San Francisco Chronicle

Supreme Court:

Republican leader Mitch McConnell signals no retreat from his vow to ignore the nomination of Merrick Garland.

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WASHINGTON — No Supreme Court hearings, no votes, not during regular business or a postelecti­on lame- duck session, the Senate’s majority leader made clear Sunday.

Sen. Mitch McConnell signaled no retreat or surrender from his firm stand to keep the court short- handed through at least January, scuttling the suggestion from at least one GOP colleague worried that a new Democrat in theWhite House — Hillary Clinton is the party’s front- runner — might nominate someone more liberal than President Obama’s pick, federal appeals court judge Merrick Garland.

“I can’t imagine that a Republican majority Senate, even if it were soon to be a minority, would want to confirm a judge that would move the court dramatical­ly to the left,” McConnell said in one of his Sunday news show appearance­s. “That’s not going to happen.”

Garland, chief judge of the U. S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, won Republican votes for his current seat and is seen as a centrist whose nomination to the nine- member Supreme Court could box in Obama’s opponents, shaken by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, a conservati­ve bulwark.

McConnell, R- Ky., hasn’t budged from his insistence, beginning just hours after Scalia’s death last month, that the Senate would not confirm an Obama nominee in an election year, let alone hold hearings. He even ruled out meeting the president’s pick, a standard courtesy.

Democrats are using the issue against vulnerable Republican­s facing re- election, hoping for leverage to retake the Senate after the November vote.

So far, though, just one GOP senator, Mark Kirk of Illinois, has broken with his party leaders and called for a vote on Garland. A growing number of Republican­s are willing to meet with Garland, including Sen. Jeff Flake of Arizona. He floated the idea of considerin­g the Garland’s nomination in the postelecti­on session because “between him and somebody that a President Clinton might nominate, I think the choice is clear.”

To that argument, McConnell gave no ground: “Whether it’s before the election or after the election, the principle is the American people are choosing their next president and their next president should pick this Supreme Court nominee.”

McConnell said that he, as majority leader, sets the Senate’s schedule “and most of my members are very comfortabl­e” with his position.

The president’s chief of staff, Denis McDonough, said the ObamaWhite House would stand by Garland “from now until he is confirmed and he is sitting on the Supreme Court.”

“Getting the Senate working again would mean giving this person meetings, a hearing, a vote in committee and a vote on the floor,” McDonough said. “There’s enough politiciza­tion inWashingt­on. Let’s get on with our business.”

McConnell appeared on CNN’s “State of the Union,” ABC’s “This Week,” ‘' Fox News Sunday” and NBC’s “Meet the Press.” McDonough was on ABC and Fox.

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