living. Gorsuch was raised Roman Catholic but as an adult attends an Episcopal church in Virginia, identifying as Episcopalian without formal records of conversion from Catholicism. His uncle, David Gorsuch, was a progressive Episcopal priest known for social activism, whom Gorsuch has described as a personal "hero." Upon his 2017 confirmation to the Supreme Court, Gorsuch became the first Protestant justice since 2010, joining a bench dominated by Catholics and Jews at the time. Gorsuch's personal values emphasize religious liberty, limited government, and textual fidelity in law, informed by his family's conservative political background—particularly his mother's Reagan-era service—and his own judicial record prioritizing individual rights over expansive regulatory authority. He has expressed commitment to the as a bulwark against arbitrary power, drawing from first-hand observation of his mother's contentious EPA tenure, which ended amid congressional proceedings over withheld documents. In public commentary, Gorsuch advocates for , intellectual independence, and skepticism of bureaucratic overreach, aligning with a libertarian-leaning that resists ideological extremes.

Ethics Allegations and Rebuttals

In June 2017, nine days after his confirmation, Gorsuch sold a 40-acre vacation property in , which he co-owned with two other families, for $1.825 million to Brian Duffy, chief executive of the law firm . The sale price exceeded a recent independent appraisal by approximately 20 percent, and the transaction involved a revocable trust that did not disclose Duffy's identity in Gorsuch's mandatory financial disclosure form filed that year. has participated in at least 22 cases before the since the sale, including some in which Gorsuch joined majority opinions favoring the firm's clients in eight of 12 instances where his vote was recorded. Critics, including Democratic lawmakers and ethics advocacy groups, alleged that the undisclosed buyer identity created an appearance of impropriety and potential influence, arguing it exemplified lax disclosure rules that could enable access to the . These claims emerged amid broader scrutiny of financial practices, often amplified by outlets and figures opposing the Court's conservative majority. No evidence has surfaced of direct communication between Gorsuch and Duffy regarding the sale's terms or subsequent litigation, nor of any linking the transaction to judicial outcomes. experts, including those not aligned with Gorsuch's judicial philosophy, have stated that the omission of the buyer's name violated no existing disclosure requirements, as justices are not obligated to identify private purchasers in non-gift sales under federal ethics guidelines applicable at the time. Gorsuch did not recuse from cases, consistent with the absence of a spousal or personal financial interest in the firm, and his rulings aligned with his established textualist approach rather than deviating from patterns in similar disputes. Supporters contend the allegations reflect partisan efforts to undermine the without demonstrating causation or bias, as sales among non-parties to litigation pose no inherent conflict under traditional judicial canons. Separate allegations involve Gorsuch's longstanding friendship with Colorado billionaire , including unreimbursed stays at Anschutz's ranch and private jet travel, which ethics watchdogs claimed warranted recusal from cases implicating Anschutz's interests, such as environmental disputes over and rail projects. In October 2024, advocacy groups urged Gorsuch to recuse from Railroad Development Corp. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, citing these ties and Anschutz's potential indirect benefit through expanded transport. Gorsuch ultimately recused on December 4, 2024, stating the decision followed review of the Court's 2023 ethics code, which emphasizes avoiding even the appearance of partiality. The recusal addressed prior criticisms that Gorsuch had participated in Anschutz-related matters post-appointment despite routine recusals during his Tenth Circuit tenure, but no undisclosed benefits or rulings favoring Anschutz personally were identified. Gorsuch has disclosed relevant travel per guidelines and maintained that friendships alone do not trigger mandatory recusal absent direct case involvement, a position echoed in judicial precedents prioritizing actual over speculative appearances. Broader concerns, including Gorsuch's opposition to an enforceable code with external oversight—arguing it risks politicizing —have fueled narratives of resistance, though he supported the voluntary 2023 code and subsequent recusals demonstrate adherence. Annual disclosures reveal standard income from book royalties (over $1 million total from titles like A Republic, If You Can Keep It) and teaching stipends (e.g., $30,000 from in 2024), with no unreported luxuries or conflicts akin to those scrutinized in other justices' cases. No formal investigations or sanctions have resulted from these matters, underscoring the absence of verifiable wrongdoing amid heightened partisan scrutiny.

Writings and Public Engagements

Books and Monographs

Gorsuch's first monograph, The Future of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia, was published in 2006 by as an adaptation of his 2004 Oxford DPhil thesis. The book examines the ethical, legal, and policy dimensions of and , arguing that these practices should not be legalized due to the intrinsic and risks of abuse, including the potential erosion of protections for vulnerable populations. It critiques utilitarian justifications and surveys international legal trends, emphasizing deontological principles over consequentialist ones in . In 2019, Gorsuch released A Republic, If You Can Keep It, published by Crown, a collection of essays, speeches, and reflections drawing on the Benjamin Franklin quote to explore the U.S. Constitution's design and the judiciary's role in preserving republican government. The work defends originalism and textualism as interpretive methods faithful to the framers' intent, critiques judicial overreach, and includes personal anecdotes from his judicial career, such as cases involving religious liberty and administrative law. It became a New York Times bestseller, highlighting Gorsuch's views on limited government and the separation of powers. Gorsuch's most recent book, Over Ruled: The Human Toll of Too Much Law, appeared in August 2024 from , contending that the proliferation of federal regulations—exceeding 185,000 pages in the —imposes undue burdens on individuals and businesses, often without clear legislative accountability. Drawing on case examples and historical analysis, it advocates for clearer statutory language, reduced administrative deference, and a return to legislative primacy to mitigate the "human toll" of regulatory excess, consistent with Gorsuch's textualist . The monograph critiques the administrative state's growth since the era, arguing it undermines democratic self-governance.

Articles, Speeches, and Commentary

Prior to his federal judicial appointments, Gorsuch authored op-eds critiquing progressive reliance on courts to resolve contentious social issues, such as , arguing instead for resolution through democratic processes rather than judicial fiat. In one such piece published in Online, he described liberals' approach as an "addiction" to judicial intervention, warning that it undermines legislative authority and public accountability. As a judge on the Tenth Circuit, Gorsuch delivered the 2013 Barbara K. Olson Memorial Lecture titled "Ironies of the Law," in which he examined how the explosion of federal regulations—numbering over 185,000 pages in the by then—creates unintended traps for ordinary citizens, including cases where well-meaning individuals face severe penalties for technical violations. He emphasized the irony that a system designed to promote justice often burdens the compliant while favoring the cunning, drawing on historical examples like Learned Hand's warnings about over-criminalization. Following his nomination, Gorsuch gave an acceptance speech on , 2017, in the , thanking President for the honor and affirming his oath to interpret the and laws as written, without regard to personal views or external pressures. He highlighted the judiciary's role in safeguarding liberty against all branches of government, invoking the framers' vision of an independent court. In public engagements as a , Gorsuch has commented on the administrative state's expansion, arguing in a 2024 interview that excessive imposes a "human toll" by criminalizing everyday conduct and eroding , with federal agencies wielding prosecutorial power without sufficient legislative oversight. During a , 2024, discussion at the , he referenced Learned Hand's 1951 "The Contributions of an Independent Judiciary to Civilization" speech, contending that modern legal complexity—exemplified by over 300,000 federal crimes—threatens individual liberty more than overt tyranny, as it fosters arbitrary enforcement and compliance burdens on non-experts. Gorsuch advocated for textualist interpretation to constrain such overreach, citing cases where vague statutes lead to disparate outcomes.

References

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