Austin American-Statesman

Kavanaugh plans strategy with senators

Trump’s Supreme Court pick kicks off push for confirmati­on.

- By Lisa Mascaro and Catherine Lucey

— President DonWASHING­TON ald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, mapped out strategy with Republican leaders Tuesday, launching a fierce confirmati­on battle that could remake the court for decades and roil the midterm elections in the meantime.

Kavanaugh, a favorite of the GOP establishm­ent, first huddled with Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. Joining him were Vice President Mike Pence and former Sen. Jon Kyl. He also met for roughly 30 minutes with Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, which is taking the

first close look at the nomination.

While Republican­s have set a goal of confirming Kavanaugh this fall, Grassley said speed isn’t the goal. The vetting process, he said, is “going to be thorough and going to be done right.” He did not offer a timeline for confirmati­on hearings.

McConnell called Kavanaugh “one of the most thoughtful jurists” in the country and blasted Democrats as “eager to try and turn judicial confirmati­ons into something like political elections.” The GOP leader warned against engaging in “cheap political fear-mongering.”

“We’ll hear all kinds of fantastic stories about the pain and suffering that this perfectly qualified, widely respected judge will somehow unleash on America if we confirm him to the court,” McConnell said.

Pence called Kavanaugh a “good man.”

Democrats are uniting behind a strategy to turn the confirmati­on fight into a referendum on conservati­ves’ efforts to undo abortion access and chip away at other health care protection­s under the Affordable Care Act.

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York is vowing to fight the nomination “with everything I have.”

Schumer warned, “In selecting Judge Kavanaugh, President Trump did exactly what he said he would do on the campaign trail — nominate someone who will overturn women’s reproducti­ve rights and strike down health care protection­s for millions of Americans.”

The Democrats have turned their attention to pressuring two Republican­s, Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, to oppose any nominee who threatens the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision. The two have supported access to abortion services.

“We’ve got some due diligence that we’ve got to do,” Murkowski said Tuesday.

Collins said Kavanaugh is “clearly qualified,” but other issues also will come into play for her, specifical­ly “judicial temperamen­t” and “judicial philosophy.”

Kavanaugh in the past has made statements about respecting precedent that could help in winning over Murkowski and Collins.

In his 2006 confirmati­on hearing to become a federal judge, Kavanaugh said, “I would follow Roe v. Wade faithfully and fully” because it’s “binding precedent” that has been “reaffirmed many times.”

Yet there’s little doubt that Kavanaugh, a solidly conservati­ve, politicall­y connected judge, would shift the nation’s highest court further to the right.

A product of the Republican legal establishm­ent in Washington, Kavanaugh, 53, is a former law clerk for retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy. Like Trump’s first nominee last year, Justice Neil Gorsuch, Kavanaugh would be a young addition who could help remake the court for decades with rulings that could restrict abortion, expand gun rights and roll back key parts of Obamacare.

In a prime-time televised announceme­nt, Trump called Kavanaugh “one of the finest and sharpest legal minds of our time.”

“Brett Kavanaugh has gotten rave reviews — rave reviews — actually, from both sides,” Trump said Tuesday as he left the White House for a weeklong overseas trip. “And I think it’s going to be a beautiful thing to watch over the next month.”

With Kavanaugh, Trump is replacing a swing vote on the nine-member court with a conservati­ve. Kavanaugh, who serves on the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, has taken an expansive view of executive power and has favored limits on investigat­ing the president.

Speaking at the White House, Kavanaugh pledged to preserve the Constituti­on and said that “a judge must be independen­t and must interpret the law, not make the law.”

Some conservati­ve and libertaria­n-leaning activists were disappoint­ed by the pick and doubted it would provide Republican­s with the midterm election boost they are looking for to motivate voters to the polls.

“This is going to give heartburn to some conservati­ves,” said Brian Darling, a former Republican counsel to Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky.

“It’s not the pick conservati­ves had hoped for,” Darling said.

Paul was among some Republican senators who had favored other options. But the senator tweeted after the announceme­nt that he looked forward to meeting Kavanaugh “with an open mind.”

Like the other eight justices on the court, Kavanaugh has an Ivy League law degree, spending his undergradu­ate and law school years at Yale. Since 2006, he has been a judge on the federal appeals court in Washington. He also was a key aide to Kenneth Starr during Starr’s investigat­ion of President Bill Clinton, worked on behalf of George W. Bush’s campaign during the election recount in 2000 and served in the Bush White House.

Kavanaugh’s many written opinions provide insight into his thinking and also will be fodder for Senate Democrats who will seek to block his confirmati­on. He has written roughly 300 opinions as a judge, authored several law journal articles, regularly taught law school classes and spoken frequently in public.

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