Tuesday round-up

At the Associated Press, Mark Sherman reports on the intersection between the current vacancy on the Supreme Court and the upcoming election, noting that “the stakes are even higher when the president has a chance to put a like-minded justice on the court to take the place of an ideological opponent,” because such “a switch can change the outcome of some of the court’s most important cases.” In an op-ed in The Huffington Post, Marjorie Cohn observes that “Trump and Clinton’s choices for Supreme Court justices could not be more philosophically dissimilar” and highlights the conservative records of several of Trump’s prospective nominees. At Bloomberg, Patrick Gregory profiles Michigan Supreme Court Chief Justice Robert Young, who is on Trump’s list of candidates for nomination. At Reason.com, Damon Root looks at recent statements by Republican senators assessing the prospect of Senate hearings on the nomination of Chief Judge Merrick Garland; he argues that such hearings “would be a positive development because they might force conservative lawmakers to publicly air their differences” on “crucial legal questions.” And at MSNBC, Steve Benen reports that Sen. Chuck Grassley, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, cited the expense of hearings as a reason not to conduct them.

Briefly:

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