Thursday round-up

In The National Law Journal (subscription or registration required), Tony Mauro suggests that “U.S. Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch may have helped cement his chances for confirmation Wednesday night by telling senators that President Donald Trump’s critical tweets of federal judges were ‘disheartening’ and ‘demoralizing,’” because “Gorsuch’s comments could have the effect of telegraphing to the legal establishment and to the Supreme Court itself that he embraces the importance of judicial independence.” Coverage of Gorsuch’s remarks comes from Julie Hirschfeld Davis in The New York Times and from Abby Phillip and others in The Washington Post. At the Election Law Blog, Rick Hasen calls Gorsuch’s comments “a smart political move” that was likely “strategized and vetted with the team seeking to secure his nomination,” and predicts that at “the hearings, I expect regardless of how many ways and how many times Democrats ask, Judge Gorsuch will not go much beyond ‘disheartening’ and ‘demoralizing.’”

In The New York Times, Adam Liptak offers a step-by-step report on the process leading up to Gorsuch’s nomination, noting that “Mr. Trump’s team is already looking down the road, weighing the choices should Justice Anthony M. Kennedy decide to step down,” and that an administration official named federal appeals court judges Raymond Kethledge and Brett Kavanaugh as possible candidates. At the Pew Research Center’s Fact Tank, Kristen Bialik and John Gramlich note that Gorsuch, at 49, “would be a relatively young new member of the court”; they look at data on the age of previous and current justices and conclude that, with “plenty of exceptions,” “justices who are younger when they join the court … end up serving longer than older appointees.”

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