I think announcing that they have the votes to confirm before the nominee is even chosen is something everyone should have a problem with. But at that point the content of the hearings themselves are rather meaningless.
Of course the hearings matter. They're the opportunity for dissenters to drop bombshells that flip a few crucial votes. If they'd been able to show a clear pattern of prejudice in her rulings on cases touching human sexuality. If they'd presented evidence of dark money connections. But they didn't.
The hearings are pointless not because they GOP has the votes, but because the Dems don't have anything that could change a vote. And since they can't just acknowledge that she's an acceptable nominee, they have to grandstand pointlessly about the implications.
But is it really pointless? If it were, wouldn't someone have moved to skip the hearings and go straight to the vote? The folks praising Hirono and dark money guy: Does your praise take into account the fact that their efforts are pointless and they're apparently too stupid to realize it? Or do you think maybe there is a point to the hearings, even if the GOP already has the votes?
No. They're pointless because the GOP senators made it clear they would pass the nominee before they even knew who the nominee was.
But they did know. There was a short list, and everyone on that short list was acceptable.
Acceptable to whom?
Acceptable to whom?
But they did know. There was a short list, and everyone on that short list was acceptable.
To Republicans. Duh.
That "short list" consisted of Forty-Four ultra-conservative judges all approved by the ultraconservative Heritage Foundation and Federalist Society.
We all know that. My question was to maybe have supporters contemplate that the judges on the SCOTUS should be deemed about equally acceptable to both sides. These days it's essentially a purely party line affair.
That the Courts have become a political battleground is a damning and dangerous state of degeneration. Anyone not alarmed by this is brain-dead.
No. That was the published list from 2016. Everybody knew that the list of candidates Trump was considering for this appointment was a lot shorter than that.
I agree that it's a problem, but 1) it's not new, and 2) Democrats have the wrong solutions to it. The driving force behind this problem is in my sig.
I have sigs turned off.
It was when the confirmation threshold was changed from 2/3 to a simple majority vote that this crap really took off. For such momentous and long lasting appointments, it should never have even been possible to contemplate less than 2/3, so as to ensure the impossibility of a purely partisan outcome (unless more than 2/3 of the seats should be held by one Party.)
I wonder how Barrett feels to know that more than half the country sees her fast-tracked installation in this ramming down their collective throat as wrong. Not enough, I guess, to heed the pleas of some 100 professors from her alma mater to decline this confirmation and await the election result.
It used to require 60 votes, not two-thirds, before the end of the filibuster.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news...filibuster-supreme-court-nominees/3573369001/
IMO, they always have been political, because tribes are largely political and most people are tribal. They probably know where they stand on a given spectrum before they ever get to law school. Plus the spirit of the age changes: Separate but equal was upheld in 1896; by 1955 separate was deemed inherently unequal. Many if not most groundbreaking civil rights cases are contrived to some extent.That the Courts have become a political battleground is a damning and dangerous state of degeneration. Anyone not alarmed by this is brain-dead.
I wonder how Barrett feels to know that more than half the country sees her fast-tracked installation in this ramming down their collective throat as wrong.