Trump’s buddies would applaud plan for RBG seat
When Mitch McConnell blocked President Barack Obama’s choice to fill a Supreme Court vacancy in March 2016, he claimed he wanted to “let the American people decide” in November elections eight months later.
McConnell’s tender concern for the will of the people has evaporated in 2020.
Even before the late, great Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died Sept. 18, is laid to rest, the Senate majority leader is urging a vote on her successor be held within the next few weeks. President Donald Trump wants the process completed within weeks, before his term ends on Jan. 20, or even before the Nov. 3 election.
In other words, for Trump’s GOP, the people’s will is no longer paramount — because the people might vote for the opposition. Polls show that 62% of Americans believe the court choice should be made by the next president. But in Trumpworld, the Democratic Party and its leaders are the enemy, as the president daily proclaims in tweets and at rallies.
This is not the normal stuff of partisan politics, but something far more dangerous. Delegitimizing the opposition is the trademark of demagogues in countries led by dictators or lapsed democrats _ as I’ve witnessed in Russia, China, Turkey, Hungary and elsewhere.
It is Trump’s trademark, too.
The president’s rush to replace Ginsburg is the culmination of his efforts to effectively establish one-party rule.
From his inauguration speech on, he has painted his political opposition as instigators of American carnage, making ugly personal attacks against Democratic Party leaders.
Which brings us to the White House rush to lock in a historic 6-3 conservative majority on the Supreme Court for decades — if possible, before the Nov. 3 results are in.
Just imagine the havoc if Biden wins and/or the Democrats take back a majority in the Senate. After Nov. 3, you could have a lame- duck Senate, including defeated GOP senators, that confirms a crucial sixth conservative Supreme Court justice. This could happen even if Trump is defeated.
So much for the will of the people. Or for the diminished reputation of an uber-partisan Supreme Court that would likely try to undo any major legislation a Democratic Congress passed.
And since Trump will claim the election was stolen if he loses, that very Supreme Court could wind up ruling on endless challenges to a Biden victory.
But it could get worse. Just imagine what Trump will do if he wins the presidency, and/or retains control of the Senate. A politicized Supreme Court would no doubt be asked to further suppress voting by minorities, punish Trump’s opponents and curb a free press. In other words, to try to ensure that the Democratic Party could not win in the future.
The president has plenty of autocrat friends who can give advice.
Hungary’s Viktor Orban, whom Trump praised and invited to the White House, brags openly about his “illiberal democracy.” Hungary holds elections, but Orban’s nationalistic Fidesz Party has taken control of executive and legislative powers along with the court system, with the ability to maneuver election laws so that the opposition can’t gain a majority.
And there are the more extreme cases such as Turkey, where Trump’s pal Recep Tayyip Erdogan has purged thousands of judges, and those who remain are fearful. Or Russia’s “telephone justice” under Trump’s buddy Vladimir Putin, where party officials often instruct judges on rulings, including the persecution of political activists.
Bottom line, in autocracies and backsliding democracies, leaders know they need to control the courts in order to cripple their opposition. Trump knows this, too.
“Let the people decide,” McConnell proclaimed in 2016. Right. If need be, millions of Americans should march on Congress to shame him and GOP senators like Pennsylvania’s Pat Toomey into taking those words seriously. Most important, in RBG’s memory, every Democrat who is breathing must vote in this election.
Otherwise, we are headed toward Trump’s one-party state.