Los Angeles Times

Nominee process could be derailed

Two GOP Judiciary members test positive. Plan to quickly seat Barrett could stall.

- BY JENNIFER HABERKORN Times staff writer Janet Hook in Myrtle Beach, S. C., contribute­d to this report.

White House outbreak might complicate confirmati­on process for Amy Coney Barrett.

WASHINGTON — Senate Republican­s pledged to plow ahead with the confirmati­on of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court despite President Trump’s diagnosis of COVID- 19 and the potential for an outbreak among their ranks.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell ( R- Ky.) called the virus the “biggest enemy” standing in the way of confirming Barrett, given the close margin of votes he is working with.

With two Republican­s already opposed to confirming a nominee so close to the November election, McConnell can afford to lose only one more vote on the Senate f loor and still conf irm Barrett. Because senators must be in the chamber to cast a vote, any absence of a Republican because of illness or necessary quarantine could put the vote tally at risk.

Republican­s are “keeping everybody healthy and well and in place to do our jobs,” McConnell said on the Hugh Hewitt radio show. “Every precaution needs to be taken. We don’t anticipate any Democratic support at all … and therefore everybody needs to

be in an all- hands- on- deck mindset.”

Republican­s view Barrett’s confirmati­on as a once- in- a- generation opportunit­y to pull the Supreme Court to the right, one that they are unlikely to allow anything to derail. But it was Barrett’s nomination that could have put lawmakers at risk.

Sens. Mike Lee ( R- Utah) and Thom Tillis ( R- N. C.), both members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, announced Friday that they had tested positive for the virus. They attended the Sept. 26 announceme­nt of Barrett’s nomination at the White House Rose Garden

along with Trump, First Lady Melania Trump, the president of the University of Notre Dame, where Barrett used to teach, and White House aide Hope Hicks, all of whom have tested positive.

More than dozen other Senate Republican­s attended the packed event. Like most of the crowd, many elected officials at the event did not wear a mask.

On Thursday, Lee attended a Judiciary Committee meeting, potentiall­y exposing other members of the panel to the virus. Sen. Dianne Feinstein ( D- Calif.), the top Democrat on the committee, was expected

to get a test, an aide said Friday.

Amid the looming threat, Republican­s on the committee are preparing for a pandemic- style, largely virtual confirmati­on hearing, which is scheduled to get underway Oct. 12.

“We’re on track,” Sen. Lindsey Graham ( R- S. C.), the committee chairman, told reporters in South Carolina on Friday. “We’re in a good spot. She’s going to get confirmed.”

Senate committees have been meeting remotely, and members of the Judiciary panel are expected to be able to do so also. Barrett and Graham are expected to be in the committee room, and senators will have the option of questionin­g remotely, according to a committee aide.

Sanitizing stations will be at every senator’s desk. Seating for staff and press — who typically jam into the room for such high- profile hearings alongside the public — will be severely restricted, the aide said.

Democrats, who have argued against Trump f illing the vacancy since Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death last month, urged Republican­s to slow down. Feinstein and Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer ( DN. Y.) called it “premature” for Republican­s to pursue a hearing in 10 days.

A virtual hearing is “not an acceptable substitute,” they said in a statement, pointing to the fact that all Circuit Court nominees heave appeared in person for their confirmati­on hearings during the pandemic.

“It’s critical that Chairman Graham put the health of senators, the nominee, and staff first — and ensure a full and fair hearing that is not rushed, not truncated, and not virtual. Otherwise this already illegitima­te process will become a dangerous one,” they said.

Republican­s have shown a sense of urgency in getting Barrett confirmed before the November election, when control of the Senate chamber will be up for grabs. This week, Barrett held introducto­ry meetings with dozens of Senate Republican­s. Barrett had the coronaviru­s this summer and has since recovered, a fact f irst reported by the Washington Post on Friday.

In addition to the political calculatio­ns, there is a serious health threat involved in continuing to conduct business in the Senate: The average age of a senator is nearly 63, meaning most senators are considered to be in a high- risk category.

Trump’s diagnosis — as well as Lee’s — amplified calls for more frequent or even mandatory testing in the Capitol.

McConnell said he would not cancel next week’s planned Senate session.

“So far, the disease has not kept us from operating as we would normally, and there’s no reason to expect that to be the case in the foreseeabl­e future,” he said.

The threat of an outbreak has loomed over the Senate, like the rest of the world, since March. The vast majority of senators — except Sen. Rand Paul ( R- Ky.), a physician who had the virus and says he now has immunity — are frequently seen wearing masks while in the Capitol. Handfuls of House Republican­s have been seen without them.

There was a threat of an outbreak in March, when Paul contracted the illness and was spotted in Senate facilities. However, no known major spread occurred among lawmakers.

 ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP Alex Brandon Associated Press ?? and Judge Amy Coney Barrett at the Rose Garden event announcing her high court nomination, where the coronaviru­s may have spread.
PRESIDENT TRUMP Alex Brandon Associated Press and Judge Amy Coney Barrett at the Rose Garden event announcing her high court nomination, where the coronaviru­s may have spread.

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