Reuters
By Julia Edwards and Joan Biskupic
March 16, 2016
President
Barack Obama is likely to announce either Judge Sri Srinivasan or Judge
Merrick Garland as his pick for U.S. Supreme Court nominee and the
announcement could come as early as Wednesday,
a source familiar with the selection process said.
The
team of advisers helping to vet candidates, line up their public
supporters and answer the president's questions had finished its work,
the source said on Tuesday.
Obama
is searching for a replacement for long-serving conservative Justice
Antonin Scalia, who died on Feb. 13. With Scalia's death, the court is
divided 4-4 between conservatives and liberals.
Obama's nominee could move the court to the left for the first time in
decades.
Republicans,
who control the U.S. Senate, have vowed not to hold confirmation
hearings or an up-or-down vote on any nominee picked by the Democratic
president for the lifetime position on
the court. Senate confirmation is required for any nominee to join the
bench.
Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has suggested there might be no point
even in holding the traditional "courtesy call" meetings with whomever
Obama nominates, infuriating Senate Minority
Leader Harry Reid and his fellow Democrats.
Republicans,
hoping a candidate from their party wins the Nov. 8 presidential
election, want the next president, who takes office in January, to make
the selection. Billionaire Donald Trump
is the leading Republican presidential candidate; Obama's former
secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, is the front-runner on the
Democratic side.
Without
Scalia, the Supreme Court is evenly split with four liberals and four
conservatives. An Obama appointment could tilt the court to the left for
the first time in decades.
Both Srinivasan and Garland are seen as having unique attributes that could weigh heavily in Obama's decision.
Srinivasan,
49, and Garland, 63, serve together on the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the District of Columbia Circuit. That appeals court has served as a
springboard to the Supreme Court for
several justices including Scalia in recent decades.
Srinivasan,
who was born in India and grew up in Kansas, would be the first
Asian-American and first Hindu on the high court. Obama appointed him to
the appeals court in 2013. The Senate
confirmed him in a 97-0 vote.
DIVERSITY AN ISSUE
He could appeal to the president's long-declared interest in bringing more diversity to the bench.
Srinivasan
has served in the Justice Department under Democratic and Republican
presidents and worked as a clerk to the first woman to serve on the
Supreme Court, Sandra Day O'Connor, a Republican
appointee.
Garland,
who has earned praise from lawmakers of both parties, is the chief
judge of the Washington appeals court, where he has served since being
appointed by Democratic President Bill Clinton
in 1997, winning confirmation in a 76-23 vote. Prior to that, he served
in the Justice Department under Clinton.
With
Senate Republicans vowing to turn their backs on anyone he picks to
fill the vacancy, Obama may be looking for a nominee who could convince
the Republicans to change course. Garland
could fit that bill with moderate record, background as a prosecutor
and a history of drawing Republican support.
Garland
was under consideration in 2009 for Obama's first appointment but the
new administration chose Sonia Sotomayor, attracted to her rise from a
Bronx housing project to the elite corridors
of Yale and the federal judiciary.
Yet
they also regarded Garland as a future compromise choice if another
vacancy opened in an election year with the Senate under Republican
control, according to Obama advisers at the time
and others weighing in on the current nomination.
That is the situation now confronting Obama.
Presidents
tend to pick nominees younger than Garland, so they can serve for
decades and extend a president's legacy. But Obama may reason that the
choice of an older nominee might also entice
Senate Republicans into considering Obama's selection.
Obama
already has named two justices to the Supreme Court: Sotomayor, who at
55 became the first Hispanic justice in 2009, and Elena Kagan, who was
50 when she became the fourth woman to
ever serve on the court in 2010.
Last
week, a source familiar with the selection process said the White House
had narrowed the selection to three candidates: Srinivasan, Garland and
Paul Watford, 48, a judge on the San Francisco-based
9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Watford is an African-American and the U.S. Supreme Court has had only two black justices in its history.
(Reporting
by Julia Edwards and Joan Biskupic; Writing by Eric Beech and Richard
Cowan; Editing by Sandra Maler and Howard Goller)
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