For the first time, conservatives might thank God for Kennedy

WASHINGTON — As many conservatives saw it, Justice Anthony Kennedy’s 1988 ascent to the nation’s highest bench was reason for only muted celebration, if any, because he settled into the seat that his nominator, President Ronald Reagan, had first tried to fill with the conservatives’ favorite jurist, Robert Bork. Bork was rejected by the Senate (58-42) after what was up to that point the most acrimonious Supreme Court confirmation fight. This was before now-Justice Clarence Thomas was, in 1991, Borked.