David Porter

United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

  • AFJ Opposes
  • Court Circuit Court

On April 12, 2018, President Trump nominated David J. Porter to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. Porter was nominated to replace Judge Michael Fischer, who assumed senior status on February 1, 2017. Notably, one of Pennsylvania’s U.S. senators, Sen. Bob Casey, has chosen to withhold his blue slip on Porter’s nomination. Alliance for Justice strongly opposes Porter’s confirmation on grounds related both to the process surrounding his nomination and to the merits of his record.

Porter’s career has been marked by fidelity to highly ideological and partisan missions. He is affiliated with several ultraconservative groups, including the Federalist Society. He has a close relationship and is philosophically aligned with Leonard Leo, the president of the Federalist Society, as he made clear when he thanked Leo for his comments on a book review Porter wrote on Ourselves and Our Prosperity: Essays in Constitutional Originalism. Disturbingly, Porter is a contributor to the Center for Vision & Values, a conservative think tank that has advocated against LGBTQ rights and argued that the minimum wage is unconstitutional. With former Senator Rick Santorum, he founded the Pennsylvania Judicial Network, an organization which opposed the nomination of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor.

In addition, Porter has vocally opposed the legality of the Affordable Care Act. In a 2012 article for the Center for Vision & Values, Porter reviewed landmark Supreme Court decisions that upheld the National Labor Relations Act, the Fair Labor Standards Act and federal civil rights laws, and said that if the Supreme Court were to uphold the ACA under the Commerce Clause, it would “further stretch” and “break the Framers’ structural design[.]” In the same article, Porter praised the Supreme Court’s ruling in United States v. Morrison, which struck down part of the Violence Against Women Act.

Introduction

On April 12, 2018, President Trump nominated David
J. Porter to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. Porter
was nominated to replace
Judge Michael Fischer, who assumed senior status on February 1, 2017. Notably,
one of Pennsylvania’s U.S. senators, Sen. Bob Casey, has chosen to withhold his
blue slip on Porter’s nomination. Alliance for Justice strongly opposes
Porter’s confirmation on grounds related both to the process surrounding his
nomination, and to the merits of his record.

A brief history of events surrounding another recent
nomination to the Third Circuit is relevant here. In March of 2016,
Pennsylvania’s other U.S. senator, Sen. Pat Toomey, announced he would not return
his blue slip on President Obama’s nomination of Rebecca Haywood to the Third
Circuit Court of Appeals, stating, “The
Administration knows that I have concerns about the nomination of Ms. Haywood
to serve on the Third Circuit.” He added, “Instead of blowing up a bipartisan
working arrangement for judicial nominees that has done so much good for
Pennsylvania,” the president should “instead work across the aisle with Senator
Casey and me to arrive at a consensus nominee as we have for every other
vacancy since 2011.”

At the time, Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley
respected Toomey’s decision not to support Haywood’s nomination; Grassley did not
schedule a hearing, nor did Haywood receive a committee vote. (If she had been
confirmed, Haywood, chief of the Appeals Division in the U.S. Attorney’s Office
in the Western District of Pennsylvania and rated well qualified by the ABA,
would have been the first African-American woman on the Third Circuit.)

Now, just two years later, the contrast between Grassley’s
approach to Haywood’s nomination and his approach to Porter’s could not be more
stark. Casey is attempting to exercise the same right exercised by Toomey in
withholding a blue slip on a judicial nominee. Chairman Grassley is refusing to
honor Casey’s right, and has found
an ostensible new reason for doing so: “the blue slip isn’t supposed to
allow the unilateral veto of a nominee.”

What makes this action even more striking is that Grassley
has continued to espouse the value of the blue slip while not respecting it in
practice. Publicly, he has continued
to maintain
that “[t]he blue slip serves the important purpose of
encouraging consultation between the White House and the Senate. The White
House has an obligation to engage in good-faith consultation with home-state
senators. I won’t allow the White House to just steamroll home-state senators.”

Such statements stand in contradiction to the reality that
Grassley is enabling the White House to run roughshod over Casey’s rights with
regard to the Porter nomination. Porter’s nomination was fast-tracked from the
start without consultation with Casey; the White House decided to nominate
Porter to the Third Circuit just four months after he first expressed interest
in the position.

Since then, by Porter’s own admission,
he has had no interactions with Casey. Also, Casey had made clear prior
to this nomination that he was willing to work with the White House to find
consensus on nominees other than Porter; in fact, Casey returned his blue slip
on Stephanos
Bibas
even though he opposed Bibas’s confirmation, and he has supported
Trump’s nominees to the district courts in Pennsylvania.

The disrespect shown to Casey throughout the nomination
process is deeply troubling and on its own could merit the withholding of a
blue slip. But Casey’s decision to withhold support is in fact based on his
assessment of Porter’s record. Porter’s career has been marked by fidelity to
highly ideological and partisan missions. He is affiliated
with several ultraconservative groups, including the Federalist
Society.
2 He has a close relationship and is
philosophically aligned with Leonard Leo, the president of the Federalist
Society, as he made clear when he thanked Leo for his comments on a book review
Porter wrote
on Ourselves and Our Prosperity:
Essays in Constitutional Originalism.
3 Disturbingly, Porter is a
contributor to the Center for Vision & Values, a conservative think tank
that has advocated against
LGBTQ rights
and argued that the minimum
wage
is unconstitutional. With former Senator Rick Santorum, he founded the
Pennsylvania Judicial Network,
an organization which opposed the nomination of U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Sonia Sotomayor.

In addition, Porter has vocally opposed
the legality of the Affordable Care Act. In a 2012 article
for the Center for Vision & Values, Porter reviewed landmark Supreme
Court decisions that upheld the National Labor Relations Act, the Fair Labor
Standards Act and federal civil rights laws, and said that if the Supreme Court
were to uphold the ACA under the Commerce Clause, it would “further stretch”
and “break the Framers’ structural design[.]” In the same article, Porter
praised the Supreme Court’s ruling in United
States v. Morrison,
which struck down part of the Violence Against Women
Act.

As Pennsylvanians are well aware, Porter’s many affiliations
and statements are clear signifiers of a philosophy that is hostile to the
civil and human rights progress of recent decades. His record has generated
intense home-state opposition to his candidacy for a federal judgeship, both
now and when the possibility has arisen in the past. This opposition is well-documented and should be taken very
seriously by senators charged with evaluating this nominee.

Finally, we note that Grassley’s shabby treatment of Casey with
regard to the Porter nomination follows egregiously disrespectful treatment of
Senators Tammy Baldwin, Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley when they withheld blue
slips on judicial nominees, and heightens our concern that the judicial
nominations process is being irreparably damaged by the actions of the
Chairman.

Biography

David Porter is a partner
at Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He received
his B.A. from Grove City College and his law degree from George Mason
University School of Law.4 After law school he clerked for Judge D. Brooks
Smith, then a judge on the U.S. District Court for the Western District of
Pennsylvania. Porter’s practice at Buchanan Ingersoll focuses on business
litigation in the areas of trade secrets, higher education, First Amendment and
media law, copyright and trademark matters, shareholder and partnership
disputes, banking, and civil rights.

After the White House announced Porter’s nomination,
Americans for Prosperity-Pennsylvania, a conservative think tank funded and run
by the Koch brothers, applauded
the nomination. AFP-PA’s support was so strong that it soon announced that
it would fund and run an advertising campaign in support of Porter.

Nomination Process

David Porter’s name was first floated for a federal district
court judgeship in 2014, when Sen. Toomey advocated for Porter as part of
negotiations with the Obama Administration and Sen. Casey regarding judges in
the state. Thousands of Pennsylvanians, however, made clear that Porter’s
career fighting civil rights, environmental protections, access to health care,
and other critical legal protections demonstrated that he would not be a fair-minded
judge. After a petition with signatures of nearly 40,000 people opposing
Porter’s nomination was delivered to Senators Toomey and Casey, his name was
pulled from consideration.

At the same time that Porter was being considered for a
district court vacancy, there was a vacancy on the Third Circuit Court of
Appeals. In August 2013, over two and a half years before she was ultimately
nominated, Rebecca Ross Haywood submitted an application to
Pennsylvania’s nominating commission. Twice over the next two years, Haywood
met with Toomey, and Toomey ultimately announced he would not return the blue
slip on Haywood’s nomination.

Chairman Grassley, respecting the blue slip tradition, did not
consider
Haywood’s nomination.

Because Chairman Grassley respected Toomey’s blue slip, the
vacancy on the Third Circuit for which Haywood had been nominated remained
vacant throughout Obama’s term, leaving an opening for the Trump White House to
nominate Porter last May. According to Porter’s Senate
Judiciary Questionnaire,
Porter first met with Toomey in November and
December 2016 to discuss a federal judgeship. Only a few months later, in March
2017, the White House notified Porter of its intent to nominate him to the
Third Circuit. Porter was eventually nominated in April 2018. Critically,
Porter never met with Casey in connection with Porter’s nomination to the Third
Circuit.

At that time, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer, Casey
“warned the White House he’s prepared to withhold Porter’s blue slip if Trump
nominates [Porter].” Casey then worked with the White House in good faith, and returned
his blue slip on Stephanos Bibas, another Third Circuit nominee, even though
Casey had concerns about Bibas’s record and voted against Bibas’s confirmation.

In spite of this good-faith effort by Casey to work with the
White House on judicial nominations, when there was a second vacancy on the
Third Circuit, the White House chose to nominate Porter over Casey’s previously
stated opposition.

It is therefore no surprise that Casey immediately made
clear he could not support Porter, issuing the following statement:

As a lawyer, David Porter has advocated legal theories
that stack the deck against workers, deny Pennsylvanians access to health care
and undermine the equal protection of our laws for all Americans. I have worked
in a bipartisan way with Senator Pat Toomey to recommend and move forward
candidates for the federal judiciary in 
Pennsylvania, even when I have had concerns about the candidates’
judicial philosophies. It is unfortunate that this Administration has decided
to nominate, over my objections, an individual who is far outside the
mainstream to a lifetime appointment to one of the most important courts in the
nation: the Third Circuit Court of Appeals.

Legal and Political Views

Porter’s record raises serious concerns regarding whether he
will be a fair- minded jurist able to approach cases without bias toward any
predetermined outcome. In a 2000 op-ed, Porter
gave a clear indication of his own agenda when he applauded the nomination of
John Ashcroft as Attorney General and wrote that Ashcroft is “pro-life,
pro-death penalty, anti-gun control, prefers judges who exercise restraint and
strictly construe the Constitution, and disfavors quota- based affirmative
action plans.”

Affordable Care Act

Porter is a vocal opponent of the Affordable Care Act. He
has written several columns arguing the law is unconstitutional, including an
op-ed in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in 2012 calling for the Supreme Court to
strike down the individual mandate provision of the ACA. In that piece, Porter argued
that the provision was unconstitutional and said that the individual
mandate “compels individuals to buy insurance in an attempt to suppress the
ruinous effects of the ACA’s other provisions.”

He has framed his legal objection to the ACA in terms of his
originalist ideology, saying
that “under the original understanding of [the Commerce Clause, the
Necessary and Proper Clause and the Taxing Clause] and the more expansive
interpretation given to them by the Supreme Court in recent decades, the
mandate is an unprecedented assertion of federal control that violates the
framers’ constitutional design.”

In
another piece
, Porter engaged in a brief review of the Supreme Court’s
Commerce Clause jurisprudence, concluding that compelling people to join the
health insurance marketplace would be a “metaphysical abstraction” of the
Commerce Clause that “threatens not merely to further stretch, but finally
break the Framers’ structural design that for 225 years has preserved
individual liberty and served as a check on unlimited federal power.”

After the Supreme Court upheld the individual mandate,
Porter wrote an op-ed
criticizing the decision and calling for the 2012 presidential election to
be a referendum on the Supreme Court and the ACA.

Political and partisan activities

Porter has extensive connections to ultraconservative groups
that have worked to undermine critical constitutional rights and legal
protections.

He leads
the Lawyers Chapter
of the Pittsburgh Federalist Society, an
ultraconservative group to which President Trump has delegated several aspects
of the judicial nominations process. In 2013, while Porter was the Pittsburgh
chapter’s president, the group
invited Roger Clegg, P
resident of the Center for Equal Opportunity (CEO),
to give a presentation on voting rights. The CEO is a right-wing think
tank
that is anti-immigrant and anti-affirmative action.

In 2009,
Porter was a founding member
of the Pennsylvania Judicial
Network, a
partner group of the Judicial Crisis Network that opposed the
nomination of Sonia Sotomayor to the U.S. Supreme Court. Other founding members
included former Senator Rick Santorum; Charlene Bashore, Legislative Director
of the Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation; Thomas
J. Shaheen of the Pennsylvania Family Council, which has advocated

vigorously against women’s reproductive rights and against equality for LGBTQ
persons; and Colin A. Hanna, President of Let Freedom Ring, which states is was “formed to counter
the attacks of anti-conservative groups on
patriotic candidates as well as
attacks on the important issues of our day—those that affect the core of our
society: the family, marriage, the economy, energy, abortion, health care and
foreign policy.”

Porter praised Senator
Rick Santorum’s 2005 book, It Takes a
Family,
writing that “[Santorum] argues, ‘the currency of social
capital is trust’ and that ‘is first created and then nurtured by healthy
families,’ a prosperous society ‘depends on healthy mom-and-dad families.’”Porter called the book a “thoughtful
articulation of conservative vision and public policy.”

Porter is also a contributor to The
Center
for Vision & Values, a think tank at
Grove
City
College—where Porter is a
trustee.
Grove City
Colleg
e
does not allow it
s students to
accept federal financial aid in order to avoid complying with Title IX. The
Princeton Review ranked
Grove City College as one of the least LGBTQ- friendly colleges in the
country.

Illustrative of the Center for Vision & Values’ mission
is a piece on its website supporting
Neil Gorsuch’s nomination
to the Supreme Court, based on the perception
that Gorsuch favored “natural law.” In the piece, the author writes that “[i]f
you’re endeavoring to fundamentally transform human nature, especially on
issues like marriage, family, sexuality, and gender, then the natural law is
your chief foe” and “[n]ature tells you what to do; you don’t tell nature what
to do. Just as your biology and  your 74
trillion chromosomes tell you your gender; you don’t tell yourself your
gender.” The Center has also
published
pieces
critical of marriage equality and contraceptives and has regularly hosted anti-LGBTQ
activists at its annual conference.

The Center also endorsed
Mark Levin’s book, Rediscovering
Americanism and the Tyranny of Progressivism
, and noted that “all sorts of
governments make laws that are unjust, especially laws that ignore or violate
the natural law, from the legal right to own a slave to the legal right to kill
unborn children, from the denial of the inherent humanity and dignity of a
black person (the Dred Scott case) to the denial of the inherent humanity and
dignity of an unborn person (Roe v. Wade and Casey v. Planned
Parenthood
). These laws of the state contravene the laws of nature. That,
in essence, first and foremost, is why they are unjust laws.”

Porter is a member of the
Republican National Lawyers Association. He once represented former Senator
Rick Santorum in a
dispute
about Santorum’s ability to claim residency in Pennsylvania and in a lawsuit challenging the
proposed deactivation of a Pennsylvania National Guard unit. In 2013, Porter
represented
the Republican caucuses of
Pennsylvania’s General Assembly in a lawsuit
defending the constitutionality of a 2009 anti-environment bill that vastly
expanded the amount of state forest land eligible for gas extraction.

Conclusion

David Porter’s nomination represents a highly politicized
attempt to place a hard-line partisan ideologue on the federal bench over the
objections of residents from his home state and one of his home-state senators.
Porter’s record shows a longtime dedication to and affiliation with
far-right-wing causes, and his nomination to a federal judgeship has been met
with an unusually high level of opposition by Pennsylvanians. He is strenuously
opposed by one of his home-state senators, who has chosen to withhold a blue
slip on the nomination.

Nonetheless, Porter’s nomination is being forcibly advanced
by the same Judiciary Committee chairman who very recently acquiesced to Sen.

Toomey’s objections to an Obama nominee for a seat in the
same circuit. If this effort succeeds, Porter will
bring to the Third Circuit a record of clear hostility to accessible health
care, reproductive rights, LGBTQ rights, and racial equality. Alliance for
Justice strongly opposes his confirmation.

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