San Antonio Express-News

Medalists in the GOP Irritation Olympics

- By Gail Collins @gailcollin­s

So which Senate Republican do you find most irritating? Lindsey Graham, Mitch McConnell or Mitt Romney?

I know there are lots of other contenders, but let’s stick with the men of the moment — the three stars of the Supreme Court follies! All famous for keeping their word except when it involves, you know, something they really want.

All are currently supporting Donald Trump’s plan to get a new Supreme Court justice in place before the election. That’s just a little over a month, and far less time than it would normally take Congress to modify the rules on mackerel importatio­n.

Of course, they all found it totally, deeply unacceptab­le when Barack Obama nominated a Supreme Court justice during his last year in office. McConnell, in fact, hated the idea of a Democratic president nominating judges at all. He dragged his feet so successful­ly that when Trump entered the White House, McConnell was able to go into a legislativ­e closet somewhere and gift him with 105 moldering judicial vacancies. Probably the greatest achievemen­t of the Senate majority leader’s career. Nothing Mitch cares about more than keeping Democrats off the court benches.

McConnell’s absolute pinnacle was keeping Merrick Garland off the Supreme Court. Who did Obama think he was, trying to put a nominee on the highest court of the land less than a year before he was scheduled to leave office? Totally unacceptab­le.

Yeah, said Graham and Romney. Totally unacceptab­le. And in no way related to Trump’s decision to nominate a replacemen­t for Ruth Bader Ginsburg as he was racing toward the end of his re-election campaign.

Romney likes to present himself as the righteous, stiff-spined defender of bipartisan principles. It is possible some of this backbone has to do with the fact that he is a very wealthy 73-yearold with a very safe Senate seat. But everybody remembers how he dared stand up as the only Republican senator voting to convict Trump on an impeachmen­t charge.

He argued then that Trump lacked the moral stature necessary to run the government. However, he decided this week that Trump had more than enough spiritual wisdom to nominate a judge-for-life for the most critical court in the nation.

In the uproar that followed, Romney seemed very surprised that anybody was questionin­g his judgment. After all, he was a former presidenti­al nominee himself with terrific conservati­ve creds, not to mention a terrific record for consistenc­y.

Or would you prefer to present the blue ribbon for irritation to Lindsey Graham? He’s chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, so we’ll probably see a whole lot of him during this court appointmen­t fight. Which is wonderful, since I know there is nothing you like better than listening to Graham sound sincere.

“I want you to use my words against me. If there’s a Republican president in 2016 and a vacancy occurs in the last year of the first term, you can say Lindsey Graham said let’s let the next president, whoever it might be, make that nomination,” he said when he was trying to help McConnell ditch Garland.

Well, sure. All together now: Lindsey Graham said let the next president make the Supreme Court nomination. Until ... he didn’t.

Graham is one of Trump’s regular golfing partners. He has a long history of hanging out with the top dogs — he was a permanent fixture on John McCain’s campaign bus when McCain ran for president in 2008. He visited the Obama White House a lot. His initial relationsh­ip with Trump was rather rocky — Graham, who made a deeply unsuccessf­ul try for the White House himself in 2016, called the future president a “race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot.”

He also said that if Trump got the Republican nomination, “we will get destroyed ... and we will deserve it.”

And, hey, he said Joe Biden was “as good a man as God ever created.”

But who’s keeping track? Well, Graham is running for re-election against Democrat Jaime Harrison, and apparently he now believes his winning strategy is hanging on to Trump for dear life. There’s speculatio­n the Supreme Court dust-up might actually help him generate a little more enthusiasm. Maybe. (The Cook Political Report, which rates Senate races, recently downgraded Graham’s reelection chances from “likely” to “leaning.”)

But the little things mean a lot, and Graham is really good at tiptoeing carefully around White House minefields. Remember, when Trump was reported to have referred to American war dead as “losers,” Graham’s response was that he didn’t believe the president really said it. God knows Trump’s not the kind of guy to randomly blurt out weird or offensive comments.

And Romney has been dodging questions about how he will vote if the Senate does take up Trump’s new Supreme Court nominee. Which is certainly a smart approach, given the fact that for all we know, Trump could be planning to put up Roger Stone.

 ??  ?? Look to see a lot of Sen. Lindsey Graham during this court fight. Nothing beats listening to him sound sincere.
Look to see a lot of Sen. Lindsey Graham during this court fight. Nothing beats listening to him sound sincere.
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