Orlando Sentinel

Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch

Trump’s Supreme Court nominee vows independen­ce, including from president

- By David G. Savage and Evan Halper david.savage@latimes.com

faces a second day of questionin­g in his Senate confirmati­on hearing.

WASHINGTON — Judge Neil Gorsuch, President Donald Trump’s nominee for the Supreme Court, sought to assure senators on Tuesday he would be independen­t, impartial and willing to rule against the occupant the White House.

“Nobody is above the law in this country, and that includes the president of the United States,” Gorsuch said.

He also told the Senate Judiciary Committee that he had made no promises or commitment­s to Trump or his aides, including whether he would vote to overrule the landmark abortion ruling in Roe v. Wade.

“Senator, I would have walked out the door,” he said, if the question had been asked. “That’s not what judges do. They don’t do it at that end of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, and they shouldn’t do it at this end either.”

Calm and unruffled, Gorsuch frustrated Democrats by refusing to be drawn into revealing his thoughts on current legal controvers­ies or past rulings. “If I were to start telling you which are my favorite precedents or which are my least favorite precedents,” he said, “I would be tipping my hand.”

Instead, Gorsuch said he was there to defend his qualificat­ions and his record as an appeals court judge. He survived the allday-session relatively unscathed, though Democrats appeared unimpresse­d by his Jimmy Stewart-like earnestnes­s or folksy yarns about his family. Questionin­g by senators will resume Wednesday.

Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, began the second day of hearings by giving Gorsuch an opening to distance himself from the president. Grassley asked whether Gorsuch “would have any trouble ruling against the president who appointed you.”

“That’s a softball, Mr. Chairman,” Gorsuch replied. “I have no difficulty ruling against or for any party other than based on what the law and the facts in a particular case require. …There’s no such thing as a Republican judge or a Democratic judge.”

And anticipati­ng that California Sen. Dianne Feinstein, the ranking Democrat, would press him on abortion, Grassley asked Gorsuch to discuss his views on adhering to Supreme Court precedents, a topic that can sometimes provide insights into a judge’s thinking on Roe v. Wade and other controvers­ial rulings.

“You start with a heavy, heavy presumptio­n in favor of precedent in our system,” Gorsuch said. That is particular­ly so, he said, for cases decided many years ago. In addition to the age of the precedent, he said other key factors he would consider in deciding whether to overturn a decision are whether it has been reaffirmed over the years and to what degree the precedent is currently relied upon.

His comments appeared to signal to the Democrats that he would be skeptical about overturnin­g the right to legal abortion set in 1973.

But Democrats grew increasing­ly frustrated with Gorsuch’s refusal to frankly discuss his views about other cases, something almost no Supreme Court nominee does anymore because the process has become so partisan.

Sen. Al Franken, DMinn., grilled Gorsuch about the case of the freezing truck driver who had been fired after he had left his broken trailer after waiting several hours for help. The temperatur­e was 14 degrees below zero.

While the 10th U.S. Circuit panel upheld an administra­tive judge’s ruling in favor of the fired driver, Gorsuch dissented. He said the law would have protected a driver who refused to operate an unsafe vehicle, but it did not protect a trucker who drove away from his trailer.

“I had a career in identifyin­g absurdity, and I know it when I see it,” said Franken, a former “Saturday Night Live” performer and writer. “It makes me question your judgment.” He pressed Gorsuch to say what he would have done if he had been faced with the driver’s predicamen­t.

“I don’t know what I would have done if I were in his shoes,” Gorsuch replied. “I don’t blame him at all for doing what he did do. I thought a lot about this case. I totally empathize.”

Earlier, Feinstein aggressive­ly questioned Gorsuch about his involvemen­t in defending the torture policies of the George W. Bush administra­tion during the year he served in the Justice Department.

Feinstein produced documents that she said appear to show Gorsuch condoning the use of waterboard­ing and other torture techniques and offering ways to defend or explain their use. Such methods have since been abandoned by national security agencies and characteri­zed as inhumane and ineffectiv­e.

Feinstein said a set of talking points asked whether “aggressive interrogat­ion techniques employed by the administra­tion yielded any valuable informatio­n.”

“And in the margin next to this question, you hand wrote, ‘yes,’ ” she said. Then she asked Gorsuch what informatio­n he had showing that the techniques were effective, a finding that was contradict­ed by a 7,000-page report congressio­nal investigat­ors published on the issue.

Gorsuch said he was unfamiliar with the document. They agreed he would review it and offer more fully informed answers on Wednesday.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP ?? Neil Gorsuch testifies Tuesday when he frustrated Democrats by refusing to share his views on legal controvers­ies.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP Neil Gorsuch testifies Tuesday when he frustrated Democrats by refusing to share his views on legal controvers­ies.

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