Porterville Recorder

Trump savors big reveal for court choice

- By CATHERINE LUCEY and ZEKE MILLER

BERKELEY HEIGHTS, N.J. — A family separation crisis of his own making continues at the border. His Environmen­tal Protection Agency chief just quit amid mounting scandals. And he’s about to meet with an adversary accused of meddling in the 2016 election.

But President Donald Trump has every confidence that on Monday night, the nation’s attention will be right where he wants it.

After more than a week of pitched speculatio­n, Trump will go on prime-time television to reveal his choice to fill the Supreme Court seat vacated by retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy, selecting a conservati­ve designed to rally Republican voters in a midterm election year. And with that, the opticsobse­ssed president will be in his comfort zone — taking center stage in a massive show.

Nearly 18 months after Trump set in motion Justice Neil Gorsuch’s nomination, the reality star-turned-president is more seasoned, more embittered and increasing­ly comfortabl­e exerting his will over the machinery of government and his own staff. His upcoming “Supreme” show is the latest example of Trump’s push to remake the federal bench with young conservati­ve judges, a crusade he believes will energize GOP voters concerned about the state of the judiciary.

Trump is largely following the same playbook this time as when he successful­ly rolled out Gorsuch’s nomination in January 2017. White House aides have strict instructio­ns to keep informatio­n under wraps so Trump himself can make the big reveal. The president was gleeful when Gorsuch’s name didn’t leak out early.

“So was that a surprise?” Trump said, after announcing his decision.

Still, there are difference­s this time. In the last go-around, the White House relied heavily on outside consultant­s to push Gorsuch over the finish line. Despite a staff exodus that has left key vacancies across the West Wing, the White House this time is retaining more control over the nomination and confirmati­on processes. A war room of communicat­ions, legal and research staff has been assembled in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building to promote and defend the nominee.

Trump has reveled in building up suspense in the days leading up to his speech, offering fragments of informatio­n here and there but strategica­lly keeping the guessing game alive.

Drawn from a public list of 25 candidates approved by conservati­ve groups, the president’s top contenders include federal appeals court judges Brett Kavanaugh, Raymond Kethledge, Amy Coney Barrett and Thomas Hardiman. The White House has been preparing confirmati­on materials on all four.

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