Gulf Today

Ginsburg’s death is an opportunit­y for Trump

- Holly Baxter,

Sometimes it felt like she was America’s last hope. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Supreme Court judge since 1993, achieved celebrity status during Trump’s four years. Affectiona­tely given the nickname “Notorious R.B.G” by a slew of online followers, she was the subject of superhero memes and the inspiratio­n for much light-hearted merchandis­e ( Urban Oufiters stocks T-shirts emblazoned with her face and her famously blunt quotes, and I gifted a friend in Brooklyn a cuddly Ginsburg doll for her newborn last year.)

Beneath the jokes, the quotes and the welldesign­ed tote bags, however, ran an undercurre­nt of anxiety and fear. The fact that Supreme Court judges have lifetime appointmen­ts meant that many were morbidly obsessed with Ginsburg — who battled cancer on numerous occasions, and died of its complicati­ons — staying alive long enough to get to the election. She herself clearly felt the same way, if NPR’S reports about her dying wishes are to be believed: “My most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is installed,” she apparently said not long before passing away aged 87. She was only the second woman appointed to the Supreme Court.

And there’s no geting round it: Ginsburg’s death is a terrible opportunit­y for Donald Trump. With a new seat on the court vacant so close to the election, he can make a song and dance about his legacy and his future promises by installing an extreme conservati­ve. At the Republican Convention a few weeks ago, the President dedicated an entire night to the “prolife” cause, bringing in speakers who waxed lyrical about his “concern for the unborn” and making allusions toward overturnin­g Roe v Wade once and for all. Ginsburg’s death puts women’s rights in grave danger — not to mention the rights of many others who are historical­ly overlooked or targeted by the ultra-right wing.

This is because Trump’s supporters are now, quite frankly, fringe conservati­ves who are happy to do away with establishe­d legal interpreta­tion in the United States. Many have spoken about “reinterpre­ting” or “kicking out” the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constituti­on, which gives everyone born on US soil automatic citizenshi­p. It’s true that lifelong Republican politician­s are walking away from Trump’s presidency and distancing themselves as polls point toward a possible Biden win — the Lincoln Project and a slew of disgruntle­d former staffers are testament enough to this — but the president has responded by digging his heels in and atempting to galvanise enough extreme conservati­ves to make up the numbers. Replacing Ginsburg while working to this playbook will be damaging for America in the long term, far beyond any presidenti­al term Trump might legally hold; it will mean that the 45th President leaves a damaging legacy behind him for generation­s to come.

Back in August, Republican­s were asked what they would do if a Supreme Court seat “became vacant” this year, before Trump’s election. “Oh, we’d fill it,” said Mitch Mcconnell, reportedly with a smile. Mcconnell is close to Trump and was highly praised for his loyalty during the impeachmen­t, but not every member of his party felt the same way as him. Notably, Lisa Murkowski, the Republican senator from Alaska, has said publicly that her party would need to “let the people decide” on election day if a seat became vacant months away from November. When then-president Obama tried to replace Supreme Court Judge Antonin Scalia ater Scalia’s death in the February before the 2016 election, the move was blocked by Republican­s specifical­ly because, they argued, it was undemocrat­ic to make a lifetime appointmen­t so close to an election. “If we now say that months prior to the election is OK when nine months was not, that is a double standard and I don’t believe we should do it. So I would not support it,” Murkowski said. She has not yet commented now that Ginsburg has passed away. Mcconnell, however, just made a statement saying that he fully intends on keeping his own promise: “President Trump’s nominee will receive a vote on the floor of the United States Senate,” he said tonight, in a speech which also briefly honoured Ginsburg’s contributi­on to the court.

Trump has never been humbled by the office or cowed by a memento mori. “He didn’t come to my inaugurati­on,” he said, of celebrated civil rights activist John Lewis. “I was never a fan and I never will be,” he said, of Vietnam War veteran and across-the-aisle friend of Joe Biden’s, John Mccain. About Ginsburg, in comparison, he was positively kind: “She just died? Wow. I didn’t know that. She led an amazing life. What else can you say?” he said, ever erudite, when informed of her death by a reporter on-air, moments ater emerging from a two-hour rally.

Presented with Ginsburg’s death — and comments on her “amazing life” aside — few of us believe that the President and his ardent supporters in Congress will make the decent move, the sportsmanl­ike move, or the move for which there is precedent. This is a delicious opportunit­y handed to that side of the party on a golden plater, weeks before Americans go to the polls. But will all Republican­s so easily follow Mcconnell’s lead? Is there scope for a risky mutiny in the ranks, wherein four GOP senators vote with the Democrats and force a block or delay to the nomination? No doubt we’ll find out soon enough. And whichever way it goes, it promises to be messy.

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