Ahead of an official announcement scheduled for later Wednesday morning, news outlets are confirming that President Obama’s nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court is Merrick Garland.

Currently the chief judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, Garland is widely regarded as a “moderate” choice to replace the seat on the nation’s highest court left empty after Justice Antonin Scalia’s death last month.

According to MSNBC legal analyst Ari Melber, Garland fits the profile of a nominee who from the White House’s perspective is “judicially unassailable”—an important descriptor given that the Republican Party, which currently controls the U.S. Senate, has said it will not even consider or hold hearings for any candidate Obama puts forth.

Ahead of specifically naming Garland, Obama said in a statement about the pending announcement that he was confident his choice for the court would be “not only eminently qualified to be a Supreme Court Justice” but is someone who “deserves a fair hearing, and an up-or-down vote” by the Senate.

“As president, it is both my constitutional duty to nominate a justice and one of the most important decisions that I—or any president—will make,” Obama continued. “I’m doing my job. I hope that our senators will do their jobs, and move quickly to consider my nominee. That is what the Constitution dictates, and that’s what the American people expect and deserve from their leaders.”

As NPR‘s reporting notes, “Garland’s nomination opens a new chapter in what could become an epic and bruising fight over both the ideological tilt of the nation’s highest court and President Obama’s legacy.”

Offering background on Garland, NPR reports that Garland has

 Answering the question “Who Is Merrick Garland?” at ThinkProgress, Ian Millhiser writes that despite his “moderate” reputation, “Garland’s record does not suggest that he would join the Court’s right flank if confirmed to the Supreme Court. He would likely vote much more often than not with the Supreme Court’s liberals, while occasionally casting a heterodox vote.”

Obama’s nomination of Garland, Millhiser adds, “appears to be an attempt to box in Senate Republicans who’ve refused to confirm anyone Obama nominates. There are strong reasons to doubt whether this strategy will work, however. Sen. Hatch, who undoubtedly regrets his decision to praise Garland shortly before this nomination, has outright refused to meet with anyone Obama nominates to replace Scalia. And he’s far from alone within the GOP caucus.”

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