El Dorado News-Times

Trump nominates Kavanaugh for Supreme Court post

What to expect in the Supreme Court nomination battle

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The coming battle over a Supreme Court nominee promises to be a bruising one.

Republican­s are eager for conservati­ves to gain a firm majority on the court. Democrats are voicing alarm about what the new justice could mean for charged issues such as abortion rights and gay rights. The stakes are enormous, and advocacy groups that don't have to unveil their donors are spending heavily to shape the fight.

President Donald Trump on Monday announced his nomination of federal appeals judge Brett Kavanaugh.

Trump chose the 53-year-old federal appellate judge for the seat opened up by the retirement of Justice Anthony Kennedy. Kavanaugh would be less receptive to abortion and gay rights than Kennedy was.

Kavanaugh is Trump's second high court pick after Justice Neil Gorsuch. Kavanaugh and Gorsuch served as law clerks to Kennedy at the same time early in their legal careers.

Kavanaugh is a longtime fixture of the Republican legal establishm­ent. He has been a judge on the federal appeals court in Washington since 2006. He also was a key aide to Kenneth Starr during his investigat­ion of President Bill Clinton and worked in the White House during George W. Bush's presidency.

It's likely that the closely divided Senate will be holding a momentous confirmati­on vote just weeks before the midterm election.

A look at what to expect:

FINDING THE VOTES

Republican­s may have a narrower margin for error than they did when the Senate confirmed Trump's first Supreme Court nominee, Gorsuch, by a vote of 54-45 in April 2017.

Democratic Sen. Doug Jones of Alabama has replaced Republican Sen. Luther Strange, cutting the GOP's Senate majority to 51-49. Meanwhile, Republican Sen. John McCain of Arizona is battling brain cancer and has not been back to the Capitol since December.

That increases the focus on two Republican­s — Sen. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska. Both support a woman's right to have an abortion and will be looking for assurances that the nominee would not overturn the Roe v Wade decision establishi­ng abortion rights. Trump pledged in 2016 that he would be "putting pro-life justices on the court."

On the Democratic side, the focus will be on Sens. Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Joe Donnelly of Indiana and Joe Manchin of West Virginia. All three voted to confirm Gorsuch and are up for re-election in states that Trump won handily. Whatever they decide will upset a large group of voters in their home states.

If Collins and Murkowski vote "no" and Democrats all vote "no," the nomination would be blocked. If McCain were to miss the vote, only one GOP defection would be needed to block the nomination if all Democrats were opposed.

OLD WOUNDS

Democrats are still stinging from Republican­s refusing to even grant a hearing to President Barack Obama's choice to serve on the Supreme Court, Merrick Garland.

They are calling on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to wait until after the November election to schedule a hearing and vote. McConnell has rejected that possibilit­y, saying the decision to not fill the vacancy under Obama was prefaced on it being a presidenti­al election year.

Democrats say McConnell is being hypocritic­al in moving forward with the nomination. While that argument won't sway Republican­s, their strategy could stiffen Democratic resolve to oppose the nominee. Liberal advocacy groups are challengin­g Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., to keep the Democrats united.

SENATE RELATIONS

Much of the groundwork for a successful confirmati­on comes in private meetings that the nominee will have with individual senators in the coming weeks.

For lawmakers who are not on the Judiciary Committee, it may be their only chance to talk with the nominee personally before a final vote. Gorsuch met with nearly three-quarters of the Senate in advance of his hearings.

The process is arduous, with the private meetings giving way to days of testimony before the Senate

Judiciary Committee, which has 11 Republican­s and 10 Democrats.

Hearings for the most recent nominees to the Supreme Court have lasted four or five days, though there were 11 days of hearings for Robert Bork's nomination in 1987.

On average, for Supreme Court nominees who have received hearings, the hearing occurred 39 days after the nomination was formally submitted, according to the Congressio­nal Research Service.

The Judiciary Committee need not approve the nomination for it to advance.

A negative recommenda­tion or no recommenda­tion merely alerts the Senate that a substantia­l number of committee members have reservatio­ns.

THE FIGHT OUTSIDE THE CAPITOL

Before the president has even made his announceme­nt, advocacy groups are making clear they will play an important role in the coming fight.

Groups that support abortion rights are planning a "Day of Action" for August 26, the anniversar­y of the 1920 adoption of the 19th Amendment giving women the right to vote.

The liberal advocacy group Demand Justice will spend $5 million on ads through September and began airing spots Thursday in Maine and Alaska aimed at pressuring Collins and Murkowski. "Why won't she rule out voting for Trump's anti-choice picks?" both ads ask.

It also plans to run ads next week in Manchin's, Donnelly's and Heitkamp's home states with a softer tone, asking them to continue protecting people with pre-existing health conditions by opposing a nominee who'd threaten that.

Meanwhile, the conservati­ve Judicial Crisis Network said it will launch a $1.4 million ad buy in four states — Alabama, Indiana, North Dakota, and West Virginia — introducin­g the nominee in a favorable light.

The spot will launch as soon as the nominee is announced and will run for one week. The group says it has reserved air time nationally and in those same states for another four weeks.

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