USA TODAY US Edition

High drama in the Senate

Confirmati­on not in doubt yet procedures may be put in play

- Richard Wolf @richardjwo­lf USA TODAY Contributi­ng: Eliza Collins

Gorsuch’s confirmati­on vote is expected this week

Republican­s will take a major step Monday toward restoring the conservati­ve majority on the Supreme Court lost last year when Justice Antonin Scalia’s death led to a political standoff involving all three branches of government.

The Senate Judiciary Committee is set to vote on the nomination of federal appeals court Judge Neil Gorsuch just 62 days after his nomination by President Trump — a vote Republican­s denied President Barack Obama’s nominee, Merrick Garland, for 293 days last year.

That will set the stage for a showdown before week’s end in which Gorsuch’s confirmati­on isn’t really in doubt, but how it is achieved will have a profound impact on the high court, the Senate and the 2018 elections.

“We’re going to confirm Judge Gorsuch this week,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said on Fox News Sunday. “The way in which that occurs is in the hands of the Democratic minority.”

Democrats still seething over Republican­s’ refusal to consider Garland’s nomination will try to block a final vote on Gorsuch unless he can get the 60 votes needed to overcome a filibuster. Republican­s, with a 52-48 majority, have vowed to change the Senate’s arcane rules if necessary.

McConnell said Sunday it was not yet clear if there were enough Democrats to stop a filibuster and would not rule out changing the rules. An increasing number of Democrats — even those from states that Trump won — have announced they’ll support a filibuster, a bad sign for Republican­s hoping to make a deal.

In the middle of the storm is Gorsuch, 49, a folksy but scholarly Coloradan whose résumé and reverence for the Constituti­on, laws and precedents have captivated Republican­s and unnerved Democrats.

A 10-year veteran of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit by way of Columbia University, Harvard Law School and the University of Oxford, Gorsuch coasted through more than 20 hours of questionin­g by committee members last month. He did so without revealing his views on issues that could come before the high court in the years ahead, from abortion and affirmativ­e action to gay rights and gun control.

The performanc­e virtually assured the result of Monday’s committee vote by uniting its 11 Republican­s while putting the nine Democrats in what Sen. Dianne Feinstein of California called “a terrible position.” Only once before has a filibuster blocked a high court nominee: Justice Abe Fortas, whose 1968 nomination to be chief justice later was withdrawn.

Since Gorsuch’s appearance at the White House on Jan. 31, he has been characteri­zed by Republican­s as a stellar jurist beyond reproach and caricature­d by Democrats as a tool of right-wing zealots and corporate profiteers.

His supporters have trotted out loyal ex-colleagues and law clerks to extol his fair-minded and level-headed approach to the law, while mounting a $10 million TV, digital and grass-roots campaign targeting the most vulnerable Democratic senators.

His opponents have seized on Garland’s treatment, Gorsuch’s evasivenes­s, conservati­ves’ refusal to disclose their campaign’s donors, and a number of the judge’s decisions which they say favored big business and government over the “little guy.”

The dueling efforts have led to the same political chasm that divides Democrats from Republican­s on other issues in the nation’s capital, most recently the GOP’s failed effort to repeal and replace Obamacare. But Supreme Court nomination­s used to be above the fray; the fights that blocked federal appeals court Judge Robert Bork in 1987 and nearly upended now-Justice Clarence Thomas in 1991 were rare exceptions.

Gorsuch has been characteri­zed by Republican­s as a stellar jurist and caricature­d by Democrats as a tool of right-wing zealots.

 ?? JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY ?? The Senate Judiciary Committee is set to vote Monday on the nomination that would return the Supreme Court to full strength – and a conservati­ve majority – since the death of Justice Antonin Scalia.
JACK GRUBER, USA TODAY The Senate Judiciary Committee is set to vote Monday on the nomination that would return the Supreme Court to full strength – and a conservati­ve majority – since the death of Justice Antonin Scalia.

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