Trump meets with four Supreme Court contenders

A source said President Donald Trump is keenly focused on two people after meeting with four potential Supreme Court justices.

US President Donald J. Trump waves after seeing off Prime Minister of the Netherlands Mark Rutte (not pictured) at the outside the West Wing.

US President Donald J. Trump waves after seeing off Prime Minister of the Netherlands Mark Rutte (not pictured) at the outside the West Wing. Source: AAP

President Trump says he has met with four potential Supreme Court justices to replace to retiring Justice Anthony Kennedy.

Trump told reporters at the White House that he will meet with two or three more candidates and decide on a nominee in the next few days.




With a second Supreme Court pick less than 18 months into his presidency, Trump is poised to cement conservative control of the court and fire up supporters eager for a rightward shift on divisive social issues like abortion and gay rights.

Trump's nominee must win confirmation by the Senate. Republicans control the chamber but only by a slim majority, making the views of moderates, including some Democrats, important.

Federal appeals court judges Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett have gained the most interest from Trump and his team since Kennedy last week announced his retirement, said the person familiar with the selection process.

"There is keen interest in those two, but there are at least a couple of others who are still very seriously in the mix," said a source familiar with the selection process.

Kavanaugh is a judge on the District of Columbia US Court of Appeals. Barrett was named by Trump to the Chicago-based Seventh US Circuit Court of Appeals.

President Donald Trump with retiring Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy.
President Donald Trump with retiring Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy. Source: AP


The other top potential nominees are Thomas Hardiman, who serves on the Philadelphia-based Third US Circuit Court of Appeals; Raymond Kethledge of the Cincinnati, Ohio-based Sixth US Circuit Court of Appeals; and Amul Thapar, whom Trump named to the 6th Circuit.

White House Counsel Don McGahn will oversee Trump's selection process, the White House confirmed on Monday.

McGahn held the same role for the process that led to Trump's selection of Neil Gorsuch, who has become one of the most conservative justices on the court.

"Teams of attorneys from the White House Counsel's Office and Department of Justice are working to ensure the president has all the information he needs to choose his nominee," White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said in a statement.


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