podesta-emails
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Tom Goldstein <http://www.scotusblog.com/author/tom-goldstein> Publisher
Posted Tue, February 16th, 2016 5:25 pm
Email Tom <[email protected]>
Bio & Post Archive » <http://www.scotusblog.com/author/tom-goldstein>
Continued thoughts on the next nominee (and impressions of Judge Ketanji
Brown Jackson)
My thinking about the likely nominee to replace Justice Antonin Scalia
continues to evolve. His untimely death surprised everyone. The White
House is now compiling a list. Democrats are gearing up to support
whatever nominee is chosen. Republicans are shaping their message in
opposition to any possible candidate.
I discussed my sense of the political calculus in earlier post. Here it
is, along with some additional elaboration. I follow it with an
explanation for why my thinking on the next nominee has evolved from Ninth
Circuit Judge Paul Watford to Attorney General Loretta Lynch (both of whom
will almost certainly get serious consideration) to U.S. District Judge
Ketanji Brown Jackson.
Republicans hold the ultimate power of confirmation. So it makes sense to
start our analysis with them. There are fifty-four Republican senators.
Four would have to vote for the nominee on the merits. Fourteen would have
to vote to end a filibuster. The former is unlikely.
More important, the latter is wildly implausible – unless Republicans end
their filibuster not to conduct a genuine debate but simply to reject the
nominee in an up-or-down vote. Conservatives will lay down on the tracks
on this issue. A liberal vote could swing the Supreme Court to the left
for decades. (A Republican presidential victory would probably allow
Republicans to move the Court back to the right by replacing Justice Ruth
Bader Ginsburg and/or Justice Stephen Breyer, but you never know.) A
Republican senator who facilitates moving the Court to the left guarantees
conservative enmity – and primary challenges – forever. For evidence, look
to the fact that Senator Kelly Ayotte immediately announced that she agreed
that the Senate should not proceed on any nomination before the election.
Relatedly, conservatives view the Court as a critical issue for the
turn-out of their own core voters – in both the Republican primary (to
support a nominee like Ted Cruz) and in the general election. So they have
every incentive to hold this line firmly.
The bottom line is that President Obama’s nominee is not getting confirmed
before the election. Maybe there will be a permanent filibuster. Maybe
Republicans will nominally allow the filibuster to be “broken,” then
proceed to reject the nominee on the merits. (That course is suggested by
the announcement by Senator Chuck Grassley, chairman of the Senate
Judiciary Committee, that he would await a nomination before deciding
whether to hold hearings.) Maybe a couple of Republicans who have specific
concerns in purple states will even vote for the nominee. But the entire
process will be crafted to ensure that the nominee is not confirmed.
Now look at it from the administration’s perspective. It is of course
important for the president to pick a highly qualified nominee. As a
matter of principle and tradition, every president wants to do so as part
of his legacy. There is also of course a realistic chance that the nominee
will be confirmed if a Democrat wins the presidential election. So the new
Justice’s legal abilities are critical.
Just as important, qualifications are obviously central to how the nominee
is publicly perceived. People will only rally around a candidate whom they
think should get the job. One particular kind of qualification is
particularly valuable here: that the nominee was previously confirmed
without any objections by Republicans. That “bumper sticker message” puts
Republicans in a huge bind in attempting to block the nomination.
The nomination itself is part of the president’s legacy, even if partisan
politics prevents confirmation. In my opinion, that points to President
Obama selecting a black nominee. It just seems strange that our first
black president – a Democrat who has emphasized diversity on the bench –
would make three Supreme Court nominations, none of them black. The
unacceptable implied message is that there were no qualified black
candidates. It is less important, but the president’s historical legacy –
and the Democratic Party’s long-term standing – would also be enhanced by
nominating three women to the Supreme Court.
Beyond excellent qualifications and the president’s legacy, the pick is
inherently political. The administration will ask itself: who will best
advance our interests? To reiterate, the relevant “interest” – getting the
nominee confirmed, which in this case is effectively impossible – is not
the usual one. There is no such thing as a “consensus” pick, because the
only consensus for Republicans (who have the votes) is that the Senate will
not confirm anyone the president picks.
The administration’s “interests” instead involve partisan politics. Which
nominee will best serve the Democratic Party’s interests in both the short
term (the 2016 presidential and Senate elections) and the long term?
One political interest involves the ability to move quickly. Each week
that passes without a nomination brings us closer to the election. That
lets the Republican narrative that there should be no appointment before
the election gain credibility and take hold. So there is a strong
incentive to go with a pick who is already known to the administration and
who ideally has recently been vetted.
Beyond that, the politics are an exercise in figuring out how to generate
votes, an issue which is not my strength. But at a broad level, the goals
are obvious: persuade independent voters and motivate turnout among
existing voters. The easily identifiable demographic group of
independents—particularly for the long term – is Hispanics. So a nominee
like Judge Adalberto Jordan of the Eleventh Circuit is certainly a
possibility.
But as I said above, I think the president will have a material preference
for this appointee to be black. And the president of course already
appointed the first Latina, Sonia Sotomayor. So the administration has
already gained some of the political benefits of a Supreme Court
appointment with the Hispanic community.
I do think that independents will respond to concerns that extremists are
blocking the orderly functioning of the government – here, the Supreme
Court. If the administration can put forward a highly qualified nominee
and persuasively show that conservatives are preventing the Court from
functioning properly for reason other than political gain, that message
will probably have some force.
Beyond that, there is some tension between using the nomination to persuade
political independents to support Democrats and using it to motivate core
Democratic voters to turn out in the election. An obviously moderate
nominee may be appealing to independents, but fail to energize the
Democratic base. Conversely, a strong liberal may turn off independents.
The balance between those two would seem to lie in a candidate like Elena
Kagan: someone in whom the left has confidence but who cannot be
caricatured as a wild-eyed liberal.
What other elements of the base are significant and susceptible to being
motivated by a nomination? In my opinion, black voters and women. Blacks
already voted in a higher proportion than whites in 2012. But without
Barack Obama on the ticket, that number naturally would go down. And
because blacks are such reliable Democratic voters, each percentage point
in black participation is very important to the victory of a Democratic
candidate. That was a principal factor in my first suggesting that the
nominee would be a highly respected, young Ninth Circuit judge – Paul
Watford.
Recognize that the calculus may well be different in Senate races. Indeed,
it is possible to select a nominee with the micro-targeted goal of
affecting the outcome in a single Senate contest. But on the whole, I
think the administration will likely focus on the presidential race and
partisan politics broadly.
The nomination can also motivate female Democratic voters to turn out. We
still are in an era in which every important political appointment of a
woman is notable. A nomination of a woman would present the prospect of
the Supreme Court coming virtually into balance, with five men and four
women – an historic achievement. (The same points can be made in terms of
persuading independent women voters.)
One female candidate for the nomination stands out in light of many of
these factors: Eighth Circuit Judge Jane Kelly, who was confirmed by a
vote of ninety-six to zero, with the strong support of Senator Grassley.
So she will almost certainly be a serious candidate
By contrast, I think that these factors point against the nomination of
D.C. Circuit Judge Sri Srinivasan. Judge Srinivasan is almost a lock to
get a Supreme Court appointment in a Democratic administration, because he
is so very widely respected and admired. If it were possible to select a
consensus candidate whom Republicans would actually confirm, he would
surely be it. He would be the first South Asian Justice. He also has the
great advantage of having been unanimously confirmed. But he generates
very little political advantage. He is – to state the obvious – not a
woman; and while Asian Americans are an important, independent part of the
voting population, I think the administration will place less weight on
them than blacks.
More important, Judge Srinivasan is unlikely to motivate the Democratic
base much, particularly among interest groups. His appointment to the D.C.
Circuit was principally delayed by the left, not by conservatives. He
clerked for two judges who were Republican appointees. Like many
Washington lawyers, he worked for a corporate law firm that represented
corporate interests.
I instead think that the president will be inclined to appoint a highly
qualified black woman to the Court who has been recently confirmed. In a
previous post, I said that the most likely candidate is Attorney General
Loretta Lynch. I continue to think her credentials are strong. But it is
worth noting that her confirmation vote in the Senate was close (because of
Republican votes), so the administration could not make the point that she
had been uniformly supported in the past.
There is another potential sticking point – one on which people directly
involved in Democratic Supreme Court nominations are torn. The
confirmation process would give Republicans the excuse to demand a wide
array of documents that are related – maybe tangentially – to Lynch’s
service as attorney general. These could include documents relating to
decisions to initiate investigations and prosecutions. Benghazi is one
example among many.
In the view of some, that is a deal-breaker for the nomination. The
administration won’t want to expose itself to those demands. Others think
it could be worked out, as it was with respect to documents from Elena
Kagan’s time as Solicitor General.
To my mind, the prospect of such document demands makes the nomination
unlikely, although for a slightly different reason. The administration’s
goal will be to put forward a nominee whom Republicans cannot credibly
oppose – any serious excuse to oppose the nomination substantially
undermines the message that Republicans are treating the nominee unfairly
and undermining the Supreme Court’s orderly functioning. But Republicans
would have little difficulty framing opposition to – and ultimate rejection
of – Lynch in terms of the administration’s refusal to provide documents
that Republicans need to assess such an important nomination.
If not Lynch, who? There does not seem to be any obvious candidate in the
federal courts of appeals. But there is a district judge.
Ketanji Brown Jackson is a judge on the U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia. She was confirmed by without any Republican
opposition in the Senate not once, but *twice*. She was confirmed to her
current position in 2013 by unanimous consent – that is, without any stated
opposition. She was also previously confirmed unanimously to a seat on the
U.S. Sentencing Commission (where she became vice chair).
She is a young – but not too young (forty-five) – black woman. Her
credentials are impeccable. She was a *magna cum laude* graduate of
Harvard College and *cum laude* graduate of Harvard Law School. She
clerked on the Supreme Court (for Justice Stephen Breyer) and had two other
clerkships as well. As a lawyer before joining the Sentencing Commission,
she had various jobs, including as a public defender.
Her family is impressive. She is married to a surgeon and has two young
daughters. Her father is a retired lawyer and her mother a retired school
principal. Her brother was a police officer (in the unit that was the
basis for the television show *The Wire*) and is now a law student, and she
is related by marriage to Congressman (and Speaker of the House) Paul Ryan.
Judge Brown Jackson’s credentials would be even stronger if she were on the
court of appeals rather than the district court and if she had been a judge
for longer than three years. One person whom I know who has been deeply
and directly involved in prior confirmations is confident the president
would not nominate someone from the district court.
I disagree because these are special circumstances. It is easy to see a
political dynamic in which candidate Hillary Clinton talks eagerly and
often about Judge Brown Jackson in the run-up to the 2016 election, to
great effect.
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