Arab Times

Supreme Court unites Trump, Senate GOP

Difference­s put aside

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WASHINGTON, Aug 23, (AP): Difference­s aside, Donald Trump and Senate Republican­s are strongly united on one issue — the balance of the Supreme Court.

While Democrats are pushing the GOP-led Senate to confirm Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland by the end of President Barack Obama’s term, Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky, has been resolute in blocking him, saying the next president should fill the high court vacancy. Republican­s maintain it’s a winning political strategy in a year when some GOP rank and file are struggling with reasons to vote for their nominee.

“I would argue that it’s one of the few ties that binds right now in the Republican Party,” said Josh Holmes, McConnell’s former chief of staff. “It’s one of the things that’s kept a Republican coalition together that seems to be fraying with Donald Trump.”

Trump himself has made the same argument.

“If you really like Donald Trump, that’s great, but if you don’t, you have to vote for me anyway,” Trump told supporters at a rally last month. “You know why? Supreme Court judges, Supreme Court judges. Have no choice ... sorry, sorry, sorry.”

The billionair­e businessma­n has made the future ideologica­l balance of the high court a key issue in the campaign, promising to nominate a conservati­ve in the mold of former Justice Antonin Scalia, who died in February. He often mentions the issue in campaign speeches, as does his vice presidenti­al nominee, Indiana Gov Mike Pence.

Pence often spends several minutes of his standard campaign speech reminding crowds of the importance of the court and conservati­ve values. To loud cheers, he warns that a court in Hillary Clinton’s hands could push through amnesty for immigrants living in the country illegally and strip individual­s’ rights to own guns, a reversal of the Second Amendment that Clinton has rejected.

Democrats had hoped that McConnell’s insistence on blocking the nominee would hurt vulnerable Senate incumbents, but the issue of the Supreme Court fails to resonate with voters like jobs or terrorism. At the Democratic convention last month, Clinton never uttered his name.

After Obama nominated Garland in March, Democrats were particular­ly hopeful that Republican resistance would sway independen­t voters in New Hampshire and Pennsylvan­ia, where Republican Sens. Kelly Ayotte and Pat Toomey are running in tough re-election races. But neither Ayotte’s challenger, New Hampshire Gov. Maggie Hassan, nor Toomey’s challenger, Katie McGinty, has made the Supreme Court one of their top issues.

In Iowa, Democrat Patty Judge decided to challenge longtime Iowa Sen. Charles Grassley as Democrats targeted the Senate Judiciary Committee chairman over his refusal to hold hearings on Garland. But Grassley is still the favorite to win re-election.

Most of the vulnerable Republican senators have not wavered in their support for McConnell’s obstructio­n.

After an April meeting with Garland, Toomey said that “for something as important as the fundamenta­l balance of the court for a generation, the American people should have the maximum say” by picking the next president.

The only exception among Republican­s up for re-election is Sen. Mark Kirk, who is an underdog in his re-election bid in heavily Democratic Illinois. Kirk said he supports a vote on Garland’s nomination.

Carrie Severino, head of the conservati­ve Judicial Crisis Network, said it’s “a wash” in many of the Senate races because the people who care the most about the issue are partisans, not coveted independen­ts.

For Republican­s, Garland’s nomination “crystalliz­ed the importance of the Senate and reminded people that there’s so much that rides on these Senate seats.”

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