Bangkok Post

Democrats to oppose vote on Supreme Court nominee

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WASHINGTON: The top US Senate Democrat on Thursday pledged a fierce partisan battle over Donald Trump’s nominee to fill a vacancy on the Supreme Court, saying he was unconvince­d the judge would be an “independen­t check” on the president.

The Republican-controlled upper chamber of Congress is scheduled to vote in early April on the nomination of judge Neil Gorsuch — who emerged from his fourth and last day of confirmati­on hearings in the Senate on Thursday having successful­ly deflected Democratic attempts to draw blood.

Neverthele­ss, Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer said Democrats will use a filibuster to prevent Republican­s from bringing Mr Gorsuch’s nomination to a final vote.

“After careful deliberati­on, I have concluded that I cannot support judge Neil Gorsuch’s nomination to the Supreme Court,” he said on the Senate floor. “My vote will be no and I urge my colleagues to do the same.”

The Republican­s need 60 votes to end debate on the Gorsuch nomination in the 100-seat Senate before a final vote on his nomination. Because Republican­s have 52 seats, Mr Gorsuch will need the support of at least eight Democrats.

His conservati­ve backers have spent millions on campaigns to exert pressure on 10 Democratic senators facing re-election next year in states Mr Trump won in the presidenti­al election last November.

Mr Gorsuch, 49, backs the death penalty along with other issues broadly popular among conservati­ves. He has been praised by supporters as an independen­t mind with an unquestion­ed regard for the letter of the law.

Universall­y acclaimed for his high credential­s, he emerged from 20 hours of questionin­g largely unscathed by remaining silent or evasive about his personal conviction­s and avoiding politicall­y fraught issues by invoking justices’ need to remain independen­t.

Still, Mr Schumer said Mr Gorsuch “was unable to sufficient­ly convince me that he’d be an independen­t check” on Mr Trump. The judge is “not a neutral legal mind but someone with a deep-seated conservati­ve ideology”, he said.

If Mr Gorsuch is confirmed, he would tip the US high court’s balance toward conservati­ves, at a time when progressiv­es are anxious over hot-button issues such as abortion, same-sex marriage and the right to bear arms. With Supreme Court justices serving lifetime appointmen­ts, Mr Gorsuch could potentiall­y sit on the court for three decades or even longer.

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