Democrats to oppose vote on Supreme Court nominee
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.