US Senate begins hearings for Trump’s Supreme Court pick
Prior to the White House COVID-19 outbreak, Republicans had vowed to complete the nomination process before the November 3 election
WASHINGTON: The US Senate began on Monday to consider Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett, who was tapped to replace the late justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. If confirmed, Barrett would receive a lifetime appointment.
The nomination comes just weeks before the US general election, where members of Congress, both House and Senate, and the presidency are on the ballot. It also comes as a wave of COVID-19 infections hit Republicans circles, some of which were traced to the White House ceremony to announce Barrett’s nomination.
“I believe Americans of all backgrounds deserve an independent Supreme Court that interprets our Constitution and laws as they are written,” Barrett said in her opening statement to the Senate Judiciary Committee.
The committee met in person in Washington, DC, despite fact that one of its members, Senator Mike Lee, had tested positive for coronavirus over a week prior to the hearings.
Republican rush to confirm
Although Democrats had demanded a delay to the proceedings, for public health concerns, Republican Chairman Lindsey Graham decided to move ahead with what is the first step of Barrett’s nomination.
Prior to the White House COVID-19 outbreak, Republicans had vowed to complete the nomination process before the November 3 election, while they hold a majority in the Senate.
Barrett’s confirmation would give the court a 6-3 conservative majority, which critics say could entrench Republican policies or roll back Democratic-led ones for a generation.
Barrett addressed the criticism head on in her opening statement. “Courts have a vital responsibility to the rule of law, which is critical to a free society. But courts are not designed to solve every problem or right every wrong in our public life,” Barrett said.
“The policy decisions and value judgments of government must be made by the political branches, elected by and accountable to the people,” she added.
An ‘illegitimate’ process
Democrats decried hypocrisy by Republicans, who in 2016 refused to consider former president Barack Obama’s nominee for the high court, Merrick Garland, arguing that the nomination should wait for a new president to be elected.
Republicans now argue that it is the current president that should pick the nominee, despite being a month away from the presidential election. Democrats accuse Republicans of wanting to impose a conservative majority in the judiciary, calling the process to nominate Barrett “illegitimate.”
“If [senators] vote for Trump and he loses, and then Judge Barrett gets to the Supreme Court, this will be understood as a humiliating moment in the history of the constitution of the United States,” US constitutional law scholar Bruce Ackerman told DW. “There is no question that if [Democrat rival presidential candidate Joe] Biden wins, the Supreme Court members will have to really think, do they want to provoke a foundational crisis of the republic?”