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Updates from Senator Hatch

Monday, March 20, 2017 - 12:45pm
Senator Orrin Hatch

Hatch Delivers Opening Statement in Gorsuch Confirmation Hearing

 

Washington, D.C.—Senator Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the senior member and former Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, delivered the following opening statement today during the Supreme Court confirmation hearing for Judge Neil Gorsuch. To date, Senator Hatch has participated in 14 Supreme Court confirmation hearings—more than any Republican in the Senate.  

Video Via YouTube

 

Thank you, Mr. Chairman.  Judge Gorsuch, welcome back to the Judiciary Committee.  This will be more of an ordeal than your last confirmation hearing, but your fitness for this appointment will be just as apparent.

I’ve served on this committee for 40 years, and some things in the confirmation process never change.  The conflict over judicial appointments in general, and over this nomination in particular, is a conflict over the proper role of judges in our system of government.  

I have long believed that the Senate owes the President some deference with respect to his qualified nominees.  Qualifications for judicial service include legal experience, which summarizes the past, and judicial philosophy, which describes the present and anticipates the future. 

Judge Gorsuch’s legal experience is well-known.  My Democratic colleagues have referred to the American Bar Association’s rating as the gold standard for evaluating judicial nominees.  The ABA’s unanimous well qualified rating for Judge Gorsuch confirms that he has the highest level of professional qualifications including integrity, competence, and temperament.

Judicial philosophy is both the more important qualification and the more challenging to assess.  It refers to a nominee’s understanding of the power and proper role of judges in our system of government. 

Over the last several weeks, I have addressed this issue on the Senate floor and in opinion pages around the country by contrasting what I have called impartial judges and political judges.  An impartial judge focuses on the process of interpreting and applying the law according to objective rules.  In this way, the law rather than the judge determines the outcome.  A political judge, in contrast, focuses on a desired result and fashions a means of achieving it.  In this way, the judge rather than the law often determines the outcome.

In my experience, a Supreme Court confirmation process reveals the kind of judge that Senators want to see appointed.  A Senator, for example, who wants to know which side a nominee will be on in future cases, or who demands that judges be advocates for certain political interests, clearly has a politicized judiciary in mind. 

The New York Times reported last week that the most prominent line of attack against this nomination will be that Judge Gorsuch is “no friend of the little guy.”  Something is seriously wrong when the confirmation process for a Supreme Court Justice resembles an election campaign for political office. 

This dangerous approach contradicts the oath of judicial office prescribed by federal law.  When taking his seat on the U.S. Court of Appeals in 2006, Judge Gorsuch swore to administer justice without respect to persons and to impartially discharge his judicial duties.  His opponents today demand, in effect, that he violate that oath.

Advocates of such a politicized judiciary seem to think that the confirmation process requires only a political agenda and a calculator.  When a nominee is a sitting judge, they tally the winners and losers in his past cases and do the math.  If they like the result, it’s thumbs up on confirmation.  If they don’t, well, it’s thumbs down.

What if, for example, Judge Gorsuch's record on the appeals court was as follows: he voted against the plaintiff in 83 percent of immigration cases, against the defendant in 92 percent of criminal cases, denied race claims more than 80 percent of the time, and agreed with other Republican-appointed judges 95 percent of the time.  I can just hear the cries of protest, accusations that he favors certain parties and is hostile to others, and threats of filibuster.

That is, in fact, the record of a U.S. Circuit Judge nominated to the Supreme Court, but not the one before us today.  It is the record of Judge Sonia Sotomayor as described by Senator Charles Schumer at her July 2009 confirmation hearing.  Not only did he champion her nomination, but he offered that statistical summary of her record as proof that, as he put it, “she is in the mainstream.”  Oh, what a difference an election makes.

Alexander Hamilton wrote about the importance of judicial independence, what Chief Justice William Rehnquist later called the crown jewel of our judicial system.  Today, in a bizarre twist on that principle, Judge Gorsuch's opponents say that the only way for him to prove his independence is by promising to decide future cases according to certain litmus tests.  In other words, judicial independence requires that he be beholden to them and their political agenda.  If simply describing that unprincipled position is not enough to refute it, the confirmation process is in more trouble than I thought. 

Judge, I know that the integrity of the judiciary, fairness to the litigants who come before you, and your own oath of office are your highest priorities.  You will be in good company by resisting efforts to make you compromise your impartiality.  When President Lyndon Johnson nominated Judge Thurgood Marshall to the Supreme Court, Senator Ted Kennedy, who would later chair this committee, said: “We have to respect that any nominee to the Supreme Court would have to defer any comments on any matters which are before the Court or very likely to appear before the Court.” 

That was 50 years ago.  When Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg appeared before this committee in 1993, she said: “A judge sworn to decide impartially can offer no forecasts, no hints, for that would show not only disregard for the specifics of the particular case, it would display disdain for the entire judicial process.”

In a speech earlier this year, Justice Sotomayor said this: “What you want is for us to tell you how as a judicial nominee we’re going to rule on the important issues you find vexing….Any self-respecting judge who comes in with an agenda that would permit that judge to tell you how they will vote is the kind of person you don’t want as a judge.”

I’ll close by reading from a letter we received from dozens of Judge Gorsuch’s Harvard Law School peers.  After describing how they were of all political, ideological, religious, geographical, and social stripes, the signers wrote: “What unites us is that we attended law school with Judge Neil Gorsuch – a man we’ve known for more than a quarter century – and we unanimously believe that Neil possesses the exemplary character, outstanding intellect, steady temperament, humility and open-mindedness to be an excellent addition to the United States Supreme Court.”

I agree and look forward to this hearing.  Thank, Mr. Chairman.

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Hatch: Gorsuch is qualified, and politics shouldn’t stop him

By Senator Orrin Hatch

http://www.sltrib.com/opinion/5071826-155/hatch-gorsuch-is-qualified-and-politics

 

This week, my Senate Judiciary Committee colleagues and I will consider a critical question: Is Judge Neil Gorsuch prepared to fill the seat left by the late Justice Antonin Scalia on the United States Supreme Court? We will weigh this question carefully at Gorsuch's confirmation hearing, which begins this morning.

 

Although the hearing begins today, we have been assessing Gorsuch's record and qualifications since he was nominated in early February. We have pored over his judicial opinions and other writings. We have asked for, received, and reviewed hundreds of pages of documents provided by the nominee. We have also reviewed dozens of letters submitted by outside groups and over 150,000 pages produced by the Justice Department from Gorsuch's public service there.

 

Indeed, this is not the first time we have assessed Gorsuch's qualifications. We thoroughly reviewed his record in 2006 when he was nominated to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit. Not one senator voted against Gorsuch's confirmation.

 

This is the 14th confirmation process for a Supreme Court nominee in which I have participated. While some things change, others stay the same. The conflict over judicial appointments remains a conflict over the proper role of judges in our system of government. Over the last several weeks, I have addressed this issue on the Senate floor and in opinion pages around the country by contrasting what I have called impartial judges and political judges.

 

An impartial judge focuses on the process of interpreting and applying the law according to objective rules. In this way, the law rather than the judge determines the outcome. A political judge, in contrast, focuses on a desired result and fashions a means of achieving it. In this way, the judge rather than the law often determines the outcome.

 

Unfortunately, some of my colleagues have taken their search for a political judge to new extremes this year. The New York Times reported last week that the most prominent line of attack against Gorsuch is that he is "no friend of the little guy." Even liberal Harvard law professor Noah Feldman agrees that this politically motivated attack is "a truly terrible idea" because "justices — including progressive justices — shouldn't decide cases based on who the parties are. They should decide cases based on their beliefs about how the law should be interpreted."

 

Something is seriously wrong when the judicial confirmation process resembles an election campaign for political office. Politicizing the judiciary in this way also undermines judicial independence. While the Constitution protects judges from external political pressures, the impartial judge also strives to maintain his independence from internal political pressures.

 

The campaign for a politicized judiciary includes strategies to get judicial nominees to take partisan positions on issues that could come before them in the future. Principled nominees don't fall for this bait. They understand that the integrity of the judiciary far outweighs questions of politics. Perhaps Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg put it best: "A judge sworn to decide impartially can offer no forecasts, no hints, for that would show not only disregard for the specifics of the particular case, it would display disdain for the entire judicial process."

 

During this confirmation hearing, I urge my colleagues to focus our analysis on whether Gorsuch will be an impartial judge, and not whether he is suitable to run for public office of any particular party. And I urge them to respect judicial independence by not demanding that he prejudge issues that may come before him as a judge.

 

If at the end of the hearing the opposition's criticism remains that Gorsuch is "no friend of the little guy," the American public will know with certainty that there is no principled argument against Gorsuch's confirmation. The American Bar Association seems to have already reached that conclusion by unanimously giving him their highest rating. Based on my review of his record and qualifications, I concur that Gorsuch is the ideal nominee to fill Scalia's seat on the Supreme Court.

 

Sen. Orrin Hatch is Utah's senior U.S. Senator.

 

 

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