San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Trump would push selection for court before the election

- By Aamer Madhani and Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have tried to make it clear: Given the chance, they would push through a Supreme Court nominee should a vacancy occur before Election Day.

The issue has taken on new immediacy with the disclosure Friday that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is receiving chemothera­py for a recurrence of cancer after four earlier bouts with the disease.

The 87-year-old liberal, who apologized in 2016 for her pointed public criticism of Trump during his first campaign, says she has no plans to retire.

The developmen­t has focused even more on what’s at stake this election, with the winner in position to help shape the trajectory of the court for years to come.

White House officials have underscore­d that Trump wouldn’t hesitate to fill an opening before voters have their say Nov. 3, less than four months away, on whether to give him a second term.

Four years ago, also in a presidenti­al election year, the GOP-controlled Senate refused to hold a hearing or vote when President Barack Obama, a Democrat, nominated federal Judge Merrick Garland to succeed Justice Antonin Scalia after his death in February.

Nine months before that year’s election, McConnell said voters should determine who would nominate the person to fill that seat.

Fast forward to this past week. Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows, told reporters: “I can’t imagine that if he had a vacancy on the Supreme

Court that he would not very quickly make the appointmen­t and look for the Senate to take quick action.“

Meadows spoke shortly after the court said Ginsburg was briefly hospitaliz­ed, but before the justice announced she had a recurrence of cancer and has been treated with chemothera­py since May 19.

Ginsburg is the oldest justice, followed by Stephen Breyer, 81; Clarence Thomas, 72; and Samuel Alito, 70.

Trump sees his efforts at reshaping the judiciary as a signature achievemen­t of his presidency.

Last month, he marked his 200th judicial appointmen­t.

Earlier in his term, he won confirmati­on of Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh to the high court.

The president has sought to remind fellow Republican­s that should he win a second term, he would have the chance to push the Supreme Court and lower courts further to the right.

Last month, after the court rejected his administra­tion’s attempt to end an Obama-era program that provided legal protection­s to roughly 650,000 immigrants illegally brought to the United States as children, Trump said more needed to be done to push the court to the right.

He said he would release a “new list of Conservati­ve Supreme Court Justice nominees” by Sept. 1. “Based on decisions being rendered now, this list is more important than ever before (Second Amendment, Right to Life, Religous Liberty, etc.) — VOTE 2020!” he tweeted.

Carl Tobias, a University of Richmond law school professor, said Republican­s “have shown no consistenc­y” between their refusal to give Garland a hearing and their insistence it would be proper to move forward on a vacancy during the waning days of a potentiall­y lame-duck presidency.

Tobias said Trump and Republican­s are calculatin­g that playing up their commitment to adding another conservati­ve justice is such an attractive pitch to base voters that it’s worth risking being labeled hypocrites by their opponents.

Leading Republican­s, including the Senate Judiciary Committee chairman, Republican Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, now say it’s OK to consider an election-year appointmen­t when the Senate and the White House are held by the same party.

“Merrick Garland was a different situation,” Graham said in May. “You had the president of one party nominating, and you had the Senate in the hands of the other party. A situation where you’ve got them both would be different.”

McConnell was even more blunt.

“Yeah, we’d fill it,” he said in a February interview.

At least one key Republican has expressed reservatio­ns.

Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley, the former chairman of the Judiciary panel who blocked Garland’s nomination in 2016, said two years ago that he wouldn’t take up a new nomination if he were still the committee chairman in 2020 and there were a Supreme Court vacancy.

But Grassley, who now heads the Senate Finance Committee, said if there were a different chairman, that person would have to make the call.

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