The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

SUPREME COURT TIMELINE

Key events following the death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia and leading up to President Donald Trump’s nomination of Judge Neil Gorsuch to replace him.

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Feb. 13, 2016 — Scalia is found dead in his room at a Texas ranch where he had gone on a hunting trip. His death at age 79 leaves the high court split between four liberal justices and four conservati­ves. Within hours, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says President Barack Obama should not fill the vacancy during an election year and it should be up to the next president. Obama later says in a televised address that he plans to fulfill his constituti­onal responsibi­lity to nominate a successor.

March 16 — Obama nominates Merrick Garland, chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, to take Scalia’s seat. Obama hopes Garland’s reputation as a respected moderate will put pressure on Republican­s to consider him. But Republican­s stand firm and insist they will not even grant a Senate hearing.

March 29 — The Supreme Court announces its first deadlock in a case since Scalia’s death, handing a win to labor unions in a high-profile dispute over fees. The split vote leaves in place an appeals court ruling that allows unions representi­ng government employees to collect fees from all workers, even those who choose not to join.

April 12 — Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Charles Grassley tells Garland during a meeting that the Senate won’t advance his nomination for the rest of the year.

May 16 — The Supreme Court sends back to a lower court a dispute over access to birth control. The move averts a 4-4 tie and suggests the justices could not form a majority to issue a ruling that would have settled the issue.

May 18 — Trump, the presumptiv­e Republican presidenti­al nominee, releases a list of 11 potential picks to replace Scalia. The list offers a mix of federal and state judges and appears tailored to win over conservati­ves still skeptical of Trump’s candidacy. It includes federal appeals court judges Thomas Hardiman and William Pryor, who would later emerge as leading contenders.

June 23 — The Supreme Court announces it is deadlocked in a dispute over Obama’s plan to protect millions of immigrants who are in the United States illegally. In the fourth 4-4 split of the term, the justices leave in place a lower court ruling that said the Obama administra­tion lacked the authority to shield up to 4 million immigrants from deportatio­n.

July 21 — Trump in his speech accepting the GOP presidenti­al nomination pledges to replace Scalia with “a person of similar views, principles and judicial philosophy.” He says the pick“will be one of the most important issues decided by this election.”The same day, Garland becomes the longest-waiting Supreme Court nominee without a Senate confirmati­on vote. The previous record was held by Justice Louis Brandeis, who waited 125 days before he was confirmed.

Sept. 23 — Trump adds 10 more names to his list pf potential Supreme Court nominees, including Gorsuch.

Nov. 8 — Trump defeats Hillary Clinton in the presidenti­al election, giving him the power to re-establish the court’s conservati­ve tilt.

Jan. 18, 2017 — Garland returns to his federal appeals court.

Jan. 24 — Trump narrows his choices to three judges: Gorsuch, Hardiman and Pryor.

Jan. 31 — Trump announces he has chosen Gorsuch as his nominee.

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