Lodi News-Sentinel

Supreme Court confirmati­on hearings begin

- By Erica Werner and Mark Sherman

WASHINGTON — Judge Neil Gorsuch emphasized “the importance of an independen­t judiciary” on Monday in opening remarks to a Senate Judiciary Committee bitterly divided over his nomination to the Supreme Court.

“Under our Constituti­on, it is for this body, the people’s representa­tives, to make new laws. For the executive to ensure those laws are faithfully enforced. And for neutral and independen­t judges to apply the law in the people’s disputes,” said Gorsuch, President Donald Trump’s pick to fill the high court vacancy created 13 months ago by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia.

Gorsuch, 49, who serves on the Denver-based 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, is a respected, highly credential­ed and conservati­ve judge with a legal philosophy akin to Scalia’s, who has spent 10 years on the federal bench. Democrats claimed that he’s found in favor of corporatio­ns over “the little guy” during that time, while Republican­s credit him with an intelligen­t and straightfo­rward approach of interpreti­ng the law as it is, not as anyone would wish it to be.

Since Scalia’s death, the court has split 4 to 4 on a handful of cases. Gorsuch’s confirmati­on would generally restore the court’s 5-4 conservati­ve tilt, although Justice Anthony Kennedy, for whom Gorsuch clerked, has joined the liberals on cases involving gay rights, abortion rights and race.

“These days we sometimes hear judges cynically described as politician­s in robes, seeking to enforce their own politics rather than striving to apply the law impartiall­y. If I thought that were true I’d hang up the robe. But I just don’t think that’s what a life in the law is about,” Gorsuch said.

Gorsuch delivered a very personal opening statement, speaking of his Western upbringing and his parents and grandparen­ts, and choking up as he hugged his wife, Louise, of 20 years, and talked about their two daughters.

Gorsuch spoke to the Senate Judiciary Committee after hours of opening statements from senators revealed deep partisan divides between Democrats and Republican­s on the panel. Democrats angrily condemned Republican­s for refusing to act on Barack Obama’s nominee last year, while Republican­s accused Democrats of trying to turn Gorsuch’s confirmati­on hearing into a referendum on the GOP president.

“The nominee before us today is not President Trump,” said Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C. “The nominee before us today is not Leader McConnell,” the Senate GOP leader, Mitch McConnell, who engineered the 10-month blockade of Obama’s court pick, Judge Merrick Garland, last year.

“So I hope this nomination hearing focuses on the one person before us,” Tillis said.

Democrats made clear that it wouldn’t.

Addressing Gorsuch, Sen. Dick Durbin repeated a comment by White House chief of staff Reince Priebus last month that Gorsuch “represents the type of judge that has the vision of Donald Trump.”

“I want to hear from you why Mr. Priebus would say that,” Durbin, D-Ill., said to Gorsuch. “Most Americans question whether we need a Supreme Court justice with the vision of Donald Trump.”

Democrats, under intense pressure from liberal base voters horrified by the Trump presidency, entered the hearings divided over how hard to fight Gorsuch’s nomination given that the mild-mannered jurist is no right-wing bomb thrower and is widely expected to win confirmati­on in the end, one way or another.

 ?? OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS ?? Judge Neil Gorsuch attends the first day of his Supreme Court confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee in the Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill Monday in Washington, D.C.
OLIVIER DOULIERY/ABACA PRESS Judge Neil Gorsuch attends the first day of his Supreme Court confirmati­on hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee in the Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill Monday in Washington, D.C.

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