When the 2016 election was held American voters knew they were not just choosing a president who would decide policy for the next four years, but one that could shape America for decades to come.
At that time the nine-member US Supreme Court, finely balanced between conservatives and liberals, had one seat open. It also included one sitting justice in her eighties, and two more in their late seventies.
It seemed more than probable that the next president would get to nominate replacements, potentially several of them, putting their ideological stamp on the country’s highest court for a generation.
Voters knew that issues including abortion, gun rights, immigration, labour rights and campaign…
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