No, he is a conservative. He just declines to do the Republican party's onanistic fantasies for them when they're supposed to do it politically.
Your analysis is silly. I'm basically telling you exactly how he sees himself. Shall I quote him? "I do not think beginning with an all-encompassing approach to constitutional interpretation is the best way to faithfully construe the document." His stated approach to jurisprudence is to not ground his decision in one ideology but to treat each case individually.
And like, do you think his opinions are conservative? Shall we consult a graph? He's practically the midpoint and moving that direction.
You're just wrong.
The problem people like you face is that you want to be reasonable, but on the other hand you don't want to accept that your much beloved party is now officially endorsing conspiracy theory and attempts to ignore democratic process. Caught in the cognitive dissonance, you're trying to steer a middle course, but a middle course between sanity and insanity is merely being half-insane.
It's your perspective that's broken. We've been told for years that the election was stolen. The 2016 election. Somehow that's not conspiracy theories and cognitive dissonance. What's the difference? Recounts and court appeals are perfectly normal aftermath in a presidential election. What isn't normal is this overblown reaction. In 2016, experts suggested Clinton should sue to challenge the entire electoral college system as unconstitutional. Is that a coup? Am I supposed to fear a military takeover of the country because people suggest ridiculous lawsuits? Why are you taking them so seriously? There were certainly people who suggested Obama would invoke martial law and refuse to leave office, and those people were rightly ignored as loonies. Do you want to be a loony?
Well, maybe so, though I'd say the term "activist judges" here just means "judges that made a call I don't personally like".
Quite the opposite. I think most of what they did was perfectly reasonable as policy. It was the method and the tone that caused problems. Like, I have no problem with the idea that there's a pandemic and people should be allowed to vote without congregating. That's fine. But it should be the legislature doing that. Well, they're in a spat with the governor (who's pandemic response is the worst executed policy I've ever seen. His lockdown was "here's a list of things we deem important enough to stay open and everything else closes" and the first draft neglected to include pharmacies), so bipartisan changes to the system weren't likely, and I appreciate that as well, BUT their decisions became silly. Everyone can mail in vote, even if its late, even if its late and we can't tell when it was mailed, even if its actually done in person early, everything's allowed. Republicans ask "well, if they're voting early, do we get to have poll watchers to maintain election transparency?" NAH. Polling places aren't open so the law says no poll watchers, because apparently the letter of the law starts mattering exactly when it pisses off Republicans.
It's not that rule changes weren't justified given the circumstance. It's that they were formulated as a giant middle finger to Republicans. A middle finger that was more important to them than the election or the pandemic or the state's laws they are tasked with.
How many activist judges can there be left after Trump’s purge of judicial ranks?
I don't know of any judges purged by Trump, or even a legal mechanism by which he could accomplish that.