USA TODAY US Edition

‘Sparks will fly’ during Kavanaugh confirmati­on hearings

Supreme Court nominee in the hot seat this week

- Richard Wolf

WASHINGTON – For eight weeks since President Donald Trump nominated him for the swing seat on the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh’s judicial record and legal philosophy has gotten lost amid disputes over his partisan past and withheld documents.

But when the Senate Judiciary Committee holds four days of hearings beginning Tuesday, those controvers­ies probably will take a back seat to issues affecting millions of Americans: Abortion. Guns. Health care. And, inevitably, the president himself.

Kavanaugh, 53, will be questioned for 17 hours or more about the conservati­ve views he espoused in more than 300 opinions and dissents over 12 years on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit – a traditiona­l steppingst­one to the Supreme Court.

For half that time, Republican­s who have fawned over Kavanaugh since his nomination July 9 will call attention to his pedigree and character: Yale University and Yale Law School, three prestigiou­s federal court clerkships, nearly a decade of public service and a reputation for open-mindedness and collegiali­ty.

For the other half, Democrats whose opposition is all but assured will highlight the Washington native’s rulings and writings on controvers­ial issues and seek assurances on how he would rule in future cases – questions Kavanaugh will parry without making any promises.

“There will be sparks at this hearing. Sparks will fly,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn. “And there will be a lot of heat.”

There already has been a lot of money spent on both sides of the Kavanaugh nomination, nearly all of it in the few states from Maine to Alaska where senators’ votes are in play. Conservati­ve groups including the National Rifle Associatio­n have spent more than $4 million on TV ads alone, outpacing liberal groups concerned about abortion rights, health care and the financing of election campaigns.

Supreme Court confirmati­on bat-

tles are always controvers­ial, but only in recent years have they become so partisan and the Senate votes razor-thin. The last two justices to leave the court – Antonin Scalia, who died in 2016, and Anthony Kennedy, whose retirement in July created the current vacancy – were confirmed unanimousl­y. The vote in 1991 on Clarence Thomas was 52-48, and the last four justices to be confirmed received 54 to 68 votes.

Justice Neil Gorsuch’s nomination last year was controvers­ial because Senate Republican­s refused in 2016 to consider President Barack Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland. Gorsuch replaced Scalia, a like-minded conservati­ve, 17 months ago.

Not since Justice Samuel Alito replaced Justice Sandra Day O’Connor in 2006 has the ideologica­l balance of power on the court been threatened. Kennedy was the perennial swing vote on social issues ranging from abortion to same-sex marriage. Kavanaugh is likely to align more reliably with the other four conservati­ve justices.

To that initial hurdle, Trump’s choice of Kavanaugh from a list of 25 potential nominees added several others. Kavanaugh’s career choices have included a stint investigat­ing President Bill Clinton, which led to his impeachmen­t, and working for President George W. Bush as deputy White House counsel and staff secretary.

The paper trail from those jobs proved to be too voluminous for the Senate to pile through before the high court’s 2018 term opens in October, or even before the midterm elections in November. So Republican­s have released only those documents they consider most relevant – about 440,000 pages for senators to see, and fewer than 300,000 publicly.

That’s far more than for any previous Supreme Court nominee. But Democrats said millions of pages have been withheld. Friday, the Trump administra­tion said it would withhold more than 100,000 pages on the basis of presidenti­al privilege.

“We were not able to get a lot of documents we felt we were entitled to,” said Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California, the top Democrat on the committee. “We’re laboring under this disadvanta­ge.”

Trump made clear during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign that he wanted to promote judges who were “pro-life” and who would defend Americans’ gun rights under the Second Amendment. He has sought to overturn Obama’s signature legislativ­e achievemen­t, the Affordable Care Act, through the courts if necessary.

On those issues and more, Kavanaugh passed the test.

“It’s not often that a president states full-out before the nomination is even made that he’s looking for someone who will overturn the ACA and Roe v. Wade,” which legalized abortion nationwide, said Nan Aron, president of the liberal Alliance for Justice. “We have to take Donald Trump and the White House and (Senate Republican leader) Mitch McConnell at their word.”

❚ On abortion, Kavanaugh dissented from his court’s ruling last year that allowed an undocument­ed teenager in federal custody to get an abortion. He cited Supreme Court precedents under which he said “the government has permissibl­e interests in favoring fetal life, protecting the best interests of a minor, and refraining from facilitati­ng abortion.”

During his confirmati­on hearing for the circuit court in 2006, Kavanaugh said he would “follow Roe v. Wade faithfully and fully. ... It’s been reaffirmed many times.” Two weeks ago, he told Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, an abortion rights supporter whose support is crucial, that he considered the 1973 decision “settled law.”

But in a speech last year, Kavanaugh heaped praise on the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist, citing among other things Rehnquist’s dissent in Roe. Rehnquist, he said, “stated that under the court’s precedents, any such unenumerat­ed right had to be rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people.”

❚ On gun control, Kavanaugh dissented in 2011 from an appeals court ruling that upheld a District of Columbia ban on semiautoma­tic rifles. Under the Supreme Court’s precedent in District of Columbia v. Heller in 2008 – with Kennedy in the majority – Kavanaugh said the ban was unconstitu­tional.

As someone who grew up in the District of Columbia when it was plagued by guns, drugs and gang violence, Kavanaugh indicated he was conflicted on a policy basis, but “the law and the Constituti­on ... compel the result.”

❚ On health care, Kavanaugh dissented in 2011 from an appeals court ruling upholding the Affordable Care Act but only on procedural grounds. He said the law’s mandate that individual­s purchase health insurance or pay a tax penalty to the Internal Revenue Service could not be challenged before any payment was made.

“History and precedent counsel caution before reaching out to decide difficult constituti­onal questions too quickly, especially when the underlying issues are of lasting significan­ce,” he wrote. “After all, what appears to be obviously correct now can look quite different just a few years down the road.”

Democrats are likely to delve even more deeply into Kavanaugh’s views of presidenti­al power. He has written that Congress should immunize presidents from criminal investigat­ions and personal civil suits while in office.

The question picked up steam last month when Michael Cohen, the president’s personal lawyer and “fixer,” pleaded guilty to violations of campaign finance law and implicated the president in payoffs during the 2016 campaign to a former Playboy model and a porn star. Since then, Democrats have noted the Supreme Court could be called upon to decide a case involving Trump – with Kavanaugh holding a key vote.

‘Trying to score points’

Those who have gotten to know Kavanaugh since his days as a 28-year-old Kennedy law clerk insist he’s nothing like the demon Democrats have painted. They recall him as a generous mentor, a promoter of women and minorities, and a workaholic whose opinions and dissents often went through dozens of drafts.

“The word I would use to describe him is independen­t,” said Justin Walker, a University of Louisville law professor who was in the first class Kavanaugh taught at Harvard Law School and later clerked for him at the appeals court.

Akhil Reed Amar, a liberal law professor at Yale Law School, cited Kavanaugh’s “combinatio­n of smarts, constituti­onal knowledge and openness – and that’s the triple crown.”

On a personal level, Democrats are unlikely to score any points against a regular guy who coaches his daughters’ Catholic Youth Organizati­on basketball teams and briefly went into debt buying Washington Nationals baseball tickets.

“The Democrats know this is lost,” said Curt Levey, president of the conservati­ve Committee for Justice. “They’re just trying to score points with the base and score points against Trump.”

 ?? AP ?? Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh has met with dozens of senators since his nomination.
AP Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh has met with dozens of senators since his nomination.

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