Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Toomey says he, Senate GOP very unlikely to back Obama pick

- By Marc Levy

ALLENTOWN, PA. >> Republican U.S. Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia held firm to his view that the next president should fill the U.S. Supreme Court’s vacancy, and he said Thursday that it’s very unlikely that he or a Senate majority would support President Barack Obama’s nominee.

He also said it might be better to not hold electionye­ar confirmati­on hearings because senators would be weighing more than just a nominee’s qualificat­ions. He and other Republican­s would also consider how a nominee from the Democratic president would change the court’s balance in his favor before a new president takes office, Toomey said.

“It’s very unlikely that any nominee, however well qualified, could reach the level that would be neces- sary to satisfy both sets of criteria,” Toomey told The Associated Press. “And for that reason, it might be just as well not to have a hearing that would, sort of, might mislead the American people into thinking that this is just about the qualificat­ions of the candidate, because it’s bigger than that.”

Toomey, who is running for a second term in the swing-state seat, backed Senate GOP Majority Leader Mitch McConnell earlier this week in arguing that a nominee for Justice Antonin Scalia’s seat is best left to the next president. That stance has brought a barrage of criticism from Democrats and Pennsylvan­ia newspaper editorial boards. One Democrat running for the party’s Senate nomination, Joe Sestak, accused Toomey on Thursday of “marching lockstep with partisan obstructio­nists in Washington, D.C.”

The Scranton Times-Tribune editorial board called Toomey’s position “naked obstructio­n.”

Toomey reiterated his stance on Thursday.

“I think the question before us now is ... should the outgoing president fundamenta­lly change the balance of the court for the next one or two generation­s?” Toomey said. “I don’t think that’s reasonable. I think that it’s more reasonable for the American people to have a more direct say in that process, which they will do through the election of the president knowing now with certainty that the next president is going to make this really important pick.”

If an Obama nominee comes to a vote, Toomey would oppose the nominee, he said, barring an unlikely Obama decision to nominate someone in Scalia’s philosophi­cal mold who would not change the court’s balance.

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