Baltimore Sun

Two who could push high court to right are in Trump’s view

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is expected to move quickly to nominate a replacemen­t for retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy’s soon-to-bevacant Supreme Court seat, and two leading candidates are veteran Washington, D.C., Judge Amy Coney Barrett, a former Notre Dame law professor and recent Trump appointee to the 7th Circuit in Chicago, and appellate Judge Brett Kavanaugh.

They emerged from a list of more than two dozen potential nominees put together by the conservati­ve Federalist Society and Heritage Foundation. On Friday, Trump told reporters he is considerin­g five to seven candidates and that two of them are women.

The list was Trump’s idea and it has proven effective, said Leonard Leo, a Federalist Society official who is advising

COURT , the White House. It told Republican voters that he was serious about appointing only reliable conservati­ves to the high court, he said.

Unlike in decades past, when presidents and their top lawyers scrambled to find a qualified nominee when a vacancy suddenly arose, the Federalist Society list is the result of careful screening. A team of lawyers read and analyzed everything written or said by the candidates.

Their unofficial motto is “No more Souters,” a reference to now-retired Justice David Souter, who was nominated by President George H.W. Bush in 1990. The White House team assured Republican­s he was a conservati­ve.

Souter was careful and cautious as a judge and devoted to precedent. But his leanings were moderate to liberal. In 1992, Souter along with Justices Anthony Kennedy and Sandra Day O’Connor joined to uphold the right to abortion announced two decades earlier in Roe v. Wade.

Conservati­ves are determined never to make the same mistake again.

Barrett, 46, is a newcomer with a sparse record as a judge. She is a product of the University of Notre Dame and South Bend, Ind.

She went law school at Notre Dame and spent a few years in Washington as a law clerk for D.C. Circuit Judge Laurence Silberman and Justice Antonin Scalia. She returned in 2002 to teach law at Notre Dame.

Barrett was narrowly confirmed by the Senate in November.

She has, however, written and spoken frequently about the importance of her Catholic faith and in her belief that life begins at conception. In a 2003 scholarly article, she suggested Roe vs. Wade was an “erroneous decision.”

During her Senate hearing, Sen. Dianne Barrett Kavanaugh Feinstein, D-Calif., said she had read Barrett’s writings, adding that the “dogma lives loudly within you, and that’s a concern.”

That comment triggered a sharp backlash from Barrett’s defenders and others, who said the nominee was being criticized for her faith.

But if Barrett is the nominee, Democrats and liberal activists are certain to focus on her views about abortion and the role they might play if the court is asked to overturn Roe.

Kavanaugh, 53, grew up in Washington, D.C., and is the favorite of many conservati­ve lawyers here.

He went to Yale Law School and clerked at the Supreme Court for Kennedy alongside Neil Gorsuch, who joined the court last year as Trump’s first appointmen­t. Kavanaugh was a top deputy to independen­t counsel Kenneth Starr in the long investigat­ion of President Bill Clinton, and he drafted the Starr Report that led to Clinton’s impeachmen­t.

He also joined the legal team that represente­d George W. Bush in the fight over the recount in the 2000 presidenti­al election.

Kavanaugh worked in the White House — Washington Post counsel’s office for Bush and later served as his staff secretary.

In 2003, Bush nominated him to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, but Democrats initially blocked his confirmati­on.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., called him a “very bright legal foot soldier” who has been in the middle of every partisan legal battle. But Kavanaugh finally won confirmati­on in 2006.

Since then, Kavanaugh has written hundreds of opinions, and he is known for always staking out a conservati­ve position. “He is much more conservati­ve in his approach to law than Justice Kennedy,” said Justin Walker, a University of Louisville law professor who clerked for Kavanaugh at the appeals court and Kennedy at the Supreme Court.

Walker cited Kavanaugh’s support for the right to owna semiautoma­tic rifle under the 2nd Amendment.

Last fall, Kavanaugh was involved in a quick-moving dispute over whether a migrant teenager in Texas could be released from immigratio­n custody to obtain an abortion. A federal judge cleared the way, but Kavanaugh wrote a 2-1 decision siding with Trump administra­tion lawyers and blocking the abortion for up to10 more days. The full appeals court intervened and overturned his ruling. In dissent, he faulted his more liberal colleagues as wrongly creating a “new right for unlawful immigrant minors in U.S. government detention to obtain abortion on demand.”

Like many judges, he has avoided any direct comments in his legal opinions about Roe vs. Wade.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States