Los Angeles Times

Abortion at center of looming debate

Senate Democrats will try to sway two GOP moderates in the battle over Justice Kennedy’s successor.

- By Jackie Calmes jackie.calmes@latimes.com Times staff writers Noah Bierman and David Lauter contribute­d to this report.

Democrats will focus on issue in Senate fight over next justice.

WASHINGTON — Democrats have a very limited ability to block President Trump’s second nominee for the Supreme Court in the Republican-controlled Senate, yet they do have some chance — and they quickly began mobilizing for it on Wednesday.

Whether Trump’s nominee wins probably will turn on one of the most divisive issues in American politics — abortion rights.

For decades Republican­s succeeded where Democrats have failed, in making court nomination­s a motivating force at election time — turning out religious conservati­ves with the promise that Republican candidates would support Supreme Court justices opposed to Roe vs. Wade, the decision that guaranteed a nationwide right to abortion. Now, with Trump poised to tip the Supreme Court’s balance decidedly rightward, Democrats’ hope lies in shaking their own voters’ complacenc­y about that 45-year-old ruling.

Democratic strategist­s hope that the pressure to oppose Trump’s nominee over that issue will not only keep the Democratic senators facing reelection in proTrump states in the party fold, but also could persuade the two Republican senators who favor abortion rights, Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska.

The Senate majority is narrow. Republican­s hold 51 seats — 50 if Sen. John McCain, who is battling brain cancer and has been absent from Washington for months, is not available to vote.

That presents the president with a challenge. He must nominate someone from his list of 25 names whose views give antiaborti­on voters confidence without being so steadfast as to alienate the moderates.

“There’s not much that Senate Democrats can do to stop this, even if they hold together,” said James P. Manley, a Democratic strategist who was a top aide to former Sens. Harry Reid and Edward M. Kennedy. “It’s all going to come down to what’s left of the moderate Senate Republican­s.”

David Axelrod, the former President Obama strategist, also focused on them. Collins and Murkowski “face their own fateful decisions, as this appointee would spell the death knell for Roe v. Wade,” he wrote on Twitter.

If all Democrats oppose Trump’s nominee, Senate Republican­s have very little margin; in a tie, Vice President Mike Pence — a longvocal critic of Roe — would cast the deciding vote.

Whether all the Democrats would stick together, however, remains uncertain. Trump’s first nominee, Neil M. Gorsuch, was confirmed last year by a 54-45 vote. Three Democrats joined all Republican­s in support: Sens. Joe Donnelly of Indiana, Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota and Joe Manchin III of West Virginia.

All three face reelection this year. In addition, one of the names high on Trump’s list of potential nominees, appeals court Judge Amy Coney Barrett, comes from Indiana and might be difficult for Donnelly to oppose.

Yet the stakes are arguably higher now: Gorsuch replaced a like-minded conservati­ve, Justice Antonin Scalia. The next nominee replaces the court’s longtime swing vote, Justice Anthony M. Kennedy.

The key senators in the middle largely declined to say much in the hours after the news that Kennedy was retiring.

“First of all, I view Roe vs. Wade as being settled law. It’s clearly precedent,” Collins told reporters. “I always look for judges who respect precedent.”

Asked if she’s concerned a nominee would be the pivotal vote for the future of abortion rights, she said, “It’s impossible for me to have concerns when I don’t know who it’s going to be.”

Outside groups on both sides were less reticent — drawing battle lines that put abortion at the center.

“A woman’s constituti­onal right to access legal abortion is in dire, immediate danger,” Ilyse Hogue, president of NARAL ProChoice America, said in a statement.

Marjorie Dannenfels­er, president of the antiaborti­on group Susan B. Anthony List, said in its response, “The most important commitment that President Trump has made to the pro-life movement has been his promise to nominate only pro-life judges to the Supreme Court.

“We trust him to follow through on his promise,” she added.

Both sides also sought to use the timing of the coming confirmati­on process to advantage. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (RKy.) quickly announced that a confirmati­on hearing would be this summer and the Senate would vote “in the fall.”

McConnell’s former chief of staff, Josh Holmes, said by email, “Timing is everything and it’s hard to imagine better timing than confrontin­g a bunch of embattled redstate Senate Democrats” with a vote on the nominee weeks before the midterm election in November.

“Opposition to a qualified nominee this fall might very well be a one-way ticket home,” he added.

Marc Short, Trump’s director of legislativ­e affairs, said that for conservati­ves, a preelectio­n confirmati­on process will serve as “a stark reminder about why so many people voted for Donald Trump for president,” and why they need to keep Republican­s in control of Congress. Liberals won’t be any more motivated, he predicted, than they already are by their animosity toward Trump.

But Democrat Ron Klain, long experience­d in judicial confirmati­ons as a former Senate aide and chief of staff to Vice Presidents Al Gore and Joe Biden, suggested that this time Republican­s’ confidence is outdated. It’s now Democratic voters, more than conservati­ves, who feel a greater sense of grievance about the high court, and hence could be more motivated to act.

Klain, who earlier this year had predicted the court fight would be “a battle of the ages,” said on Twitter, “The politics on this are going to flip around.”

Manley agreed. “Republican­s have always taken the Supreme Court nominees much more seriously than Democrats have,” he said. That could change now because so many issues of great importance to Democrats — “abortion rights, gun control, healthcare” — are all at stake.

Stoking Democrats’ anger are the memories of McConnell’s refusal through most of 2016 to let the Senate act on Obama’s nomination of Judge Merrick Garland to the court after Scalia’s death that February. His insistence that voters must first speak kept the seat open for Trump to fill it with Gorsuch.

Citing that precedent, Senate Democratic leader Charles E. Schumer of New York demanded on the Senate floor that confirmati­on of Trump’s next nominee await the voters’ decisions in November.

“Anything but that would be the absolute height of hypocrisy,” he said.

Schumer also underscore­d the battle line, on abortion as well as healthcare: “The Senate should reject, on a bipartisan basis, any justice who would overturn Roe v. Wade or undermine key healthcare protection­s.”

Other Democrats echoed him both on the timing and the issues, including California’s senators, Dianne Feinstein and Kamala Harris.

“We’re now four months away from an election to determine the party that will control the Senate,” Feinstein said in a statement. “There should be no considerat­ion of a Supreme Court nominee until the American people have a chance to weigh in.”

Privately, few Democrats expected McConnell to back down. Yet in galvanizin­g their voters, it helped to remind them of Republican­s’ past affronts.

 ?? Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images ?? NEIL M. GORSUCH is congratula­ted by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy in 2017 after being sworn in to the Supreme Court. The Senate fight over Kennedy’s replacemen­t is likely to be a major campaign issue.
Chip Somodevill­a Getty Images NEIL M. GORSUCH is congratula­ted by Justice Anthony M. Kennedy in 2017 after being sworn in to the Supreme Court. The Senate fight over Kennedy’s replacemen­t is likely to be a major campaign issue.

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