The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Senate backs Ga. judge for seat on powerful court

Atlanta native Britt Grant joins 11th U.S. Circuit, one known for major cases.

- By Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Senate voted narrowly on Tuesday to confirm Britt Grant to Atlanta’s 11th U.S. Circuit, greenlight­ing the Georgia Supreme Court justice for a lifetime position on the powerful federal appeals court that frequently takes on hotly contested issues such as gun rights and the death penalty.

The vote largely fell along party lines, with three Democrats joining 49 Republican­s to confirm the former Georgia solicitor general. The final tally was 52-46.

GOP boosters, including Georgia U.S. Sens. David Perdue and Johnny Isakson, called Grant an experience­d and well-liked conservati­ve jurist.

“Clearly, Justice Grant is immensely qualified to fill this Court of Appeals vacancy, and there is no doubt in my mind that she will do a fantastic job,” Perdue said Monday on the Senate floor. “In fact, our country needs more judges like Justice Grant.”

But Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer framed Grant’s legal philosophy as “extreme” in the lead-up to Tuesday’s vote.

The New York Democrat echoed stances taken by some civil rights and abortion rights groups, which cited cases she argued as Georgia’s solicitor general on issues such as voting rights, gay marriage and the state’s “fetal pain” abortion law.

“From reproducti­ve rights to gun safety, name a partisan legal case from the past five years and there’s a good chance Britt Grant has been involved, taking up a fringe legal argument way out of the American mainstream to weaken well-establishe­d rights and overturn a precedent in pursuit of an ideologica­l objective,” Schumer said.

Senate Democrats also sought to tie Grant to her former boss, D.C. Circuit Court Judge Brett Kavanaugh, as they scrambled for ways to block his nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court.

But their strategy was not enough to halt the Senate’s vote on Grant’s nomination, which occurred nearly four months after the Atlanta native was first tapped by the Trump administra­tion.

Grant’s nomination was briefly held up due to an unrelated dispute over trade. The intra-GOP fight infuriated Isakson and Perdue, who pressured their colleague U.S. Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., to drop holds he placed on Grant and all of President Donald Trump’s circuit court nominees.

Isakson on Monday called Grant an “outstandin­g jurist.”

“I don’t remember ever having a judge come before this body, since I have been in Congress, from my home state of Georgia who had more people pulling for her, more people wanting her to win, more people who think she is the right person at the right time for the United States of America,” he said.

Grant rose quickly through Georgia’s political and legal circles. She worked for the George W. Bush administra­tion and then-U.S. Rep. Nathan Deal before heading to Stanford University’s law school, where she was president of its Federalist Society, an influentia­l conservati­ve-leaning legal group.

She went on to clerk for Kavanaugh and work in private practice. Grant served as the state’s solicitor general beginning in January 2015, until Deal appointed her to the state appellate court bench two years later.

Grant, whom Trump earlier named to his Supreme Court shortlist, is the administra­tion’s third appointmen­t to the busy 11th U.S. Circuit Court.

The Senate previously confirmed former Georgia Court of Appeals Judge Elizabeth Branch and Birmingham attorney Kevin Newsom to the 12-member panel.

Grant now succeeds Judge Julie Carnes, who took senior status in June. At 40 years of age, Grant will likely be able to hold the position for decades, no small factor as the Trump administra­tion seeks to ensure the appeals court’s rightward tilt.

The 11th U.S. Circuit Court hears cases from Georgia, Alabama and Florida. One rung below the U.S. Supreme Court, the panel hears nationally significan­t matters involving voting rights, immigratio­n and the dividing line between church and state.

The court ruled last year that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act does not prohibit employers from discrimina­ting against workers based on their sexual orientatio­n. But other federal appeals courts later issued contrary opinions.

The 11th Circuit has also made it more difficult for plaintiffs to prevail in hostile work environmen­t claims. Following 11th Circuit precedent, lower court judges now dismiss most sexual harassment claims before they go to trial.

 ??  ?? Britt Grant is leaving Georgia Supreme Court for 11th U.S. Circuit.
Britt Grant is leaving Georgia Supreme Court for 11th U.S. Circuit.

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