New York Daily News

Neil in the coffin Dems blast GOP’s ‘ripoff justice’ for decision

- BY DENIS SLATTERY

Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch was the tiebreakin­g vote in the Trump travel ban case — enraging Democrats who maintain he shouldn't be on the court at all.

Opponents of the ruling railed against the conservati­ve judge's appointmen­t as an example of GOP obstructio­n — while Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell took a victory lap.

“It just proves one thing,” Rep. Keith Ellison (D-Minn.) told CNN. “If you steal and ripoff a Supreme Court justice (seat), then you can try to jam any kind of nasty, racist, ugly policy you can down the throats of the American people … That's what I feel.”

Ellison painted Gorsuch as illegitima­te.

“Gorsuch really should not be on the Supreme Court,” he said. “He may be there, but he's not there properly. You know, you can do that. You can jam in a Supreme Court by denying a sitting President their right to appoint the Supreme Court justice. That is exactly what happened, and Gorsuch has just done what his paymasters sent him there to do. It's a shame.”

McConnell's camp, meanwhile, tweeted a throwback photo of the smiling senator shaking the hand of the man he helped put on the bench.

It was the Senate GOP leader who blocked President Barack Obama from filling the vacancy left after Justice Antonin Scalia's death in February 2016.

Scalia's seat remained vacant for more than a year as McConnell stonewalle­d Merrick Garland, Obama's pick for the high court. McConnell prevented the Senate from even holding committee hearings for Garland, arguing he wasn't entitled to one because Obama was a lame duck.

After Trump took office and nominated then-federal appeals court Judge Gorsuch, McConnell amended Senate rules that required 60 votes to break a filibuster on Supreme Court nomination­s, allowing his pick to move forward and give conservati­ves the majority in the nation's highest court.

Critics on Tuesday blasted Republican­s for tipping the scales of justice.

“Remember when everyone was civil and allowed Mitch McConnell to steal a Supreme Court seat? How'd that work out?” tweeted television producer Bill Prady.

Paul Musgrave, an assistant professor at University of Massachuse­tts-Amherst, folded in recent conversati­ons about civility into his critique.

“If I ran a restaurant and Mitch McConnell asked to be seated, I'd tell him to wait until after the next presidenti­al election,” he wrote.

 ?? AP ?? Outrage over Supreme Court travel ban decision centers on Justice Neil Gorsuch and GOP’s successful efforts to block Obama appointee.
AP Outrage over Supreme Court travel ban decision centers on Justice Neil Gorsuch and GOP’s successful efforts to block Obama appointee.
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