In nod to conservatives, Trump reveals new list of potential Supreme
Court picks
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[September 10, 2020]
By Andrea Shalal and Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Donald
Trump on Wednesday unveiled a list of potential nominees - including
three sitting U.S. senators - to fill any future Supreme Court vacancies
in a move aimed at bolstering support among conservative voters ahead of
the Nov. 3 election.
At a White House event, Trump announced a list of 20 potential justices,
saying they all would preserve America's "founding principles." The
Republican president also urged his Democratic election rival, Joe
Biden, to release his own list.
Trump's list included Republican Senators Ted Cruz of Texas, Josh Hawley
of Missouri and Tom Cotton of Arkansas. Hawley told reporters he had
told Trump he was "not interested in the job."
Most of the names on the new list are judges whom Trump already has
appointed to lower federal courts.
Others include: Noel Francisco, who served until recently as the Trump
administration's top Supreme Court lawyer; Daniel Cameron, Kentucky's
attorney general; and Paul Clement, the top Supreme Court lawyer under
former Republican President George W. Bush and now one of the most
prominent private attorneys who argues cases before the justices.
A senior administration official told Reuters that Trump had sought
people from a diverse area of the country - 13 states plus Washington,
D.C. - along with a diversity of originating law schools for the people
on the new list, and noted that women and minorities made up 11 names on
the list.
The Supreme Court's 5-4 conservative majority includes two justices
appointed by Trump. His release of a new list - names added to another
roster he issued earlier in his presidency - was aimed at reassuring
conservatives and generating enthusiasm among them ahead of the
election. It brought to 44 the number of different potential nominees
Trump has said he would consider.
If a vacancy emerges soon, the favorites likely would be some of those
on Trump's previous list, including Amy Coney Barrett, a judge on the
Chicago-based 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
AN AGING BENCH
An additional vacancy could enable Trump to move the court further to
the right.
Four of the nine justices are age 70 or older: liberals Ruth Bader
Ginsburg, 87, and Stephen Breyer, 82, and conservatives Clarence Thomas,
72, and Samuel Alito, 70. Ginsburg has experienced recurring health
problems.
Supreme Court justices, who receive lifetime appointments, play an
enormous role in shaping U.S. policies on hot-button issues such as
abortion, LGBT rights, gun rights, religious liberty, the death penalty
and presidential powers.
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President Donald Trump takes questions after delivering remarks on
judicial appointments during a brief appearance in the Diplomatic
Room at the White House in Washington, U.S., September 9, 2020.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
If Ginsburg or Breyer were to step down and Trump was able to
appoint a successor, the court would have a rock-solid 6-3
conservative majority - or even a 7-2 advantage if both were
replaced.
That could deliver changes long sought by conservatives such as
overturning the court's landmark 1973 ruling that legalized abortion
nationwide. The court would also be a conservative bulwark should
liberal Democrats in the future have the votes to pass sweeping
legislation on such issues as climate change and healthcare.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer slammed Trump's list of
possible picks. "These radical nominees would continue the effort to
reverse important progress America has made over the last 50 years
on women’s reproductive freedom, strip away critical healthcare
protections for Americans with pre-existing conditions, and gut
labor, environmental, and civil rights," Schumer said in a
statement.
Trump's two appointees to the court were Neil Gorsuch in 2017 and
Brett Kavanaugh in 2018.
Trump's ability to appoint justices is reliant not just on him
winning re-election but on Republicans retaining control of the U.S.
Senate, which has the job of confirming federal judicial
nominations. Under Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, Senate
confirmation of Trump nominees to the federal judiciary has been a
paramount priority.
As a candidate in 2016, Trump also unveiled a list of potential
nominees in bid at the time to win over skeptical conservatives.
Trump and his allies have criticized conservative Chief Justice John
Roberts. Roberts sided this year with the court's liberals in three
high-profile rulings that backed LGBT worker rights, thwarted
Trump's bid to rescind protections for illegal immigrants dubbed
"Dreamers" who entered the United States as children, and struck
down a restrictive Louisiana abortion law.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal, Lisa Lambert, Lawrence Hurley and Susan
Cornwell; Writing by Steve Holland; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Will
Dunham and Peter Cooney)
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