The Columbus Dispatch

Obstacles ahead, but Gorsuch seems set for confirmati­on

- By Michael Doyle

WASHINGTON —Colorado-based federal appellate Judge Neil Gorsuch has political momentum as he enters his Supreme Court confirmati­on hearing Monday.

Gorsuch appears about to fill the seat kept vacant by Senate Republican­s during the final 10 months of the Obama administra­tion. Even some Democrats still furious over the GOP power play are forecastin­g Gorsuch’s success.

Since his Jan. 31 nomination by President Donald Trump, Gorsuch has maneuvered Capitol Hill without any apparent missteps. He’s met with upward of 70 senators and rehearsed disarming answers in private “murder boards.” He’s made public through the Senate Judiciary Committee more than 175,000 pages of his past writings, speeches and related documents

Conservati­ve advocacy groups have been pumping out pro-Gorsuch ads, including $4.4 million worth of radio, television and digital spots credited to the Judicial Crisis Network. A foundation affiliated with the National Rifle Associatio­n has fired off an additional $1 million or so in ads, further outgunning Gorsuch’s liberal opponents.

And in a deft move, Gorsuch showed independen­ce without piercing any White House thin skins when a Democratic senator quoted him as calling Trump’s heated rhetorical assault on his fellow federal judges “demoralizi­ng” and “dishearten­ing.”

The outdoorsy 49-year-old graduate of Columbia, Harvard Law School and Oxford University, who esteems the late Justice Antonin Scalia, has, in brief, managed a textbook confirmati­on rollout while avoiding the chaos that has elsewhere roiled the nascent Trump administra­tion. If confirmed, Gorsuch would fill Scalia’s seat.

He will be confirmed before the April recess, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., told Politico March 9. The recess is scheduled to begin April 7.

The Senate’s 52 Republican­s appear to be in lockstep behind Gorsuch. To overcome a potential filibuster, as has already been threatened by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., Republican­s would have to peel away eight Democrats. That would not be impossible, as some politicall­y vulnerable and/or institutio­n-minded lawmakers will call for an up-or-down vote even if they ultimately oppose Gorsuch.

Led by Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the Judiciary Committee’s senior Democrat, skeptical lawmakers will nonetheles­s do their best to shake Gorsuch, who will be present for opening statements Monday and a full day of direct questionin­g Tuesday.

Wednesday, once the Gorsuch questions are expected to be done, could feature outside witnesses, including those summoned by Democrats to personify the effect of Gorsuch’s past decisions. The hearings are expected to end Thursday.

“Judge Gorsuch ruled against Patricia Caplinger, from Missouri, who sued after a medical device was implanted in a non-FDA approved way,” Sen. Chuck Schumer of New York, the Senate minority leader, said in one characteri­stic tweet on March 16.

Joined by a fellow Republican appointee on the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and opposed in part by a Democratic appointee, Gorsuch reasoned in the April 2015 decision involving Caplinger that Congress had effectivel­y pre-empted state laws governing medical devices.

“Allowing more regulation of medical devices could yield benefits for patient safety,” Gorsuch wrote. “But it could also mean forcing manufactur­ers to abide not one but 51 sets of requiremen­ts, a prospect that could deter or delay access to innovative devices and wind up hurting more patients than it helps.”

Written with his customary accessible clarity, Gorsuch’s opinion in the Caplinger case was one of hundreds he has authored since he joined the bench as a President George W. Bush appointee in 2006.

The opinions confirm that Gorsuch is conservati­ve, a point cheered by tea party and other far-right activists who rallied on Capitol Hill on Friday afternoon.

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 ?? [DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES] ?? Judge Neil Gorsuch, President Donald Trump’s nominee for the Supreme Court, met with Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., on Capitol Hill in February. Gorsuch has met with upward of 70 senators and rehearsed disarming answers in preparatio­n for his confirmati­on...
[DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES] Judge Neil Gorsuch, President Donald Trump’s nominee for the Supreme Court, met with Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., on Capitol Hill in February. Gorsuch has met with upward of 70 senators and rehearsed disarming answers in preparatio­n for his confirmati­on...
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