President Donald Trump’s pick to fill a vacant seat on the Supreme Court, Neil Gorsuch, is scheduled to begin meeting with lawmakers Wednesday on Capitol Hill.
White House spokesman Sean Spicer said the Trump administration is also planning a series of briefings for members of Congress about the nominee.
Trump announced his choice late Tuesday, introducing Gorsuch as a judge the “country needs badly” and comparing him to the late Justice Antonin Scalia, whose seat Gorsuch will be filling.
Gorsuch has “a superb intellect, an unparalleled legal education, and a commitment to interpreting the Constitution according to its text,” Trump said.
The confirmation could be contentious following the Republican refusal to hold confirmation hearings for former President Barack Obama’s choice to fill the seat, which has been vacant for just under a year.
Senate Democrats immediately voiced opposition to the pick.
The top Democrat, Senator Chuck Schumer, said he has “serious doubts” about Gorsuch and that his party will insist any Supreme Court nominee receive 60 votes in order to be confirmed.
Senator Diane Feinstein, the senior Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, said it will take time to thoroughly review Gorsuch’s record and expressed concern about Trump’s campaign pledge to appoint justices who oppose abortion rights.
“Then tonight, President Trump declared, ‘I am a man of my word.’ That’s exactly what I’m afraid of. Judge Gorsuch voted twice to deny contraceptive coverage to women, elevating a corporation’s religious beliefs over women’s health care,” Feinstein said.
Senator Dick Durbin, a Democrat, wrote on Twitter that in recent years the Supreme Court has “shifted dramatically,” with decisions that favor corporate interests at the expense of American workers. He said the vacant seat “belongs to the American people, and I’ll make sure their voices are heard.”
If confirmed, Gorsuch would restore the 5-4 conservative majority on the nine-member court that existed with Scalia on the bench. He would also be one of the youngest justices ever to sit on the court where lifetime appointments make a president’s selections important long after he leaves office.
During his introduction Tuesday, Gorsuch called the appointment to the Supreme Court “a most solemn assignment.” He said if the Senate confirms him, he will do everything in his power to be “a faithful servant of the Constitution and the laws of this great country.” He also spoke of his admiration for Scalia, calling him a “lion of the law.”
Republicans praised Gorsuch, a 49-year-old federal appellate judge from Colorado, whom they believe will continue Scalia’s legacy as a conservative voice in the court.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Gorsuch has a “long record of faithfully applying the law and the Constitution.”
Senators Ted Cruz and Chuck Grassley, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, both touted Gorsuch as a judge who adheres to a strict interpretation of the Constitution common among conservative judges.
Grassley said Gorsuch is “not like a lot of people on the Supreme Court who want to stretch congressional intent on the law or maybe read the Constitution beyond what the writers implied for the Constitution to say.”
Cruz called on the Senate to “move expeditiously” and said he believes Gorsuch will be confirmed.
“The Democrats will not succeed in filibustering this nominee,” he told VOA’s Kurdish service. “They may try, they may not try. I don’t know the answer to that. But they will not succeed.”
Republicans currently hold a 52-44 majority over the Democrats in the Senate. It would take just 51 votes to confirm Gorsuch, unless Democrats choose to filibuster the nomination, in which case 60 votes would be required to overcome the action.
Gorsuch was previously confirmed in a voice vote by the Senate in 2006 after he was nominated by then-President George W. Bush to the 10th U.S. Circuit of Appeals. An individual tally of votes wasn’t conducted because Gorsuch was seen as a non-controversial nomination.
Senators Schumer and Feinstein were both present for the vote, along with then-Senators Barack Obama, Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton.
Reporter Sama Dizayee of VOA’s Turkish Service contributed to this report
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