Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

McConnell puts mark on courts

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President Donald Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., are rapidly filling U.S. federal courts with young conservati­ves who will shape American law for generation­s to come.

The Republican-led Senate confirmed Trump’s 15th appeals court nominee last week — more than the last five presidents at this juncture — with eight of the new judges in their 40s, and seven in their 50s. McConnell set the stage Thursday to confirm six more, one day after a committee voted to cut debate time, which if approved would further speed things up.

The court realignmen­t is the product of the Senate Republican leader playing a long game by holding up then-President Barack Obama’s court nominees and then closely collaborat­ing with Trump’s White House counsel Don McGahn. Both men have made it a priority to advance judges ensconced in originalis­t legal thinking favored by the Federalist Society, which distrusts New Deal-era jurisprude­nce and seeks to limit the federal government’s ability to assert powers that aren’t explicitly enumerated in the Constituti­on.

“The judicial enterprise that has been embarked on by the president and McConnell is the most successful effort we’ve seen in the GOP in the last year and a half,” said Leonard Leo, an outside adviser to the White House on judicial selections who also serves as the Federalist Society’s executive vice president.

Trump’s record also includes 17 Trump-nominated judges on district courts, and conservati­ve favorite Neil Gorsuch is on the Supreme Court after McConnell made the extraordin­ary move of refusing to consider Obama nominee Merrick Garland in 2016.

While liberals have torched the new judges as radical and out of touch, Trump has won praise for his success on nominees from conservati­ves, even those who actively opposed him during the 2016 election.

In 2016, Jonathan Adler, a professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law, and a Federalist Society member who praised Trump’s judicial picks as strong, signed a letter titled “Originalis­ts Against Trump” with five dozen fellow conservati­ves who argued that Trump “admires dictators as above the law” and cannot be trusted to respect the Constituti­on.

Today, he says he was “very wrong” about that when it comes to Trump’s judicial selections, although he believes the heavy lifting is being done by McGahn and his staff, who’ve placed a premium on confirming their circuit court picks.

“I don’t see much evidence that the president has fully formed views on legal questions,” Adler said.

Yet some conservati­ve believe it’ll be his biggest legacy.

“His greatest achievemen­t will be the judicial nominees because it has a much longer-lasting legacy” than his other actions, said Rep. Mark Meadows, RN.C., chairman of the conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus.

Trump and McConnell are having their biggest impact on the 13 U.S. appeals courts, which are particular­ly influentia­l. While the Supreme Court decides fewer than 70 cases a year, appellate courts ruled on or dismissed 59,040 cases for the year ending March 31, 2017, according to the Administra­tive Office of the U.S. Courts in Washington.

Liberal legal analysts, who have accused McConnell of stealing a Supreme Court seat from Obama, say they are troubled by Trump’s judicial selections and the speed of confirmati­ons.

“He’s had a very effective process for moving judicial nominees, which is unfortunat­e because the quality of his nominees is so lacking,” said Caroline Fredrickso­n, president of the American Constituti­on Society, adding that Trump’s picks would feel at home in the 19th century. “They’re unqualifie­d in certain circumstan­ces. They’re extreme in nearly all circumstan­ces.”

The judges he’s chosen are likely to roll back women’s rights — including abortion — civil rights, voting rights, gay rights, and allow billionair­es to “buy politician­s,” Fredrickso­n said.

“It’s as if the civil rights movement and the women’s rights movement have been erased as far as Donald Trump is concerned,” she said.

The latest circuit judge, confirmed April 24 by the Senate, was Kyle Duncan to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. He came under fire from the Human Rights Campaign for an “alarming” record of “anti-LGBTQ advocacy,” earning just one Democratic vote to squeak by 50 to 47.

Trump has other opportunit­ies. On Thursday he announced another eight nomination­s for district and appellate courts. Conservati­ves are eager to confirm as many nominees as they can this year while Republican­s have a 51-49 majority, fearing a possible Democratic takeover of the Senate in November could slow them to a crawl in 2019.

Trump’s judges reverse the demographi­c diversity sought by Obama. A full 67 percent of his appellate court judges are white males, compared with 33 percent under Obama and 63 percent under President George W. Bush, according to data compiled by Russell Wheeler, a visiting scholar at the Brookings Institutio­n. Meanwhile, 76 percent of his district court jurists are white men, compared with 36 percent under Obama and 63 percent under Bush.

They’ll be reshaping areas of law like civil rights, public health and worker protection­s, said Nan Aron, president of the liberal Alliance for Justice in Washington.

“This effort is a concerted plan to alter the federal bench, not just for two or four years, but for generation­s because judges serve lifetime terms,’” Aron said.

McConnell’s chief contributi­on to the effort, she said, was his insistence on delaying considerat­ion of dozens of Obama’s selections, in addition to holding the Supreme Court seat open. In Obama’s final two years, McConnell allowed him to fill just two vacancies on the circuit courts and 18 on district courts. That left Trump with 108 judicial openings to fill when he took office.

Josh Holmes, a former chief of staff to McConnell, said the Republican leader seldom makes strong requests to his conference, so when he does, they listen. And he’s made judicial confirmati­ons a priority.

Asked if he was concerned that Democrats could exploit the precedent by refusing to allow a Republican president to fill a Supreme Court vacancy, Holmes responded, “Democrats had invented the judicial filibuster in the early 2000s then did away with it in 2013. And so it was inevitable that retributio­n would come at some point, and it did.”

Democrats have tried to slow the pace of confirmati­ons by insisting on using all of the extensive floor time they can utilize when judicial selections are under debate. That’s slowed confirmati­on of district court judges and forced McConnell to prioritize appellate court picks. It’s typically taking 176 days for appellate judges to get confirmed; neverthele­ss, that’s still better than the median of 215 days under Obama and 178 days under Bush, according to Wheeler’s data.

Fredrickso­n lamented that White House chaos has overshadow­ed the judicial fights.

“If we lived in a normal time these nomination­s would be on the front page of every newspaper. They’d be the main story on every newscast,” she said. “There’s such an endless supply of outrages from this administra­tion that it’s hard to get people to focus on the courts. And yet this is what Donald Trump is going to leave behind. It’s truly frightenin­g.”

 ?? CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and President Donald Trump have won praise from conservati­ves with their picks to fill massive judicial vacancies.
CHIP SOMODEVILL­A/GETTY Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and President Donald Trump have won praise from conservati­ves with their picks to fill massive judicial vacancies.

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