Orlando Sentinel

Paul is publicly cool to Kavanaugh over privacy

Issue could cost nominee the Ky. senator’s support

- By Steven T. Dennis

Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s road to confirmati­on may have a little-noticed obstacle: Sen. Rand Paul’s firm views on privacy.

While abortion has gotten most of the attention in the partisan fight over the nomination, the Kentucky Republican strongly disagrees with Kavanaugh on the meaning of the Constituti­on’s Fourth Amendment, and he’s shown little reluctance to defy Senate GOP leaders or the White House to make a point on civil liberties and other privacy issues.

In a Senate controlled by the GOP 50-49 with Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., absent while fighting brain cancer, Paul’s vote can’t be taken for granted.

Paul, who ran for president with a libertaria­nminded platform, so far hasn’t tipped his hand, tweeting he’s keeping an “open mind.”

“I’m not going to make any comment until we’ve had a chance to look through and really go through a discovery process, meet the nominee,” Paul said in an interview when asked about Kavanaugh shortly before President Donald Trump announced his choice Monday night.

But Paul did say he would dig into privacy issues.

He praised Trump’s first high court nominee, Neil Gorsuch, and lauded the justice’s dissenting opinion in a June 22 ruling that police generally need a warrant to get someone’s cellphone tower records. Gorsuch said the defendant should have pursued the appeal as a matter of property rights.

“He’s exactly where I am and I’m just hoping we can find somebody else who’s in that same position, that you don’t give up your privacy by having a cellphone, or having a bank account,” Paul said. “Doesn’t mean the government gets to look at all that stuff without a warrant. We’re going to definitely look at all of that.”

Some of Paul’s allies are targeting Kavanaugh because of his past rulings backing the massive buildup in intelligen­cegatherin­g on Americans after the Sept. 11 attacks.

Paul himself filed a federal class-action lawsuit in 2014 claiming that the government’s collection of phone records on hundreds of millions of Americans violated the Fourth Amendment’s protection against unreasonab­le searches and seizures and requiring warrants based on probable cause. A year later, Kavanaugh wrote an opinion with the opposite view in a separate case challengin­g the program.

“The government’s metadata collection program is entirely consistent with the Fourth Amendment,” Kavanaugh wrote. He said he was bound by a 1979 Supreme Court precedent, Smith v. Maryland, on phone records, which Paul’s lawsuit argued should not apply.

Kavanaugh said the collection program didn’t amount to a search under the Fourth Amendment, and that even if it was a search, the effect on privacy was justified to prevent attacks.

Paul has passionate­ly opposed such sweeping, warrantles­s data collection programs, filibuster­ing their extensions on the Senate floor and championin­g the issue during his presidenti­al campaign.

One of the first members of Congress to endorse Paul’s presidenti­al bid, Rep. Justin Amash, R-Mich., ripped Kavanaugh last week in a series of tweets citing Kavanaugh’s metadata opinion.

“We can’t afford a rubber stamp for the executive branch,” wrote Amash, who shares Paul’s libertaria­n leanings.

Congress has curtailed the practices at issue, ultimately rendering the legal cases moot.

If Paul were to oppose Kavanaugh based on objections to his stance on privacy issues, it could narrow the judge’s path to confirmati­on.

 ?? JABIN BOTSFORD/THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Judge Brett Kavanaugh speaks at the announceme­nt ceremony for his nomination to the Supreme Court.
JABIN BOTSFORD/THE WASHINGTON POST Judge Brett Kavanaugh speaks at the announceme­nt ceremony for his nomination to the Supreme Court.
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