Texarkana Gazette

Senate’s McConnell on mission to reshape the courts

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON—Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was upbeat the night after Justice Anthony Kennedy announced he was retiring from the Supreme Court.

The Kentucky Republican had already led the Senate in confirming more circuit court judges in the first year of Donald Trump’s presidency than in that of any other president in history. Now McConnell had the chance to confirm a second Supreme Court justice, a thrilling prospect for his party.

More than any other accomplish­ment, including the passage of the GOP’s tax cuts, the remaking of the judiciary is fast becoming the cornerston­e of the Republican leader’s legacy. It’s something he’s been working on for a long time.

“Well, I think it’s a little too early to be talking about legacy,” McConnell said with a smile as he left the Senate chamber.

“A year and a half ago, I said it was a top priority,” he said about confirming judges, “and it remains so.”

With McConnell leading the way in the Republican­controlled Senate, Trump is seeking to put his imprint on the federal judiciary for generation­s to come. While the latest opening on the Supreme Court is commanding all the attention, with Trump set to announce his pick on Monday night, the nominees to the lower courts are also consequent­ial. More than 40 federal district and circuit court judges have been confirmed to lifetime appointmen­ts so far during Trump’s term, and those judges will have enormous sway in shaping legal arguments nationwide.

Nearly 100 other judicial nominees are awaiting Senate confirmati­on. In all, there are more than 150 vacancies on the courts.

The GOP’s focus on the judiciary has been sharpened by their narrow 51-49 Senate majority, which has made passing legislatio­n difficult. Sixty votes are normally required to advance a bill, while judges can be confirmed with a simple majority.

The newcomers to the bench follow a type. An Associated Press analysis found that roughly two-thirds of the judges who have been confirmed under Trump are white men. Of the 42 confirmed nominees, including Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch, none are black. Ten are women, nine of them white. Three of the judges are Asian-American men and one is a Hispanic man.

In contrast, during President Barack Obama’s two terms, only 37 percent of judges confirmed were white men. Nearly 42 percent were women—the highest share of female judicial appointmen­ts of any president.

“What the administra­tion is seeking is to transform the face of the entire federal judiciary,” said Nan Aron, president of Alliance for Justice, a liberal group that tracks court issues.

“The nominees share one basic characteri­stic—their hostility to progress that’s been made in women, workers and civil rights as well as health and safety over the past several decades,” she said. “This probably is the most extremist slate of judges we’ve ever seen.”

Conservati­ve judicial advocates say the judicial appointmen­ts are correcting the leftward tilt of the bench. They see Trump and McConnell’s revamping of the courts as more important than even legislativ­e victories.

Carrie Severino, the chief counsel and policy director at the conservati­ve Judicial Crisis Network, says, “It’s something that’s viewed across the Republican and libertaria­n base as a huge accomplish­ment.”

Republican­s have often been seen as taking greater interest in the judiciary than Democrats. McConnell works closely with the Federalist Society, which is at the forefront of conservati­ve judicial thinking, and he helped the group draft Trump’s list of 25 potential Supreme Court nominees. He well understand­s the power of the judicial branch to shape policy and mobilize voters.

McConnell laid the groundwork for this moment with a startling move just hours after Justice Antonin Scalia’s sudden death in February 2016. He announced the Senate wouldn’t consider Obama’s nominee because it was a presidenti­al election year. He followed through on that vow, holding the seat open until after Trump took office. Democrats remain livid over the move to this day, calling it a stolen seat.

But the Republican blockade helped solidify conservati­ve and evangelica­l support for Trump during the election, as many rallied to the cause of having a Republican president fill the seat. McConnell has characteri­zed the gambit as his single greatest achievemen­t.

Douglas Johnson, the senior policy director for National Right to Life, says the federal judges being confirmed are “extraordin­arily qualified.” He praised McConnell for recognizin­g “this is important.”

“We saw Sen. McConnell’s extraordin­ary leadership at the time of Scalia’s death— this is a continuati­on of that,” he said.

Those familiar with McConnell’s thinking on the judiciary saw him beginning to play the long game years earlier.

It began when Democrat Harry Reid of Nevada, then the Senate majority leader, changed the rules of the Senate. Frustrated with GOP roadblocks in the Obama era, the Democrats eliminated the filibuster for nominees for the administra­tion and judiciary, other than for the Supreme Court. In practice, that means that 51 votes, rather than 60, are needed to confirm nominees.

Reid’s move was so inflammato­ry that it came with a warning from McConnell on the Senate floor: “I say to my friends on the other side of the aisle, you will regret this, and you may regret it a lot sooner than you think.”

After Republican­s won control of the Senate in 2014, McConnell became leader— the confirmati­on of Obama’s nominees started grinding to halt. As Trump was about to take office, there was what some call an emerging vacancy crisis, with some 100 openings in the judiciary.

Scott Jennings, a former George W. Bush administra­tion official and longtime McConnell strategist, said the Senate leader saw in the judicial openings the opportunit­y to “restore some balance.”

Jennings said, “It became clear to him that one of the things he could do is set up the next president to remake the judiciary.”

In early 2017, when Gorsuch’s nomination was headed toward a Democratic­led filibuster, the Republican­s changed the rules again to allow the confirmati­on of justices with 51 votes.

“I think it’s paid off,” Jennings said. “Laws can be changed, regulation­s can be wiped away, but these federal judicial appointmen­ts are lifetime.”

Associated Press Data Editor Meghan Hoyer in Washington contribute­d to this report.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States