Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Trump closes in on Supreme Court pick

- By Catherine Lucey and Lisa Mascaro

President Donald Trump said Thursday he has narrowed down — to two or three — the list of contenders he’s considerin­g to fill the vacancy for the Supreme Court seat held by retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy.

“I think I have it down to four people. And I think of the four people I have it down to three or two,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One.

The president, who was traveling to a campaign rally in Montana, has wrapped up the interview process and is moving closer to picking his court nominee amid intense jockeying from various factions seeking to influence the choice.

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. The administra­tion is preparing roll-out plans for the leading contenders, and hopes to have a decision on the top one or two names in the next couple of days, so staff can conduct a deep-dive background ahead of the possible prime-time event, according to a senior administra­tion official granted anonymity to discuss the plans.

But as the president builds suspense for his second court pick in two years — a nominee who could tip the balance toward conservati­ves and revisit landmark rulings on abortion access, gay marriage and other issues — momentum is also growing among GOP supporters and detractors of the top contenders.

Conservati­ves and some libertaria­n-leaning Republican­s, including Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, have raised concerns about Kavanaugh, warning he could disappoint Republican­s if his past decisions are a guide.

Paul and another Republican, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, are supporting fellow Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, who is not said to be under serious considerat­ion by the White House but is the only lawmaker Trump has considered for the position.

To counter that, Kavanaugh’s allies have begun pushing back, reaching out to influentia­l Republican­s to ward off potential criticisms, according to one conservati­ve who was the recipient of such outreach and spoke on condition of anonymity Thursday to discuss the situation.

The senior administra­tion official, though, said the administra­tion is feeling less heat than earlier in this week over the choices, particular­ly Kavanaugh, and believes the jockeying in general has calmed somewhat.

With the Senate narrowly divided, 51-49, in favor of Republican­s, Trump’s announceme­nt will launch a contentiou­s confirmati­on process as Republican­s seek to shift the court to the right and Democrats strive to block the effort. Any GOP defections could begin to doom a nominee.

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 abortion access, or the 2010 health care law, would tarnish his legacy.

Schumer told Trump that such a choice would be “cataclysmi­c” and create more division than the country has seen in years, according to a person familiar with the conversati­on who said Trump called Schumer on Tuesday.

The senator also told the president he could unify the country by nominating Merrick Garland, President Barack Obama’s choice for the Supreme Court who was blocked by Republican­s in 2016.

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