WASHINGTON -- Nominees appearing before the Senate all have one goal in mind: Win confirmation.
And when one party controls the Senate and the White House, the strategy of saying as little as possible.
But because Supreme Court nominees spend several long days in televised hearings, they manage to reveal a few things about themselves, professionally and personally.
Here are a few things we learned about Judge Neil Gorsuch, President Donald Trump's pick for the high court:
Gorsuch was careful in his phrasing, rarely appeared to allow his pulse to quicken and refused attempts to get him to talk about abortion, guns, campaign finance and a host of key issues in a way that might signal how he'd rule on the Supreme Court.
"If I did make a bunch of campaign promises here, what's that mean to the independent judiciary?" he said.
A judge on the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver since 2006, Gorsuch described how he comes to decisions, starting with past decisions, or precedent.
"It's the anchor of the law, it's the starting place for a judge," Gorsuch said, noting he is one of the authors of "The Law of Judicial Precedent."
Democrats seemed more interested in knowing when Gorsuch might decide a past decision needs to be jettisoned, and which ones in particular. He listed some factors to consider, including "the age of the precedent, how often it's been reaffirmed, the reliance interests surrounding it, whether it was correctly decided, whether it was constitutional versus statutory."
Shortly after Gorsuch's final day of testimony began, a unanimous Supreme Court ruled public schools must do more for learning-disabled students than Gorsuch's 10th Circuit had deemed sufficient.
The opinion by Chief Justice John Roberts took aim at a phrase from an earlier case Gorsuch wrote about minimum standards. "Merely more than de minimis progress" doesn't cut it, Roberts wrote. "If I was wrong, senator, I was wrong because I was bound by circuit precedent, and I'm sorry," Gorsuch said to Sen. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.).
Gorsuch was charming with Republicans. "Maybe it's a Western thing," Gorsuch, a native of Colorado, said in an admiring riff on a project by retired Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, of Arizona. He occasionally was testy with Democrats. "I don't appreciate ... when people characterize me, as I'm sure you don't appreciate it when people characterize you. I like to speak for myself. I am a judge. I am my own man," he said to Sen. Al Franken.
Democrats remain upset about how their Republican counterparts treated Judge Merrick Garland when he was nominated to the Supreme Court by President Barack Obama after Justice Antonin Scalia died. Gorsuch would fill the same seat because the GOP blocked Garland. Gorsuch praised Garland at several points, but he cited the need to remain above the political fray in resisting Democrats' invitation to assess the treatment of a fellow judge. "Senator, I appreciate the invitation. But I know the other side has their views of this, and your side has your views of it. That by definition is politics," Gorsuch told Sen. Al Franken of Minnesota.
He has degrees from the some of the best, and oldest, schools -- Columbia, Harvard and Oxford -- a Supreme Court clerkship, more than 10 years as a federal judge and a couple of books to his name. Even Democrats critical of his record acknowledged that Gorsuch has an enviable resume.
Some decidedly old-fashioned words and phrases made repeated appearances in Gorsuch's opening remarks and answers to questions. "Goodness no, senator." "Oh goodness, senator. Yes." And Gorsuch also was pleased to explain mutton busting to rodeo neophytes. "You take a poor little kid, you find a sheep and you attach the one to the other and see how long they can hold off," he said, admitting that teenage daughters Emma and Belinda had taken their turns atop a sheep. The daughters were not at the hearing, but Gorsuch's wife, Louise, was a constant presence.
Gorsuch was describing the most prominent signature on the Declaration of Independence with a word of more recent vintage. "No one remembers who John Hancock was but they know that that's his signature, because he wrote his name so bigly, big and boldly," Gorsuch said.
The reaction was immediate. "You just said 'bigly,"' noted Sen. Ben Sasse of Nebraska, as the room filled with laughter.
Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:
For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.