Hartford Courant

Trump’s high court pick thrust into election tumult

After debate, new questions arise on rush by Senate

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s stark expectatio­n that the Supreme Court will intervene to “look at the ballots” in what he calls a rigged election casts new questions Wednesday on the Senate’s rush to confirm Judge Amy Coney Barrett for the vacant seat before Nov. 3.

Barrett was on Capitol Hill for a second day of meetings with senators ahead of confirmati­on hearings as lawmakers of both parties brace for the potential of delayed election night results or a disputed presidenti­al election that lands before the high court.

Rather than lead Americans to uphold voting traditions, Trump is sowing doubt by insisting throughout the first presidenti­al debate with Joe Biden that the election will be fraudulent if he is not reelected, even though voter fraud is rare in the United States. One analysis found Americans were more likely to be struck by lightning.

“I’m counting on them to look at the ballots, definitely,” Trump said about the Supreme Court.

The rush by Trump to fill the Supreme Court seat is already drawing fierce objections from Democrats, the first time in U.S. history a nominee will be voted on so close to a presidenti­al election, with early voting already underway in half the states.

Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois said the reason for the quick confirmati­on of Trump’s nominee is clear: “He wants that 9th person to be his nominee.”

At a campaign stop Wednesday in Ohio, Biden said it was “interestin­g” that the Senate found time for a hearing on the Supreme Court nomination but “no time” to work on additional legislatio­n to help Americans during the COVID-19 crisis.

Biden says the winner of the presidency should choose the nominee to fill the vacancy for the seat held by Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died last month at 87.

But without the votes to stop her confirmati­on, Democrats want Barrett to recuse herself from election cases. Veteran GOP election

lawyer the linking president’s his Ben nominee Ginsberg comment “to said his own personal election puts Republican senators in an uncomforta­ble position.”

A conservati­ve judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit, Barrett is giving no indication she would sit out election cases that come before the court, as some Democrats want.

Instead, she said she would recuse herself in cases in which her husband and sister, both practicing attorneys, had participat­ed, as well as cases involving her alma mater Notre Dame University, according to filings to the Senate Judiciary Committee ahead of her confirmati­on hearings.

Barrett also indicated no one at the White House or the campaign had any discussion­s with her seeking assurances of her views on any legal issues, according to theber.nearly70-pagefiling.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said Wednesday it’s “ridiculous” to suggest Barrett should recuse herself from election cases. Democrats “are grasping at straws,” he said.

“She has given nobody at the White House any hints or any assurances about any kinds of cases, real of hyposaid McConnell, thetical,” R-Ky. The Senate is racing to confirm Barrett to fill the nine-justice court at an unusually quick pace. Hearings set to begin Oct. 12 at the Judiciary Committee, and a full vote in the Senate planned for the end of OctoHouse Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on MSNBC that Trump’s comments suggest “he wants to cause chaos, take it to the courts.” Democrats are confrontin­g the limits of their power as they fight against the nomination. As Barrett conducts the traditiona­l meet-and-greet sessions

with senators, some Democrats have said they won’t meet with her.

With Republican­s holding a 53-47 Senate majority, and just two GOP senators opposing a quick vote, Barrett appears to have enough support for confirmati­on.

Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York acknowledg­ed it will be an “uphill fight” to stop Trump’s nominee. But he said Americans are on Democrats’ side in preferring to wait until after the election so the winner can choose the next justice. He is among those refusing to meet with Barrett, calling the process “illegitima­te,”

and said her conservati­ve views on health care, abortion and other issues are “far outside” the mainstream.

Unable to block Trump’s pick on their own, Democrats are arguing that Barrett’s nomination threatens the protection­s of the Affordable Care Act. The court will hear a case challengin­g the constituti­onality of President Barack Obama’s health care law just after the election.

“This is not a joke to the American people,” Schumer said Wednesday. “This is not a joke to the 20 million Americans who could lose their health insurance if the ACA is struck down.”

 ?? SARAH SILBIGER/AP ?? Judge Amy Coney Barrett met with senators on Wednesday on Capitol Hill in Washington. Hearings for the Supreme Court nominee to replace Ruth Bader Ginsburg begin Oct. 12.
SARAH SILBIGER/AP Judge Amy Coney Barrett met with senators on Wednesday on Capitol Hill in Washington. Hearings for the Supreme Court nominee to replace Ruth Bader Ginsburg begin Oct. 12.

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