Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)
Trump: ‘ Definitely time for a woman’ on court
WASHINGTON » President Donald Trump said Sunday that Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death and the two men he’s named to the Supreme Court meant “it was definitely time for a woman,” adding that it will be hard for opponents of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to “dispute her qualifications or anything about her.”
Trump announced Saturday that he has settled on Barrett for the vacancy.
But Democrats and others who recoil at the idea of the conservative Barrett replacing the liberal Ginsburg began lining up against the federal appeals court judge even before Trump formally introduced her at theWhite House.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other Democrats on Sunday criticized Barrett’s nomination as an ill- considered and hasty decision that will threaten health care rights and undercut voters so close to the Nov. 3 election.
The Republican- controlled Senate plans a swift confirmation, with hearings set to begin Oct. 12.
“I think it’s going to be really thrilling,” Trump said during a post- announcement interview with Fox News Channel that aired Sunday. “I hope it goes smoothly. Perhaps it will, perhaps it won’t. I think it’s going to be very hard to dispute her qualifications or anything about her.”
Pelosi on Sunday declined to do so, arguing that Trump wasmoving quickly to fill the vacancy before the court hears a challenge to the Affordable Care Act on Nov. 10. Pelosi helped ram the health care lawthrough Congress in 2010.
“What I am concerned about is anyone that President Trump would have appointed was there to undo the Affordable Care Act,” she said on CNN’s “State of the Union.”
Trump said he’s been very happy with the two justices he already put on the high court, referring to Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh as “outstanding people, outstanding men.”
The president said he had considered Barrett for an opening in 2018 before he ultimately settled on Kavanaugh, but explained that she seemed like a natural fit after Ginsburg’s recent death.
“It was time for a woman,” Trump said of his third nominee to the nation’s highest court.
If confirmed, Barrett’s addition would make for the sharpest ideological swing on the Supreme Court since Clarence Thomas replaced Justice Thurgood Marshall nearly three decades ago.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has said the Senate will vote on Barrett’s nomination but has not yet committed to a time line. Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsay Graham said confirmation hearings will begin in two weeks.
With only two of the 53 Republican senators voicing opposition to a confirmation vote before the Nov. 3 election, Democrats appeared outnumbered and without recourse to block the nomination.
“The Senate will confirm her next month,” Sen. TomCotton, R- Ark., said on CNN.
Other Republican senators say a post- election confirmation vote is possible. The GOP will continue to control the Senate in the period between the election and inauguration.
“This needs to take all the time it needs to take, but it doesn’t need to take more time than it needs to take,” Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri, amember of theGOP Senate leadership, said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”