Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

McConnell: Courts have long reach

Senator basks in GOP influence on judiciary into the future

- By Joe Williams

WASHINGTON — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., on Friday said the current vacancies in the U.S. court system will allow President Donald Trump to have the longest impact on the future of the country and vowed to continue to push through his nominees, regardless of any opposition from Democrats.

The comments delivered to the Faith and Freedom Coalition are likely to rile Democrats, who blasted Mr. McConnell last year for refusing to allow even a single hearing for Merrick G. Garland, former President Barack Obama’s nominee for the Supreme Court vacancy created by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia.

For years when his party was in the minority, Mr. McConnell employed the procedural speed bumps at his disposal to slow the flow of Mr. Obama’s nomination­s to the federal court system. When Republican­s claimed the majority after the 2014 elections, the flow slowed to a trickle, and the majority leader left dozens of nominees to linger, including Judge Garland.

“The courts — of all the things that we should be able to accomplish with this president and this Senate — the courts have the longest reach into the future,” Mr. McConnell said. “We have a significan­t number of vacancies coming into this administra­tion.”

Mr. McConnell recognized the nomination process would be a “tough battle” amid what he called “blind obstructio­n” by the minority party.

“The left is on war-footing for just about everything these days and that includes the lower courts,” he said. “They are doing everything they can to tie the Senate in knots. They are forcing procedural hurdles on just about everything.”

Mr. Trump on Wednesday sent up a slate of federal court nomination­s and Mr. McConnell said they would give each one a “fair hearing and vote.”

Mr. McConnell spoke about the appointmen­t of Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court, a common talking point by several political figures at the threeday conference held by the evangelica­l Christian organizati­on.

To push that nomination through, Mr. McConnell altered the Senate rules to allow Justice Gorsuch’s confirmati­on to pass with only a simple majority vote, building upon a change Democrats made in prior years to allow lower court appointmen­ts to pass under the same threshold.

He recalled a conversati­on he had with Justice Gorsuch following his confirmati­on, during which Justice Gorsuch said he hoped to serve for 20 to 25 years.

“What we had in mind was a lot longer tenure than 20 or 25 years,” Mr. McConnell told Justice Gorsuch and said to “think Strom Thurmond,” who left the Senate at the age of 100.

Mr. McConnell also said that starting next week, he would launch “a series of speeches in defense of the First Amendment.”

“This conversati­on will focus on both the contempora­ry and historical importance of free speech,” Mr. McConnell told the conference.

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