[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 56 (Thursday, March 30, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Page S2139]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NOMINATION OF NEIL GORSUCH
Mr. COTTON. Mr. President, when his nomination comes to the floor
next week, I will vote to confirm Neil Gorsuch to the Supreme Court.
This is my first time voting on a Supreme Court nominee, and I don't
take the decision lightly. It is a lifetime appointment, after all, and
the Court's rulings have shaped our country's history--for good and for
ill--and will continue to shape our future. But after reading Judge
Gorsuch's writings, meeting with him in person, and listening to his
testimony, I can say with confidence that it is not a hard call. I
believe Judge Gorsuch will be a fine addition to the Supreme Court.
There is no denying Judge Gorsuch's distinctive qualifications. We
all know his credentials: Columbia, Harvard law, and an Oxford
doctorate to boot. He clerked for an appellate judge and two Supreme
Court Justices. He had many years of experience in both private
practice and in public service and, of course, over 10 years as an
appellate judge. He possesses fine judicial temperament: highly
erudite, highly accomplished, and highly regarded by those who know him
best. It is no surprise, then, that the American Bar Association, in a
unanimous vote, declared him ``well qualified'' for the job.
While I wouldn't outsource our responsibilities to any advocacy
organization, I would note that the minority leader himself once said
the ABA rating is ``the gold standard by which judicial candidates are
judged.''
But, of course, Judge Gorsuch is not just filling any seat, but the
seat once held by the late Justice Antonin Scalia. Justice Scalia was a
giant of American jurisprudence. Most Justices earn their place in
history by writing opinions, giving voice to their colleagues, and
speaking for the Court as a whole. Justice Scalia did that many times
throughout his career, of course, but he did something more. He changed
the way judges--both conservative and liberal--think about the law and
defend their decisions. He reminded us all that a judge's job is to
apply the law--including the Constitution, our most fundamental law--as
written, to the case before him, not to rewrite it all together.
Adhering to the law, even when the judge doesn't like the result, is
the greatest public service that a judge can render, because to respect
the rule of law is ultimately to respect the rule of the people.
This is what Justice Scalia taught and what he inspired a whole
generation of judges and lawyers to understand. As we prepare to fill
his seat on the Supreme Court, let us also acknowledge that no man can
fill his shoes. We honor the memory of Justice Scalia and we thank his
wife, Maureen, and his whole family for sharing this great man with our
country for so long.
Judge Gorsuch is a child of the Scalia generation. He has long
advocated for and followed the originalist judicial craft--one rooted
in the text, structure, and history of our Constitution, which is to
say that he respects the rule of law and he respects the people.
Whether defending the religious liberty of the Little Sisters of the
Poor or the Fourth Amendment rights of a regular household, he has
shown a profound respect for the Constitution. I also think he has
demonstrated throughout his career a firm independence of thought. He
has had his influences and his mentors, his promoters and his critics,
but I believe he will be his own man--as he should be.
So I am pleased to announce my support for the next Associate Justice
of the Supreme Court, Judge Neil Gorsuch. I look forward to his
confirmation next week.
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