Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

So who is this Supreme Court nominee?

With his selection of Neil Gorsuch as his first nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court, President Donald Trump seeks to fulfill a campaign promise to appoint a well-qualified jurist who shares the judicial philosophy of the man he will succeed, the late Justic

- Orange County Register, Digital First Media

If you liked the late Justice Antonin Scalia, you likely will be thrilled with Judge Neil Gorsuch.

Judge Gorsuch’s qualificat­ions for the high court seem impressive.

He holds degrees from Columbia University, Harvard Law School and Oxford University, clerked for two U.S. Supreme Court justices, spent a year working in the Justice Department as principal assistant to the deputy attorney general under President George W. Bush and has served for a decade on the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals after unanimous confirmati­on by the U.S. Senate.

He’s even received praise from former Obama acting Solicitor General Neal Katyal.

“Judge Gorsuch is one of the most thoughtful and brilliant judges to have served our nation over the last century. As a judge, he has always put aside his personal views to serve the rule of law,” Katyal wrote in a statement posted by CNN’s Jake Tapper on Twitter.

“To boot, as those of us who have worked with him can attest, he is a wonderfull­y decent and humane person. I strongly support his nomination to the Supreme Court.”

Like Scalia, Gorsuch holds an “originalis­t” view that the Constituti­on and laws should be interprete­d with respect for the meaning that the words had to the people who voted for them at the time.

This view conflicts with the belief of judges on the other side of the ideologica­l spectrum that the Constituti­on and laws should be interprete­d more flexibly to adapt to changing circumstan­ces.

The tension between interpreti­ng the Constituti­on and upholding precedents is permanentl­y installed in our judicial system.

The Senate confirmati­on hearings for Judge Gorsuch will probe his views on issues including abortion, gun rights, campaign finance restrictio­ns and other matters that are less well-known but equally consequent­ial.

For example, Gorsuch has expressed disagreeme­nt with the legal precedent that says courts should defer to administra­tive agencies when interpreti­ng an ambiguous law.

This could signal a renewed effort of the judiciary to check executive power, which has expanded significan­tly in recent years.

Some Democrats have vowed to fight the nomination, though such resistance might be mostly symbolic, given how much power Republican­s now hold in Washington and the fact that Gorsuch would simply be replacing another conservati­ve justice, and therefore would be unlikely to lead to a shift in the previous court’s balance of power or significan­t changes in establishe­d precedents.

The larger fight will come if and when one of the more liberal justices needs to be replaced. In any case, early indication­s of Gorsuch’s jurisprude­nce seem mostly positive, and his credential­s merit him fair considerat­ion in the Senate, not mere partisan grandstand­ing.

Like Scalia, Gorsuch holds an “originalis­t” view that the Constituti­on and laws should be interprete­d with respect for the meaning that the words had to the people who voted for them at the time.

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