Call & Times

Trump closes in on Supreme Court pick

- By CATHERINE LUCEY and LISA MASCARO

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump is moving closer to deciding his next Supreme Court nominee amid intense jockeying from various factions seeking to influence his choice to replace retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy. Trump’s current top contenders are federal appeals court judges Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh and Raymond Kethledge, said a person familiar with Trump’s thinking who was not authorized to speak publicly.

With customary fanfare, Trump plans to announce his selection Monday night. Tapping into Trump’s understand­ing of the importance of the choice, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., told the president this week that nominating someone hostile to Democrat priorities would hurt Trump’s lega- cy.

Schumer, who has led efforts to block nearly all of Trump’s federal court appointmen­ts, said that such a choice would create more division, according to a person familiar with the conversati­on. Working closely with a White House team and consulting with lawmakers and outside advisers, Trump has spent the week deliberati­ng on the choice.

He conducted interviews on Monday and Tuesday. He has not yet publicly indicated that he has narrowed the list and could still consider others in the mix. Vice President Mike Pence also met with some of Trump’s contenders in recent days, according to a person familiar with the search process. The person did not specify which candidates Pence met with and spoke on condition of anonymity Wednesday to describe the private search process. Trump is choosing his nominee from a list of 25 candidates vetted by conservati­ve groups. Earlier in the week, he spoke with seven of them. The president also spoke by phone with Republican Sen. Mike Lee of Utah on Monday. The White House did not characteri­ze that call as an interview, and Lee, the only lawmaker on Trump’s list, is not viewed as a top prospect. But Lee has consistent support among conservati­ve and libertaria­n activists, including some Republican­s who worry about a nominee not upholding their principles and who say the Utah senator could bring more certainty. Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Tex- as, advocated Thursday for Lee in a Fox News op-ed, warning Trump not to repeat “mistakes” of past Republican presidents by picking a Supreme Court nominee who turns out to be insufficie­ntly conservati­ve. Cruz said President George H.W. Bush’s selection of liberal David Souter was “one of the most consequent­ial errors of his presidency.” He also pointed to former justices William Brennan, John Paul Stevens and Harry Blackmun, the latter of whom wrote the Roe v. Wade decision that establishe­d a woman’s right to abortion. All three were nominated by Republican presidents. Lee, he said, would be a “sure thing.” Paul, the Kentucky senator, has told colleagues he may not vote for Kavanaugh if the judge is nominated, citing Kavanaugh’s role during President George W. Bush’s administra­tion on cases involving executive privilege and the disclosure of documents to Congress, said a person familiar with Paul’s conversati­ons who spoke on condition of anonymity. Some conservati­ves have pointed to Kethledge as a potential justice in the mold of Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s first Supreme Court nominee last year. Both Kethledge and Gorsuch once served Kennedy as law clerks, as did Kavanaugh. Kethledge, a Michigan Law graduate, would add academic diversity to a court steeped in the Ivy League. Since Trump said his short list includes at least two women, speculatio­n has focused on Barrett, a former law clerk to Justice Antonin Scalia and a longtime Notre Dame Law School professor who serves on the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Conservati­ve groups rallied around Barrett after her confirmati­on hearing last year featured controvers­ial questionin­g from Democrats over her Roman Catholic faith.

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