Author Topic: Final preparations for court war  (Read 315 times)

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Final preparations for court war
« on: March 15, 2016, 01:55:45 am »
http://thehill.com/homenews/administration/272988-final-preparations-for-court-war

 By Jordan Fabian - 03/14/16 07:59 PM EDT

President Obama and his Republican opponents are making the final preparations for a public relations war over the vacancy on the Supreme Court.

It is likely to be one of the most heated confirmation fights in recent memory, with both sides expected to unleash television ads, opposition research and grassroots organizing aimed at gaining the upper hand for the November elections.

Political action groups and party committees have already fired shots across the bow, previewing the frenzy of activity that is expected once Obama nominates a replacement for the late Justice Antonin Scalia, a nominee Senate Republican leaders have pledged won’t receive a hearing or a vote.

“I think this is going to be as big a fight as I’ve seen,” said Drew Courtney, communications director for People for the American Way, a liberal group involved in the nomination fight. “Even knowing we are in the Donald Trump election year, this is going to stay really big.”

The stakes are high for both sides, as Obama could shift the ideological balance of the court by replacing Scalia, a staunch conservative, with a liberal jurist.

The Republican National Committee (RNC) announced the formation of a task force Monday to launch radio and digital attack ads, circulate petitions and coordinate media appearances to help Senate Republicans stand firm against confirming any nominee.

The party plans to call out Democratic presidential and Senate candidates for their “hypocrisy” on judicial nominations, highlighting comments made by Vice President Biden in 1992 suggesting that any Supreme Court nomination should wait until after the presidential election.

“This will be the most comprehensive judicial response effort in our party’s history,” said RNC Chairman Reince Priebus. “If the president wants to break with decades of precedent by pushing through a nominee in an election year, we’re going to vet that person and put their real record on display.”

The RNC’s target list includes Sen. Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), who faces a tough reelection race, and Senate candidates in nine other states including Ohio, Florida, New Hampshire and Wisconsin.

Groups on the right also plan to go after Obama’s nominee and have already begun attacking some of the leading contenders.

The conservative Judicial Crisis Network said last Friday it is spending $250,000 on TV and digital ads slamming Jane Kelly, an 8th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals judge mentioned as a potential Supreme Court pick because of her ties to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa).

The spot paints Kelly as a “liberal extremist” because of her past as a public defender, when she represented a client on child pornography charges who was later convicted of murder.

The group acknowledged that targeting someone who hasn’t yet been nominated is unusual.

“It certainly is a real significant bump up from what we did with the [Elena] Kagan nomination,” said Carrie Severino, the group’s chief counsel and policy director. “The stakes are dramatically higher. … There is a potential to dramatically shift the court to cement liberal dominance.”

Severino said her group has enlisted the research arm of America Rising, a prominent conservative group, to help independently vet Obama’s potential nominees to expose potential flaws.

America Rising’s companion group, AR2, is assisting the RNC campaign.

During Kagan’s nomination in 2010, Severino said her group was playing catch-up with vetting and opposition research. This time, she said, it would be ready with reams of information on the day the nomination is made.

But the White House and its liberal allies are formulating an offensive of their own.

Obama administration officials have enlisted former colleagues, such as 2012 deputy campaign manager Stephanie Cutter, to draw up plans for a media and political onslaught designed to shame Republicans for their Supreme Court blockade. 

Typically, Supreme Court nominees remain silent except for their appearances at confirmation hearings and meetings with senators

That could change this time. The White House and Democrats could rely on nontraditional tactics, such as mock hearings or question-and-answer sessions at law schools, to get the nominee exposure.

“I think what you will probably see is the nominee being more active,” said one person familiar with the talks.

“This is not a conventional nomination process the Republicans are proposing,” the person added. “So it can’t be a conventional or traditional response. Not every tactic under the sun is on the table, but a there are lot more tactics than you might think.”

Obama could also use his bully pulpit to make the case for his nominee, something that press secretary Josh Earnest suggested Monday.

“He was a leading advocate for their confirmation,” the spokesman said of Obama’s role during the confirmation fights over Kagan and Justice Sonia Sotomayor. “And he made a strong case with respect to both nominees testifying to their credentials and their experience and their judgment.”

Liberal action groups are heavily
involved in the messaging effort. The Alliance for Justice recently sent a letter to Senate leaders from 356 law professors demanding they fulfill their “constitutional duty to give President Obama’s Supreme Court nominee a prompt and fair hearing and a timely vote.”

Other groups, such as People for the American Way, are planning to launch ads and publish research memos.

The messaging has focused on Grassley, whose committee controls the nomination process, as well as politically vulnerable GOP senators from states including New Hampshire, Wisconsin and Illinois.

White House aides have tweeted screenshots of local news coverage critical of GOP senators who have promised not to consider Obama’s nominee, such as Wisconsin’s Ron Johnson, another vulnerable member up for reelection.

During the Senate’s end-of-month recess, liberal groups will try to generate the same kind of town hall outrage that was directed at Democrats during the healthcare debate of 2009. MoveOn.org and other progressive groups are planning a national “day of action” on March 21.

Americans United for Change is planning to confront GOP senators by dropping off petitions at their offices or peppering them with questions during town hall meetings.

“If this drags on, there’s not a tactic you can imagine that this coalition won’t employ,” said the group’s president, Brad Woodhouse

“Our goal is to get the president’s nominee on the court,” he added. “But that said, we feel like the best role we can play is to apply political pressure, to make people believe their intransigence will lead to their political demise.”
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