Rome News-Tribune

Trump interviews 4 for Supreme Court, 2-3 more to go

- By Catherine Lucey and Ken Thomas Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump interviewe­d four prospectiv­e Supreme Court justices Monday and planned to speak with a few more, as he powered forward with a speedy selection process to fill the fresh vacancy.

Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump said he had met with “four potential justices of our great Supreme Court. They are outstandin­g people and they are really incredible people in so many different ways, academical­ly and in every other way.”

Trump added that he would meet with “two or three more” in advance of an announceme­nt

July 9 on a replacemen­t for retiring Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy. He consulted with advisers during a weekend at his Bedminster golf club, and the White House has mobilized a team to manage the nomination and confirmati­on process.

Meanwhile, the Senate’s top Democrat tried Monday to rally public opposition to any Supreme Court pick who’d oppose abortion rights, issuing a striking campaign season call for voters to prevent such a nominee by putting “pressure on the Senate.”

With Trump saying he’ll pick from a list of 25 potential nominees he’s compiled with guidance from conservati­ves, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said any of them would be “virtually certain” to favor overturnin­g Roe v. Wade, the 1973 case that affirmed women’s right to abortion. They would also be “very likely” to back weakening President Barack Obama’s 2010 law that expanded health care coverage to millions of Americans, he said.

Schumer said that while Democrats don’t control the Senate — Republican­s have a 51-49 edge — most senators back abortion rights. In an unusually direct appeal to voters, he said that to block “an ideologica­l nominee,” people should “tell your senators” to oppose anyone from Trump’s list.

“It will not happen on its own,” the New Yorker wrote in an opinion column in Monday’s New York Times. “It requires the public’s focus on these issues, and its pressure on the Senate.”

Trump has said he is focusing on up to seven potential candidates, including two women, to fill the vacancy created by Kennedy, a swing vote on the ninemember court.

Schumer’s column appeared a day after Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said she would oppose any nominee she believed would overturn Roe v. Wade. Collins said she would only back a judge who would show respect for settled law such as the Roe decision, which has long been anathema to conservati­ves.

“I would not support a nominee who demonstrat­ed hostility to Roe v. Wade because that would mean to me that their judicial philosophy did not include a respect for establishe­d decisions, establishe­d law,” Collins said.

Such a judge, she said, “would not be acceptable to me because that would indicate an activist agenda.”

 ?? / Korea News Service via AP ?? In this undated photo provided on July 2 by the North Korean government, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, center, visits Sinuiju Chemical Fibre Mill in Sinuiju, North Korea. Independen­t journalist­s were not given access to cover the event depicted in...
/ Korea News Service via AP In this undated photo provided on July 2 by the North Korean government, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, center, visits Sinuiju Chemical Fibre Mill in Sinuiju, North Korea. Independen­t journalist­s were not given access to cover the event depicted in...
 ??  ?? President Donald J. Trump
President Donald J. Trump

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