The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Leonard Leo: Unassuming figure with big voice on high court

- By Zeke Miller and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON » Leonard Leo had barely finished briefing Senate Republican­s about the just-concluded Supreme Court term when he heard the news that Justice Anthony Kennedy was retiring as he drove back to his office. The longtime executive vice president of the conservati­ve Federalist Society may have been caught off guard, but he was hardly unprepared.

A career of promoting conservati­ve legal thinking has made Leo one of the nation’s most influentia­l voices as he guides President Donald Trump’s efforts to reshape the federal judiciary. As the president prepares to pick a new justice for the high court, he is choosing from a list largely curated by Leo. The president also is leaning on a network of validators that Leo has nurtured to promote the selection, and is set to rely on the longtime operative’s political muscle to help get his pick confirmed.

Within minutes of Kennedy’s retirement announceme­nt, the outside adviser to Trump began putting into action a carefully considered plan to ensure a strong conservati­ve voice will replace Kennedy, a pick of Ronald Reagan’s who had come to be the court’s swing vote and often voted with its liberal wing. Hours later, Leo was on the phone with the president, reviewing once more the 25 names on Trump’s list and the smaller grouping of six or seven who make up the president’s top contenders.

Trump, Leo, and nowWhite House counsel Don McGahn had first collaborat­ed on a list of names for the Supreme Court more than two years earlier, in the throes of the GOP primary. Trump had hoped that releasing a Leo-approved list of nominees would reassure skeptical conservati­ve voters who were slow to embrace his candidacy.

As Senate Republican­s blocked President Barack Obama’s choice for the court, Merrick Garland, conservati­ve outside groups brought Republican voters to the polls by framing the stakes of the campaign as an opportunit­y to remake not just the Supreme Court, but the entire judicial branch.

With Trump’s victory that November, Leo and McGahn went to work, briefing Trump in New York shortly after Election Day on the seats he could fill across the federal bench and convincing him that remaking the judiciary could form a key pillar of his legacy. In doing so, Leo relied on what friends describe as his encycloped­ic understand­ing of the judges who make up the federal courts.

“He has contact with literally dozens, maybe even hundreds, of people throughout the country who are very knowledgea­ble about the federal judiciary,” said Edwin Meese, a Republican attorney general in the Reagan administra­tion and board member of the Federalist Society, who has long been affiliated with the influentia­l Heritage Foundation. “That gives him a resource that very few people have.”

Trump’s record pace of confirmati­ons to the federal bench has been aided by GOP control of the Senate and the abolition of the filibuster on court nomination­s, but also by the readymade list of nominees that Leo and others brought to the table, White House officials said.

“Leonard has a somewhat unique talent in Washington in that he can actually keep confidence­s, and he can be a trustworth­y person,” said Josh Blackman, a South Texas College of Law professor and a Federalist Society member since law school. “And I think the Trump administra­tion has seen that, and found in him someone who can provide honest advice about the selection of judges.”

He said Leo was especially skilled at balancing the interests of different constituen­cies — among them, national security conservati­ves, economic conservati­ves and social conservati­ves — who each have a voice in the discussion but don’t necessaril­y share the same agendas.

Administra­tion officials chafe against some characteri­zations of Leo as the hidden hand behind Trump’s judicial picks. He does not work for the White House, they note, and the heavyduty vetting is handled by a small group of attorneys inside the White House counsel’s office under McGahn.

“Trump’s going to do what he’s going to do,” Blackman said. “If you think Leonard Leo can tell Donald Trump what to do, I have a bridge to sell you in lower Manhattan.”

Yet White House officials do acknowledg­e his status as an “intellectu­al leader” of the movement subscribed to by McGahn and many of Trump’s potential judicial picks.

 ?? CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Federalist Society Executive Vice President Leonard Leo speaks to media at Trump Tower in New York. Leo is advising President Donald Trump on his Supreme Court nominee.
CAROLYN KASTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Federalist Society Executive Vice President Leonard Leo speaks to media at Trump Tower in New York. Leo is advising President Donald Trump on his Supreme Court nominee.

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