Democrats think it’s a win-win for them Filling Scalia’s seat
President
Barack Obama smiles after announcing Judge Merrick Garland as his
nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court on March 16, 2016. (Photo: Kevin
LaMarque/Reuters)Judge
Merrick Garland of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Washington D.C.
Circuit will most likely not become Justice Merrick Garland of the
Supreme Court, at least not while President Barack Obama remains in
office. He seems unlikely to get even a hearing before the Senate
Judiciary Committee, or a vote either by that panel or the whole Senate.And
it may be partly because it’s hard to imagine an Obama nominee more
likely to win confirmation, if the Republicans allowed a vote.Republican
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell repeated on Wednesday what he
said just hours after the late justice Antonin Scalia died in
mid-February: There will be no Judiciary Committee hearings, and no
votes on confirmation while Obama resides at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.The
Senate will appropriately revisit the matter when it considers the
qualifications of the person the next president nominates,” McConnell
said, apparently extinguishing even the dim prospects of a vote in the
lame-duck session after the November elections.Still,
the pitched political battle over Garland’s fate could turn in
unexpected ways, and will shape – and be shaped by – the 2016 race: Not
just Donald Trump’s unprecedented presidential race but the fight to
control the Senate, in which a platoon of Senate Republicans are facing
stiff challenges.Garland, 63, is a judicial moderate who earned the support of a majority of Republicans for his 76-23 confirmation to the appeals court.
Seven of the Senate’s current 54 Republicans supported him, while five
opposed him, including McConnell and Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman
Chuck Grassley. Garland is a well regarded former federal prosecutor
who walked in the ruins of the 1995 terrorist attack in Oklahoma City
while emergency workers were still pulling out bodies, and he supervised
the case that led to the death penalty for convicted bomber Timothy
McVeigh.Conservatives say he is unsympathetic to their views on
gun rights, but no one has seriously suggested he lacks the credentials
to sit on the republic’s highest court. In fact, the GOP argument so
far is not that he’s unqualified, but that someone who is not Obama
should pick the next justice.
Garland’s
nomination would need 14 Republicans to disrupt an inevitable
filibuster, and five to be confirmed. Even if McConnell had not drawn
that early line in the sand, that would not have been easy, but it would
not have been impossible, and surely would have carried shorter odds
than if Obama had chosen a nominee closer to the base of the Democratic
party. Put differently, there would be comparatively little political
danger to the GOP in considering, and rejecting, a liberal firebrand,
even one plucked from the ranks of women or minorities.
Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky) leaves the Senate chamber after
vowing that the body will not hold hearings on whether to confirm
Garland. (Photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo)Republicans
know that the main prize in play is the ideological shape of the
Supreme Court. The late justice Antonin Scalia wasn’t just “a”
conservative jurist. He was arguably the most influential conservative
jurist of his era. Republicans know they’re highly unlikely to get
another Scalia, but would settle for putting another conservative in the
seat that the acerbic Italian-American held for decades, continuing
their run of 5-4 rulings on many contentious issues. The problem for
Republicans is not that Garland may turn out to be liberal, it’s that
he’s sure to be a lot more liberal than Scalia, tipping the overall
balance of the court to the left. To avoid that, the GOP has to gamble
that they will recapture the White House come November.
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