Judge Neil Gorsuch Promises Senators He Will Uphold the Constitution as Written
Judge Neil Gorsuch gave his opening statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee Monday on the first day of hearings on his nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Judge Neil Gorsuch gave his opening statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee Monday on the first day of hearings on his nomination to the U.S. Supreme Court.
National legal experts analyzed Judge Neil Gorsuch’s judicial record at a Heritage Foundation forum on Wednesday, predicting a conservative intellectual to succeed Justice Antonin Scalia.
Many CPAC-goers are wondering if Cruz might be President Trump’s next pick for the Supreme Court.
Gorsuch's record reveals his commitment to uphold the Constitution and laws as written, not those Schumer imagines.
Gorsuch, like Scalia, believes that the Constitution actually means something, rather than being a meaningless collection of words to be tortured until they confess to the desired result.
I like Gorsuch's chances, given his well-established views on the rule of law in general and religious liberty in particular.
Gorsuch is considered one of the most intellectual jurists on the federal bench, evinced by his gilded pedigree.
The Second Amendment is virtually certain to be argued before the Supreme Court this fall, as the justices receive two petitions only days apart asking them to apply the right to keep and bear arms.
The American people deserve to have a voice in the selection of their next Supreme Court justice but President Obama wants to deny the public that voice.