Posted on 07/07/2018 1:16:34 PM PDT by TaxPayer2000
Judge Hardiman isn't the frontrunner, but he would also be an excellent SCOTUS pick -- and if he doesn't get it, he's okay with that.
Heres where we stand on the search for a Supreme Court nominee to succeed Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, according to John Roberts of Fox News (which is about as close as one can get to an official news outlet for the Trump Administration):
"John Roberts ✔ @johnrobertsFox
Sources tell @FoxNews that the White House is preparing 4 rollout packages for @realDonaldTrump nomination announcement. The 4 are Kavanaugh, Kethledge, Barrett.......and.......Thomas Hardiman
8:16 AM - Jul 6, 2018"
Judge Thomas Hardiman (3d Cir.)
Whoa, Judge Thomas Hardiman (3d Cir.)?! We almost forgot that he was in this thing. Although he was the runner-up for the SCOTUS spot that went to Justice Neil M. Gorsuch, Judge Hardiman hasnt been generating nearly as much buzz this time around.
I continue to adhere to my longstanding prediction that the SCOTUS nominee will be either Judge Brett Kavanaugh (D.C. Cir.) or Judge Raymond Kethledge (6th Cir.), with Judge Amy Coney Barrett (7th Cir.) as the outside shot. But since Judge Hardiman has made it to the final four without generating many headlines, lets take a look at this stealth candidate who could end up emerging as President Donald Trumps pick.
Its impressive that Judge Hardiman has made it this far, especially considering that he doesnt have the huge fan bases or confirmation machines of the other contenders. Theres a Team Barrett (or #TeamAmy, as theyre known on Twitter), a Team Kavanaugh, a Team Kethledge, a Team Thapar but as far as I know, theres no Team Hardiman. (If Im wrong and if there is in fact a Team Hardiman a group of supporters and surrogates working to advance the judges candidacy, like the groups for the other judges please drop me a line.)
Its actually refreshing that Judge Hardiman hasnt been doing much, if any, lobbying for the spot. But its not surprising; hes not as well networked as the others (with one important exception: Judge Maryanne Trump Barry, Hardimans friend and longtime colleague on the Third Circuit, and President Trumps big sister). Since Hardiman is not a feeder judge, his clerks arent as well placed as those for Kavanaugh and Kethledge, and not as well situated to advance his candidacy inside the corridors of power in Washington.
But make no mistake: Judge Hardimans clerks love him just as much as the other judges clerks love their bosses. Hes warm and friendly, a wonderfully good and decent person, and a great boss who inspires fierce loyalty from his clerk family. During the clerkship, over the course of frequent lunches and other activities Judge Hardiman, an avid runner, enjoys running with his clerks (including in relay marathons) he builds strong bonds with his clerks.
When Judge Hardiman didnt get the SCOTUS nomination last time, his clerks were heartbroken, as one of them put it to me. The judge sent around a deeply moving letter to all his clerks after he didnt get the nod, thanking them for their support and to some, the judges eloquent letter only increased the heartbreak.
This time around, perhaps in an act of emotional self-protection (or self-care, as folks like to say these days), Judge Hardiman and his clerks havent gotten as excited about or invested in the process as they did last time. Judge Hardiman put his best foot forward in his interview with President Trump, but he didnt mobilize his clerk-troops in the same way as the other contenders. Why? In his (again refreshing) view, he said something along these lines to his clerks, who asked him if they should put together a Team Hardiman: If they dont want me as I am, then its not meant to be.
And yet, despite his lack of a giant confirmation machine, Judge Hardiman has made it to the final round once again. Congratulations, Your Honor.
To be sure, even if hes in the final four, Judge Hardiman isnt a frontrunner. Why not? It seems to be mainly about his pedigree. (Some also question his conservatism, but I dont view that as a serious issue see generally his most notable rulings over the years, which are solid.)
Judge Hardiman is a graduate of two of the countrys great universities, Notre Dame for college and Georgetown for law school but theyre not quite as elite as Yale, where Judge Kavanaugh got his college and law school degrees, and the University of Michigan, Judge Kethledges double alma mater.
But wait, you say what about Judge Amy Coney Barrett? Why is Judge Barrett, a graduate of Rhodes College and Notre Dame Law, also ahead of Judge Hardiman? Its because shes a former Supreme Court clerk (to the late, great Justice Antonin Scalia) and a SCOTUS clerkship washes away all iniquity. Judge Hardiman, in contrast, didnt clerk at all, not even for a lower-court judge. (The other top contender, Judge Amul Thapar (6th Cir.), clerked on the Sixth Circuit for Judge Nathaniel R. Jones.)
This is going to sound ridiculous and Im aware of the ridiculousness, so cut me some slack but Judge Hardiman makes me think of a kid from modest circumstances who made mistakes in his youth that haunt him decades later. But instead of picking up a drug habit or committing a crime, Hardiman committed the crimes of not going to the highest-ranked school he got into, and not clerking when he had the chance. And sadly, in the unhealthily status-obsessed world of legal elites, these are crimes of a sort.
Judge Hardiman grew up in a working-class, Irish Catholic family outside Boston. His family had a cab business, and as we now all know, he drove a cab during high school and college to help pay his way through school.
Hardiman was an excellent student at Waltham High School, and when he applied to colleges, he got into Harvard. For a poor kid from the Boston outskirts, Harvard was a dream come true in many ways. But this was also before the days of great financial aid, and Hardiman also got into Notre Dame with a full scholarship. For an Irish-Catholic kid from Boston, a full ride to Notre Dame was also a dream come true and thats the path he took, not wanting to burden himself and his family with debt. (Judge Hardiman actually has his framed Harvard acceptance letter hanging in chambers which some might view as douchey or gauche, but which I see as poignant, in light of the judges background.)
Hardiman did well in college and went straight through to law school at Georgetown, which along with Notre Dame is one of the nations preeminent Catholic universities. He excelled yet again, making it onto the Georgetown Law Journal and racking up strong grades.
Georgetown was back then, as it still is today, a top aka T14 law school. (The U.S. News rankings launched in 1987.) As a top student from a top law school, Hardiman could have clerked but he didnt.
Why not? Because he didnt understand the importance of clerking as a credential not surprising for a working-class kid from Boston and because he needed to make money. He went directly into Biglaw, starting work in the D.C. office of Skadden.
From there, his professional and personal lives blossomed. He met his future wife, Lori Hardiman (née Zappala), and she brought him back to Pittsburgh, where her family lives. He enjoyed a thriving career in private practice, eventually making partner at Reed Smith, one of the citys preeminent law firms. In 2003, President George W. Bush appointed him to the trial court (the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania), and in 2007, he was elevated to the Third Circuit appeals court, by a resounding vote of 95-0.
And now here he is, a finalist yet again for a seat on the U.S. Supreme Court. As a poor kid from outside Boston who might have wound up driving a cab, if he hadnt been the first person in his family to graduate from college Thomas Hardiman cant believe how far he has come.
Even if his youthful mistakes end up costing him the SCOTUS nomination, Tom Hardiman can live with that. He will return to Pittsburgh to his wife, their three kids, and his loyal law clerks a happy man.
Thanks for the mention. Well..., about 27 hours now...
IDK - BUT I TRUST POTUS, DJT - HE WILL DO WHAT IS RIGHT...
An “analyst” who leads of his “analysis” of potential Supreme Court Justices with commentary about their “fan bases”?
Really?
Which high school does David Lat think these people are to be judging, and is this writer a senior or just a junior? Is he perhaps on the prom committee?
Given his level of analysis, those are by far the two most important questions to ask.
He went to Harvard. That makes him a NO for me.
Belay that! Accepted but did not attend. Ok by me.
Hardiman is unabashedly pro-2A, which makes him staunchly originalist. He is #1 in my book because of that.
This is in spite if the politics of his wife’s family...which, to me, is an utter irrelevancy. My wife’s family is fairly liberal, and every time I see or speak with them it reinforces my views. They would like to have no influence over my politics, vs. the effect that they have.
Somebody who so adores illegal aliens should not be chosen.
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