Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Supreme battle over pick about to heat up

- By Lisa Mascaro Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — Confirming President Donald Trump’s nominee for the Supreme Court was expected to be one of the biggest battles of the year, but something happened on the way to the committee hearing room to make it a relatively muted one — at least so far.

Ad campaigns have been minimal. Protesters are at bay. And then there is Judge Neil Gorsuch himself, the silver-haired Colorado appellate justice whose profession­al courtesy and grounded Western roots have made him a tough target for opponents to attack.

Expect that to change Monday when the Senate Judiciary Committee launches four days of hearings to determine whether Gorsuch will win the votes needed for confirmati­on.

Democrats have been waiting for this moment to unleash their skepticism about Gorsuch as a proxy battle against Trump, whose administra­tion they say makes an independen­t judiciary more important than ever.

Trump’s criticisms of the judicial branch, his ethnicity-based attack on a Latino judge and his willingnes­s to push legal bounds with two travel bans now blocked by courts raise the stakes for a high court seat that will help serve as a final check on the administra­tion’s policies, they say.

“Judge Gorsuch has a special responsibi­lity to reassure the American people that he will be an openminded and independen­t jurist,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., a former U.S. attorney.

Democrats have spent the past month engaging Trump on other fronts — over his plans to repeal Obamacare and his associates’ ties with Russia.

But as the hearings begin, so will the battle. Outside groups are planning to flood the phone lines at Senate offices, much as they did during the confirmati­on votes for Trump’s Cabinet nominees. Others are scrutinizi­ng Gorsuch’s record, particular­ly on abortion rights, gay marriage and former President Barack Obama’s immigratio­n orders.

Opponents will be making the case that Gorsuch often has sided with big moneyed interests over ordinary Americans, and they will be highlighti­ng his longtime associatio­n with Denver billionair­e Philip Anschutz.

“Judge Gorsuch may act like a neutral, calm judge, but his record and his career clearly show that he harbors a right-wing, procorpora­te special-interest agenda,” Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., said at a recent news conference. “He expresses a lot of empathy and sympathy for the less powerful, but when it comes time to rule, when the chips are down, far too often he sides with the powerful few over everyday Americans trying to just get a fair shake. We’ve seen that play out time and time again.”

Schumer told the Washington Post that Republican­s should expect Democrats to aggressive­ly question Gorsuch because “we’re in a new world.”

Confirmati­on fights often diverge from routine partisan skirmishes because traditiona­lly many senators are inclined to support a president’s nominee, regardless of party, as long as the nominee is competent and qualified.

But this Supreme Court battle took on an unusually partisan edge after the seat became vacant last year with Justice Antonin Scalia’s death.

Senate Republican­s refused to consider Obama’s choice for the court, Merrick Garland, blocking his confirmati­on so the next White House could fill the seat. That left the court operating with a vacancy for most of 2016.

Democrats vowed to retaliate with their own hardball tactics after Trump won the White House.

So far, though, the campaign has been running largely in favor of Gorsuch.

Gorsuch’s conservati­ve views have been compared to those of Scalia, but he presents himself as a more mild-mannered, amiable contempora­ry.

With Republican­s holding a 52-seat majority in the Senate, Gorsuch will need eight Democratic votes to reach the traditiona­l 60vote threshold for confirmati­on.

“Anyone seriously reviewing the judge’s record finds that he is a fair and independen­t judge,” Carrie Severino, chief counsel at the conservati­ve Judicial Crisis Network, said in a statement. “Judge Gorsuch’s mainstream approach to the law has earned him widespread bipartisan support from conservati­ves and liberals, as well as from his colleagues and former Obama administra­tion officials.”

It remains to be seen how far Democrats will go in opposing Gorsuch. They have been concerned that if they block him with a filibuster, Republican­s might invoke the so-called nuclear option to change Senate rules and lower the threshold to allow confirmati­on with a 51-vote majority.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has promised Trump’s nominee will be confirmed, all but acknowledg­ing his willingnes­s to go nuclear, if needed.

Democrats worry about the precedent that would set for future court vacancies. Liberal groups, though, have pressured Democrats to focus their attention on the Gorsuch battle, not future ones, and some Senate Democrats appear more willing to do so.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP ?? Neil Gorsuch, President Trump’s high court nominee, is the subject of four days of Senate hearings that begin Monday.
ANDREW HARNIK/AP Neil Gorsuch, President Trump’s high court nominee, is the subject of four days of Senate hearings that begin Monday.

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