Democrats grill U.S. high court nominee over Trump concerns

By Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch said on Wednesday presidents must obey court orders and expressed uncertainty about language in the Constitution barring U.S. government officials from taking payments from a foreign country as Democrats grilled him on issues involving President Donald Trump. Gorsuch, the conservative appeals court judge from Colorado nominated by Trump on Jan. 31 to a lifetime job on the nation's highest court, sparred with Senate Judiciary Committee Democrats on the third day of his confirmation hearing. While his confirmation process looked to be proceeding smoothly, Democrats pressed him on matters swirling around Trump, even asking him about the standards for impeachment. Gorsuch's expected Senate confirmation would restore a conservative majority on the court and hand the Republican president his biggest achievement in office. Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy cited comments by Trump adviser Stephen Miller after courts blocked the president's executive action banning people from several Muslim-majority nations from entering the United States. On Feb. 12, Miller challenged the authority of courts to rule on the issue, saying the president's power to enforce the ban should not be questioned. "I'm a judge now. I take that seriously. And you better believe I expect judicial decrees to be obeyed," Gorsuch said. "That's the rule of law in this country," Gorsuch added. Gorsuch declined to say how he would approach an alleged violation of the U.S. Constitution's Emoluments Clause, which prevents American officials from accepting any gifts or favors from foreign governments without congressional approval. "The question is: What exactly does that mean?" Gorsuch said, noting there was ongoing litigation on the matter. "I have to be very careful about expressing any views." Trump has been sued by ethics lawyers, who say his businesses have accepted payments from foreign governments in violation of the Emoluments Clause. On the basis for which an official can be impeached, Gorsuch said historically the focus has been on "high crimes" rather than "misdemeanors." He said the number of criminal misdemeanors on the books has increased substantially since the U.S. Constitution was written in the 18th century. BOUND BY PRECEDENT A unanimous ruling on Wednesday by the Supreme Court justices who Gorsuch would join, if confirmed, rejected legal reasoning he used as an appellate judge in a 2008 ruling against an autistic child who sought a public education more tailored to his needs. The Supreme Court ruled in favor of another autistic student who argued he was denied an adequate education. Democrats have called Gorsuch's earlier decision an example of how he rules everyday Americans while favoring corporate interests, an assertion the nominee and his Republicans supporters reject. Gorsuch said he was bound by court precedent in the 2008 decision, adding it would be "heartbreaking" to suggest he would like ruling against disabled students. Gorsuch seems assured of winning committee approval, moving his nomination to the full Senate. His challenge then would be to gather enough Democratic votes to avoid a prolonged floor fight with the potential, if it gets rocky, of changing how the Senate works. Gorsuch has sidestepped answering whether he thought a series of contentious past cases had been decided correctly, including those on abortion, gun rights, political spending and religious rights. "What worries me is you have been very much able to avoid any specificity, like no one I have every seen before," Senator Dianne Feinstein, the panel's top Democrat, told Gorsuch. Feinstein asked Gorsuch to explain a document dating from his work in former President George W. Bush's Justice Department related to 2005 anti-torture restrictions. The document asked whether aggressive interrogation techniques used by Bush's administration had yielded valuable intelligence or stopped a terrorist incident, and Gorsuch had written "yes." Gorsuch said he was merely doing what he was told by the administration. "My recollection of 12 years ago is that was the position that the clients were telling us," he said. Feinstein expressed concern about women's rights and preserving legalized abortion, and asked Gorsuch about his views as an "originalist" seeing the Constitution's meaning as unaltered since its enactment despite centuries of societal change. "No one is looking to return us to horse-and-buggy days," Gorsuch said. Regarding the Constitution's promise of equal protection under the law, Gorsuch said it does not matter that some of the drafters of the language "were racists, because they were, or sexists, because they were." Republicans hold 52 seats in the 100-member Senate. The Senate has a 60-vote hurdle for confirmation of Supreme Court justices, meaning Gorsuch would need backing by eight Democrats. If Democrats stand together, Republicans could change Senate rules to allow confirmation by a simple majority vote. Wednesday was Gorsuch's last day of testimony. The panel was set on Thursday to hear from outside witnesses opposing or supporting Gorsuch. A committee vote is expected on April 3. Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell has said Gorsuch would be confirmed before lawmakers' mid-April recess. If confirmed, Gorsuch would replace conservative Justice Antonin Scalia, who died in February 2016. (Reporting by Lawrence Hurley and Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)