Thousands protest Trump’s Supreme Court pick
WASHINGTON: Thousands marched to the US Supreme Court in Washington on Saturday to commemorate the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and protest against President Donald Trump’s rush to push through Amy Coney Barrett as her replacement.
The US Senate Judiciary Committee has scheduled an Oct 22 vote on the nomination of Ms Barrett, a conservative appellate judge, over objections from Democrats that the confirmation process comes too close to the Nov 3 presidential election.
More than 26 million Americans have already cast their ballots for who they want to sit in the White House for the next four years, Mr Trump or his Democratic rival Joe Biden.
Demonstrators at the Women’s March said they were angry that Republicans appear ready to confirm Ms Barrett’s nomination so close to Election Day after refusing to move forward Merrick Garland, the pick of former President Barack Obama, a Democrat, more than six months ahead of the 2016 election.
“The fact of the matter is that we are powerful and they are afraid,” said Sonja Spoo, the director of the reproductive rights campaigns at UltraViolet, a feminist advocacy group, one of the speakers at the protest.
“They are on the ropes and they know it and we are about to give the knockout punch.”
Ginsburg, a liberal champion of women’s rights, died on Sept 18. Prudence Sullivan, 49, from Lake in the Hills, Illinois, near Chicago, and her sister Kelli Padgett, 47, from Jacksonville, Florida, flew in to join what they described as an energising and empowering event.
“We’ve had losses from Covid and we’ve clashed with family members over racism, Black Lives Matter,” Ms Sullivan said.
“So this is something where I can put my money where my mouth is.”
Ms Sullivan said she and her husband, an IT expert, were looking at options for moving overseas if Mr Trump was reelected. The protesters marched through downtown Washington to the Supreme Court steps.