Thursday round-up

At Roll Call, Bridget Bowman reports that Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer has said he “is preparing to block President-elect Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee if he or she is not in the ‘mainstream.’” Additional coverage of Schumer’s comments comes from Sophia Tesfaye at Salon, who observes that “Schumer’s play is likely meant to pressure Trump into selecting a moderate.” Commentary comes from Kent Scheidegger at Crime and Consequences, who maintains that “any genuine originalist will swiftly be declared ‘out of the mainstream’ by Senator Schumer, the New York Times, and the usual suspects.” In The New Yorker, Jeffrey Toobin observes that once Trump announces his nominee, “we’ll know within just a few hours whether there is any chance that the Senate will reject his choice,” “because the politics of Supreme Court appointments operates at the speed of the modern news media, not at the stately pace of the Justices’ deliberations.”

In The Wall Street Journal, Jess Bravin reports that President Barack Obama’s nomination of Chief Judge Merrick Garland to the Supreme Court expired at noon on Tuesday, “clearing the way for President-elect Donald Trump to fill a vacancy Senate Republicans held open for months with an appointee championed by conservatives”; he notes that “Judge Garland’s nomination did make history in at least one sense” – the “293 days it sat in the Senate without action easily broke the record 125 days the Senate took before confirming Justice Louis Brandeis in 1916.” Amy Howe covers the expiration of Garland’s nomination for this blog.

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