The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Toomey says he’d back Senate rule change to confirm Gorsuch

- By Marc Levy

CAMP HILL, PA. >> Republican U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey said Friday he would support changing the Senate’s rules to bypass Democratic opposition and confirm President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee and believes the Republican majority has the votes necessary to do it.

The Pennsylvan­ia senator told an audience of hundreds at the Pennsylvan­ia Leadership Conference, which is billed as the state’s largest annual gathering of conservati­ves, that Republican­s will do “whatever it takes” to confirm Judge Neil Gorsuch. He also said Democrats have never said Gorsuch ignored or misapplied the law in cases before him.

Toomey said he is confident that Republican­s have enough votes — there are 52 Republican­s in the 100-member Senate — to take what is known on Capitol Hill as the “nuclear option” because it would amount to a dramatic departure from Senate norms of bipartisan­ship and collegiali­ty.

“There’s nobody that I know in the Republican conference that is looking forward to having to do this,” Toomey said in an interview after his 26-minute speech. “But there’s nobody that I know of in the Republican conference that thinks that we should have a fouror eight-year series of vacancies on the Supreme Court. And everybody recognizes that if the Democrats aren’t willing to confirm Neil Gorsuch, there’s no one they’re going to confirm. So we just don’t have any choice. I think that’s the view of the vast majority of my colleagues.”

A Senate confirmati­on vote is expected late next week.

Unless 60 senators support Gorsuch, Republican­s would have to change Senate rules to allow Gorsuch to be confirmed with a simple majority vote in the Senate. Getting to 60 votes would require six more Democrats to back Gorsuch.

Toomey last year backed a Republican refusal to consider then-President Barack Obama’s nomination of Judge Merrick Garland to fill the high court seat left vacant by the death of conservati­ve Justice Antonin Scalia in February 2016. Toomey said that he has no regrets about blocking Garland’s nomination and that if voters had disagreed, they could have thrown out the Republican majority in the Senate and elected Democrat Hillary Clinton for president.

“I think we made the right call, and apparently most of the American people did too,” Toomey said.

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