WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The head of the U.S. Senate committee that handles Supreme Court nominees said on Friday he no longer expects an imminent court vacancy, bolstering assumptions among court-watchers since mid-year that Justice Anthony Kennedy will not retire this year.
Don't Miss Sarah Jones's Essay On Kristi Noem Titled Predatory Is The Point On The Daily.
Republican Senator Chuck Grassley, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said expectations earlier this year of a vacancy on the nine-member bench have evaporated.
“Evidently that’s not going to happen,” Grassley said in a telephone interview from his home state of Iowa during the Senate’s summer break. “I don’t have any expectation we will have a vacancy as I thought there would be” earlier this year.
There had been speculation in the spring that Kennedy, a conservative justice who turned 81 last month and has served on the court since 1988, was considering retirement. Kennedy is the regular swing vote on the high court, sometimes siding with the four liberal justices in major rulings.
A court vacancy would give Republican President Donald Trump a chance to appoint a second conservative justice to the high court since taking office in January.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Will Dunham)
Stephen Colbert pointed out that Trump's spirits had to be lifted because he had one…
House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries made it clear that Democrats are stepping in to get…
Donald Trump seems to think that abortion won't hurt in the general election as his…
Judge Merchan seemed to agree with prosecutors that Donald Trump has committed more gag order…
According to Trump aides, Kristi Noem's chances of being his running mate are dead, because…
President Biden is living up to his moral responsibility as president while delivering environmental justice…
This website uses cookies.