Trump Supreme Court pick faces tough hearings in Congress

Some two dozen witnesses are lined up to argue for and against confirming Kavanaugh

Brett Kavanaugh, President Trump's pick for the Supreme Court. PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON:
President Donald Trump's newest Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh is expected to face punishing questioning from Democrats this week over his endorsement of presidential immunity and his opposition to abortion.

Some two dozen witnesses are lined up to argue for and against confirming Kavanaugh, who could swing the nine-member high court decidedly in conservatives' favor for years to come.

Democrats have mobilised heavily to prevent his approval.

They argue that while Trump faces investigation for alleged obstruction of justice and possible collusion by his campaign with Russia, he should not be able to choose a judge who could cast a decisive vote in his case.

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When Kavanaugh appears before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Tuesday for the first of up to four days of hearings, Democrats aim to show that his record as a judge and a former White House legal counsel is colored by extremist views.

They are especially concerned that his vote might allow the Supreme Court to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe versus Wade case, which gave women the right to have an abortion.

They are also concerned about his views that the president should be immune from investigation and prosecution while in office--issues that could come before the Supreme Court if Special Counsel Robert Mueller determines Trump violated laws.

"President Trump promised to appoint justices who would automatically overturn Roe versus Wade, and be pro-gun," Senator Dianne Feinstein, senior Democrat on the committee, said Friday

"We have no reason to doubt that Kavanaugh would fulfill that promise."

Added Senator Richard Blumenthal, another Democrat on the committee, "There will be sparks at this hearing."

Kavanaugh, a 53-year-old conservative Catholic from a wealthy Washington suburb, has the backing of powerful right-wing judicial groups and deeply religious evangelical Christians--both of which are key constituents of the Republican voter base.

"How did Donald Trump get 82% of the evangelical Christian vote?... Because of the Supreme Court," noted University of Virginia political scientist Larry Sabato.


Kavanaugh began his career as a clerk to Anthony Kennedy, the justice long considered a critical swing vote on the Supreme Court, who retired on July 31.

In the 1990s he worked with special prosecutor Kenneth Starr in his probe of Democratic president Bill Clinton's affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, which led to Clinton's impeachment trial.
In 2001 he joined President George Bush's White House legal team, where his role in key terrorism-related decisions, such as permitting the torture of detainees, remains unclear.

As a US Court of Appeals judge in Washington for the past 11 years, Kavanaugh has ruled on some of the nation's most sensitive cases, including when he opposed the Affordable Care Act, the signature health reform of President Barack Obama that Trump has sought to dismantle.

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"There is no one in America more qualified for this position and no one more deserving," Trump said in announcing Kavanaugh's nomination.

Kavanaugh's record of court opinions and legal analyses shows a mainstream conservative opposed to abortion, supportive of corporations against regulation, and--despite his work in the Clinton case--holding beliefs that a sitting president should not be distracted by legal proceedings against him.

"President Trump thinks he's above the law," said Senator Kirsten Gillibrand. "It's no coincidence his Supreme Court nominee believes sitting presidents shouldn't be indicted." She called for Kavanaugh's appointment to be blocked.

Democrats are also angry that the Trump administration has not released all the records of Kavanaugh's work while he was in the White House. Senator Patty Murray said this was "even more reason to stop this entire process in its tracks."

But Republicans insist that Kavanaugh's judicial history shows a fully qualified jurist able to see all sides of the law.

"The American Bar Association 'has determined by a unanimous vote that Judge Kavanaugh is Well Qualified...its highest possible rating,'" Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said via Twitter Friday.

Democrats have hoped that one or more Republican senators in favor of abortion rights, particularly moderate Susan Collins, would oppose the nominee.
Kavanaugh needs 50 votes for confirmation, and 47 Republicans have indicated their support, with 41 Democrats announcing their opposition, the Politico website reported.

But Collins has appeared to accept Kavanaugh's pledge that he respects established court precedent, presumably including the Roe versus Wade ruling.

Meantime, some Democrats, particularly those in states won by Trump, see Kavanaugh's approval as unavoidable. They have signaled they could vote for him to appease their constituents.
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