Santa Fe New Mexican

Biden’s court nominee faces rare Dem scrutiny

President standing behind Boston pick after anger over abortion and school actions

- By Seung Min Kim

WASHINGTON — One of President Joe Biden’s nominees to a federal appeals court has generated rare concern from some Democrats and outside groups over his signature on a legal brief defending a parental notificati­on law in New Hampshire, injecting the issue of abortion into his confirmati­on fight from an unexpected flank.

Michael Delaney, nominated for the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, based in Boston, said in written testimony to senators he did not write the 2005 brief and otherwise had “extremely limited involvemen­t” in the case that was brought while he was deputy attorney general in New Hampshire.

But the signing of the brief, along with scrutiny of his representa­tion of St. Paul’s School, a private boarding school in New Hampshire that was sued in connection with a sexual assault, is complicati­ng a confirmati­on fight in which the White House has little room for error.

The close attention on an abortion case also shows how stakes are everhigher in a post-Roe v. Wade world.

Access to abortion could hinge on lower-level judges now that the U.S. Supreme Court has overturned the constituti­onal right to the procedure and advocates on both sides want near-certainty as they assess nominees. The issue helped derail one proposed Biden pick last summer when the White House decided not to nominate an anti-abortion lawyer in Kentucky following an outcry from Democrats.

Delaney’s case will test how far Biden will push Democrats to support his nominees to the federal bench even after the White House set records in the number of appointmen­ts in his first two years. It will also test the power of personal persuasion in the clubby Senate, whose members can often be influenced by fellow members whose counsel they trust.

In this case, both New Hampshire Democratic senators, Jeanne Shaheen and Maggie Hassan, strongly back Delaney and are deeply respected by other senators. Both are also fierce supporters of abortion rights.

At issue is a New Hampshire law, passed in 2003 but repealed in 2007, that required minors to tell their parents before they obtained an abortion. As the state’s deputy attorney general, Delaney was among those who signed a brief submitted to the U.S. Supreme Court that defended the law because it “does not present a substantia­l obstacle to any woman’s right to choose an abortion.”

The law, according to the brief filed in the case, Ayotte vs. Planned Parenthood of Northern New England, “promotes compelling state interests, not the least of which is protecting the health of the pregnant minor by providing an opportunit­y for parents to supply essential medical history informatio­n to the physician.”

Delaney’s involvemen­t is detailed in response to written questions from Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., that he submitted after his confirmati­on hearing last month. But his signature on the brief has caused consternat­ion for Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee and a strong supporter of abortion rights.

Besides Blumenthal, two other Democratic members of the closely divided Senate, Cory Booker of New Jersey and Mazie Hirono of Hawaii, have also expressed general reservatio­ns about his nomination, particular­ly as it relates to the St. Paul’s case. And at least one other Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee is concerned about Delaney’s involvemen­t in the Planned Parenthood case, according to a person familiar with the senator’s thinking who spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing deliberati­ons over the nomination.

In a previously unreported letter, the National Council of Jewish Women said it would oppose the confirmati­on of Delaney, the first nominee from the Biden administra­tion it has rejected. The group pointed to his representa­tion of St. Paul’s as well as to his signature on the Planned Parenthood brief.

The White House continues to support Delaney’s nomination. Privately, White House officials are concerned focusing on one motion or case could set a precedent for Republican opponents of Biden’s picks to undermine other candidates for the bench, according to a person with knowledge of the internal deliberati­ons who insisted on anonymity to discuss them.

“This was the first we had heard that anyone was interested in more informatio­n beyond his 116 pages of thorough, under-oath answers,” White House spokesman Andrew Bates said in a statement. “Michael Delaney has three decades of legal experience, including his service as Attorney General and Deputy Attorney General of New Hampshire, and he is well-qualified to serve in this important position. The White House expects Senators to take his full record into account when evaluating his nomination.”

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Michael Delaney

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