Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Baldwin flops on court nominees

- ERIC LITKE Eric Litke is a reporter for the USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin and a contributo­r to PolitiFact Wisconsin. He can be reache by email at elitke@gannett.com.

Wisconsin’s Tammy Baldwin was one of many U.S. senators who abruptly switched from offense to defense in the wake of President Donald Trump’s inaugurati­on.

The contrast has been particular­ly sharp when it comes to Supreme Court nominees.

Baldwin, a Democrat, was a vocal supporter of Merrick Garland, President Barack Obama’s nominee, but was quick to push back against Trump’s nomination of Neil Gorsuch.

When Garland was nominated in March, Republican­s moved to block his nomination, which prompted the ire of Democrats.

Baldwin declared: “It’s the constituti­onal duty of the president to select a Supreme Court nominee, and the Senate has a responsibi­lity to give that nominee a fair considerat­ion with a timely hearing and a timely vote.”

Baldwin also tweeted in May that Garland deserved “an up or down vote,” adding the hashtag #doyourjob.

Since the Republican-led Senate never held a confirmati­on hearing or vote for Garland, the seat remained open for Trump to fill. He announced Gorsuch as that pick Jan. 31.

Two days later, Baldwin told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel that she would support a filibuster to block the Gorsuch nomination, would vote against the Senate action required to block a filibuster and would vote against Gorsuch if he made it to a final vote.

Is that consistent with her position on Garland’s nomination that the Senate should vote for a nominee in a timely manner?

We thought that was a question for the Flip-O-Meter, which examines whether a politician

has been consistent on an issue.

Not all votes created equal

The Garland and Gorsuch nomination­s came up in dramatical­ly different contexts — one a nominee late in a lame duck presidency, the other immediatel­y after a highly divisive campaign.

Baldwin — like most other senators — switched sides between the two nominees.

In an email, Baldwin spokesman John Kraus said the senator’s position is consistent because she supported a hearing, a committee vote and a floor vote for both nominees.

But the voting claim isn’t quite that simple.

Figuring this out means diving into Senate rules of procedure.

When the minority party filibuster­s an initiative, as many Democrats have pledged to do with the Gorsuch nomination, the majority party can force a vote through a procedure called cloture. This effectivel­y ends the filibuster by limiting the debate to 30 more hours.

For cloture to pass, it must be supported by 60 of the 100 senators. That creates a higher threshold for nomination.

Gorsuch would otherwise need only a majority to be approved — and the Republican­s hold that majority. Cloture is unusual but not unpreceden­ted, having been used four times for Supreme Court nominees since 1968.

Kraus said Baldwin is consistent because she “supports” a cloture vote, even though she would vote against Gorsuch in that vote.

But cloture is a maneuver executed by the majority party (Republican­s in this case), so Baldwin’s “support” for that is both unnecessar­y and irrelevant.

(Cloture and the 60-vote threshold itself could also become irrelevant if Republican­s choose to use what has been termed the “nuclear option,” a parliament­ary procedure by which they can use majority votes to override the requiremen­t for a supermajor­ity, effectivel­y overcoming a filibuster with just 51 votes. Democrats did this to push through Obama’s lower court appointmen­ts in 2013, but it hasn’t been used for a Supreme Court nominee.)

Baldwin said during the Garland process the Senate should give him “fair considerat­ion,” and she pledged the same thing to Gorsuch in a statement issued the day of his nomination.

Two days later, she announced plans to vote against Gorsuch, before meeting with him or participat­ing in any hearing process.

Gov. Scott Walker labeled Baldwin a hypocrite on Twitter for telling others to meet with Garland but deciding on Gorsuch before meeting with him.

But Kraus said Baldwin had reviewed the background­s and

records of Gorsuch and other finalists before Trump’s announceme­nt.

He said that allowed time to give fair considerat­ion before deciding she would oppose Gorsuch due to a “record of ruling against disabled students, against workers and against women’s reproducti­ve health care.”

Our rating

When Baldwin’s party put forth a Supreme Court nominee, she advocated for a “timely vote” and an “up or down vote.” A common-sense interpreta­tion is that she wanted a final nomination vote, where passing meant being approved by the Senate.

But now that Baldwin is in the minority and facing a Republican nominee, she is supporting a filibuster that creates a roadblock to reaching that final vote. Her claim to “support” a cloture vote makes no sense since that isn’t up to her party — cloture would be pushed by Republican­s and is needed only if Baldwin and other Democrats pursue a filibuster.

And that cloture vote would only advance the process, not result in a final decision on Gorsuch.

That’s what we call a Full Flop.

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