Marin Independent Journal

Amy Coney Barrett advances despite boycott

- By Nicholas Fandos

WASHINGTON » The Senate Judiciary Committee voted Thursday to advance President Donald Trump’s nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to the Supreme Court, with majority Republican­s skirting the panel’s rules to recommend her confirmati­on as Democrats boycotted the session in protest.

The lopsided 12-0 outcome set up a vote by the full Senate to confirm Barrett on Monday, a month to the day after Trump nominated her to fill the seat vacated by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg. If all goes according to plan, Trump and his party would win a coveted achievemen­t just eight days before the election.

“This is whywe all run,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, R- S.C., chairman of the committee, said just before the vote. “It’s moments like this that make everything you go through matter.”

Barrett, a 48-year-old appeals court judge who has styled herself in the mold of former Justice Antonin Scalia, promises to shift the court meaningful­ly to the right, entrenchin­g a 6-3 conservati­ve majority. Her presence will likely shape American society for decades to come, with potentiall­y sweeping implicatio­ns for corporate power and the environmen­t, abortion rights and gay rights, and a wide range of other policy issues including health care access, gun safety and religious freedom.

Democrats, livid over the extraordin­arily speedy process, spurned the committee vote altogether and forced Republican­s to break their own rules to muscle through the nomination. Without the votes to block the judge in either the committee or the full Senate, though, their ac

tion was purely symbolic.

Democrats have sharply opposed Barrett on policy grounds. But their goal Thursdaywa­s to tarnish the legitimacy of her confirmati­on, arguing that Republican­s had no right to fill the seat vacated just over a month ago by the death of Ginsburg, when millions of Americans were already voting.

They were particular­ly angry that Republican­s had reversed themselves since 2016, when they refused to consider President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee, citing the election nine months later.

“Democrats will not lend a single ounce of legitimacy to this sham vote in the Judiciary Committee,” Sen. Chuck Schumer, D- N.Y., the minority leader, said at a news conference on the steps of the Capitol, where he raised his voice to be heard over the cries of protesters opposed to the nomination.

“We are voting with our feet. We are standing together. And we are standing against this mad rush to jam through a Supreme Court nomination just days, days before an election,”

Schumer said.

Inside the hearing room where the vote unfolded, Democrats’ empty chairs held large posters of Americans whose health care coverage they argued could evaporate if Trump’s nominee were to side with a conservati­ve majority on the Supreme Court to strike down the Affordable Care Act when it hears a Republican challenge to the law next month.

Republican­s proceeded anyway with little hesitation, even though it meant tossing aside Judiciary Committee rules that require members of the minority party be present to conduct official business. Graham decided that broader Senate rules that require only a simple majority of all committee members be present were sufficient. ( The committee has taken that approach several

times in the past, though never for a Supreme Court nominee.)

“I regret that we could not do it the normal way,” Graham said, “but what I don’t regret is reporting her out of committee.”

If anything, Democrats’ absence after a week of heated sparring during Barrett’s confirmati­on hearings made the proceeding Thursday quieter and faster than it otherwise would have been. It took just 12 minutes after the committee gaveled into session in a cavernous Senate hearing room — with senators and staff seated far apart as a precaution against the spread of the coronaviru­s — to complete the vote.

Republican­s dismissed the Democrats’ boycott as a childish stunt.

“This is all for show,” said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas. “This is to try to capture a narrative which is simply false and to cover up what they are really about.”

Republican­s regard the chance to install Trump’s third Supreme Court justice as perhaps themost significan­t accomplish­ment of his presidency. And they hope the elevation of Barrett will galvanize conservati­ve voters before the election.

“She was arguably the most impressive judicial nominee I’ve ever seen in these hearings, and I have been watching them intently since I was a kid,” said Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah.

He boasted that Democrats had “failed to lay a glove on Judge Barrett” in her confirmati­on hearings and argued that contrary to their claims, she would help depolitici­ze a court that liberals have tried to commandeer to further their policy agenda.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Senate Judiciary Committee ranking member Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., speaks during a news conference Thursday in Washington after boycotting the vote by the Republican-led panel to advance the nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to sit on the Supreme Court.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Senate Judiciary Committee ranking member Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., speaks during a news conference Thursday in Washington after boycotting the vote by the Republican-led panel to advance the nomination of Judge Amy Coney Barrett to sit on the Supreme Court.

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