China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Trump to GOP: Go ‘nuke’ for Gorsuch

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US President Donald Trump urged the Senate’s Republican leader on Wednesday to resort to the “nuclear option” of scrapping longstandi­ng chamber rules if needed to confirm Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch, an aggressive opening to what’s shaping up as a ferocious clash over the future of the high court.

At the White House a day after nominating Gorsuch, Trump endorsed a scenario that would involve majority Republican­s unilateral­ly changing Senate rules over the objections of the Democratic minority.

It could come into play if Democrats try to block Gorsuch’s confirmati­on with a filibuster, as the liberal base is demanding, and would allow the GOP to confirm Gorsuch with a simple majority instead of the 60 votes now needed.

Addressing GOP Senate leader Mitch McConnell from the White House, Trump said, “If we end up with that gridlock I would say, ‘If you can, Mitch, go nuclear.’” He said of Gorsuch that it “would be an absolute shame if a man of this quality was caught up in the web.”

Trump made his comments as Gorsuch traversed Capitol Hill, escorted by Vice-President Mike Pence and winning extravagan­t praise from Republican senators.

Democratic divisions were on display. Minority Leader Chuck Schumer faced intense opposition from base voters to Trump’s nominee, while political risks confronted a half-dozen Democratic senators representi­ng red states who are up for re-election next year and may feel pressure to support Gorsuch.

“The president made an outstandin­g appointmen­t; we’re all thrilled and looking forward to getting the confirmati­on process started,” McConnell said as he stood with a smiling Gorsuch in the senator’s ceremonial office in the Capitol.

McConnell has not said whether he might invoke the nuclear option if minority Democrats block Gorsuch’s confirmati­on, but the Senate leader has said repeatedly that, one way or another, Gorsuch will be confirmed. He reiterated that Wednesday evening in an interview on WHAS radio in Kentucky, saying: “Well I appreciate the president’s advice. What I would say to him is what I would say to you: We’re going to get this nominee confirmed and this is the beginning of a lengthy process.”

Schumer said that “this Supreme Court will be tried in ways that few courts have been tested since the earliest days of the Republic.”

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