Las Vegas Review-Journal

Man sentenced for 1998 killings Switch appears to have bought 36 acres of land Ex-laxalt assistant gets nod for the 9th

- By Debra J. Saunders Review-journal White House Correspond­ent

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Friday announced his intent to nominate former Nevada Solicitor General Lawrence Vandyke to serve on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Vandyke, who served as a solicitor general under former Nevada Attorney General Adam Laxalt and is a deputy assistant attorney general with the Justice Department, would fill the seat of Judge Jay Bybee of Las Vegas, who announced he will take senior status at the end of the year.

If confirmed by the Senate, Vandyke would join the San Francisco-based court that hears challenges to district court decisions in nine Western states, including Nevada, as well as the U.S. territorie­s of Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands. It also hears appeals of decisions of federal

administra­tive agencies within its circuit.

Vandyke graduated from Harvard Law School and was an editor of the Harvard Law Review. He also clerked for U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Judge Janice Rogers Brown.

The announceme­nt came after the Review-journal reported that Nevada Sens. Catherine Cortez Masto and Jacky Rosen, both Democrats, announced they were forming a bipartisan commission to vet potential candidates for federal judgeships in Nevada. The two senators had floated the idea of such a panel in January, after Rosen won the seat formerly held by Republican Dean Heller.

Senators opposed

In a statement, both senators criticized Trump’s decision to move forward with the nomination without their support.

“We’re frustrated the White House is choosing to ignore the bipartisan work undertaken by our offices in concert with Nevada’s legal community to identify and recommend qualified Nevadans for the 9th Circuit,” they said.

“The administra­tion’s decision to put forward this nominee ignores the broad, consensus-based opinion of Nevadans. Instead, the White House has chosen to move forward on their extreme judicial agenda. While we will review the full record of this nominee, we are disappoint­ed that the White House has chosen to nominate a candidate with a concerning record of ideologica­l legal work.”

University of Richmond School of Law Professor Carl Tobias said it was unlikely the White House had reached out to Nevada’s Democratic senators about the choice. “I can’t imagine they’ve done anything more than the bare minimum,” said Tobias. “They just will run over the Democrats, and the Democrats don’t have any answer to that.”

While Senate tradition allows a state’s senators to withhold “blue slips” to block the confirmati­on of district court judges from their home states, the Gop-controlled Senate is not bound to reject an appellate court nominee who is “blue slipped” by one or both senators.

For example, Tobias said, when President Barack Obama nominated Anne Rachel Traum, a UNLV law professor, to the district court bench in 2016, then-gop Sen. Dean Heller, R-nev., was able to block her. The seat remains unfilled. Heller also used the blue-slip process in 2012 to block then-state District Court Judge Elissa Cadish from an appointmen­t to the federal bench. Cadish was elected to the Nevada Supreme Court last year.

Annette Magnus, executive director of the liberal group Battle Born Progress, said in a statement: “As is typical of most Trump judge picks, Vandyke has a publicly available rap sheet of troubling decisions and poor judgment that should concern every Nevadan who values the right to abortion, LGBTQ+ civil liberties, getting money and corruption out of politics, and more.

“His relationsh­ip with former attorney general and failed gubernator­ial extremist Adam Laxalt should raise questions about his qualificat­ions and fair-mindedness. He is the epitome of an out of touch carpetbagg­er and the definition of conservati­ve welfare where mediocre men are empowered to fail up while the rest of the community suffers.”

Praise from colleagues, classmates

Laxalt told the Review-journal that he came to rely on Vandyke’s legal advice, his penchant for tackling “very challengin­g appellate work” and his talent as a “really, really amazing writer.”

Rep. Mark Amodei, the only Republican in the Nevada congressio­nal delegation, praised Vandyke for fighting “for the rule of law, especially in the protection of our cherished land, water and property rights.”

In 2014, Vandyke left his position as Montana solicitor general to run against an incumbent justice on the Montana Supreme Court but lost the election to the former Democratic lawmaker. It was the most expensive judicial race in Montana history and drew the notice of The New York Times, which described the race as a contest between a centrist Democrat and an ideologica­l Republican who signed onto amicus briefings that supported gun rights and same-sex marriage bans.

Laxalt told the Review-journal it is “not fair to go after a lawyer who worked under a boss’s view,” in this case Montana Attorney General

Tim Fox. When Vandyke worked for Laxalt, “he never signed onto a single brief without my approval.”

In one instance in 2014, Vandyke and Cortez Masto crossed paths when Montana joined a legal brief that defended Nevada’s ban on same-sex marriage and Cortez Masto, then Nevada’s attorney general, decided not to defend the law because of a court ruling that suggested it would be found unconstitu­tional.

The 9th Circuit later ruled both Nevada’s and Montana’s bans on samesex marriage to be unconstitu­tional.

Carrie Severino, chief counsel and policy director of Judicial Crisis Network, a conservati­ve legal advocacy group, defended the Montana decision to challenge “the state attorney general not defending the law that the people of Nevada passed.”

Deep respect for the Constituti­on

Severino praised the president’s choice, “Lawrence Vandyke was a classmate of mine at Harvard Law School, and you couldn’t ask for a better lawyer or a man of more exemplary character,” she said in a statement. “With deep roots in the West, Lawrence is very familiar with the challenges faced by states in the Ninth Circuit, and, as solicitor general for Montana and Nevada, he was on the front lines of the legal challenges to the overreach by the Obama administra­tion and its job-killing EPA.”

In the National Review, Severino praised Vandyke for securing “an injunction staying enforcemen­t of the EPA’S 2015 ‘Waters of the United States’ rule, which unduly expanded federal power over state and local waters and imposed onerous burdens on ranches and farms as well as government entities.” This month, the EPA announced it would return to the pre-2015 clean-water regulation­s.

Nevada Senate Minority Leader James Settelmeye­r praised the pick.

“In Nevada, we have seen multiple attempts by the federal government to improperly seize further control over our water rights, property rights, and our basic fundamenta­l liberties,” the Republican lawmaker said. “These actions severely impact our critically important mining, ranching and agricultur­e industries. Lawrence has deep respect for our Constituti­on, and I’m thankful for President Trump nominating him and I look forward to his confirmati­on and continued service to our nation and to the rule of law.”

Contact Debra J. Saunders at dsaunders@reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7391. Follow @Debrajsaun­ders on Twitter. Reporter Gary Martin contribute­d to this story.

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Lawrence Vandyke

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