Senate Democrats fight to block high court pick
WASHINGTON — Senate Democrats, facing an uphill struggle to reject the nomination of Judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court, opened a broad attack Tuesday, painting him as an arch-conservative who would roll back abortion rights, undo health care protections, ease gun restrictions and protect President Donald Trump against the threat of impeachment.
But the Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, excoriated Democrats for engaging in what he called “cheap political fearmongering,” and for declaring their opposition to Kavanaugh before his nomination was announced.
“They wrote statements of opposition only to fill in the name later,” the ordinarily staid McConnell said, growing exercised as he delivered his customary morning remarks on the Senate floor. “Senate Democrats were on record opposing him before he’d even been named! Just fill in the name! Whoever it is, we’re against.”
And a key Republican swing vote, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, quickly signaled just how hard it will be for Democrats to pull any Republicans into the opposition. “When you look at the credentials that Judge Kavanaugh brings to the job, it will be very difficult for anyone to argue that he’s not qualified,” she told reporters.
As Kavanaugh arrived at the Capitol to meet with the Republican leader and the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, the committee’s Democrats and Democratic leader took to the Supreme Court steps to deliver a direct appeal to Americans to rise up in opposition to his nomination.
“If you are a young woman in America or care about a young woman in America, pay attention to this,” said Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif. “It will affect your life.”
Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut issued a specific plea to the survivors of the school shooting in Parkland, Fla.: “If you care about common sense gun violence protections, Judge Kavanaugh is your worst nightmare.”
Before Kavanaugh’s nomination Monday night, Democrats had centered their strategy on abortion rights and health care. But the judge has given them a new line of attack: a 1998 law review article that he wrote casting doubt on whether a president could be indicted — a theory that goes to the heart of the special counsel’s investigation of Trump.
“Whether the Constitution allows indictment of a sitting president is debatable,” the judge wrote then.
Sen. Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader, said Democrats would use confirmation hearings to drill down on those views.
“We knew with any of the 25 nominees that health care and women’s health, right to choose would be important,” Schumer said, referring to the list of potential candidates drawn up for Trump by conservative groups during the 2016 campaign. “But Kavanaugh brings a new prominence to the issue of executive power, because he is almost certainly the most hard right of all of the 25. He is almost certainly the one who would most yield to presidential power.”
Democrats are well aware that they will have a difficult time persuading the Senate to reject Kavanaugh. The judge is widely respected in Washington and legal circles, and has an Ivy League pedigree, much like Justice Neil Gorsuch, Trump’s first Supreme Court nominee. Gorsuch received the backing of three red-state Democrats — Heidi Heitkamp of North Dakota, Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Joe Donnelly of Indiana.
All three are facing tough reelection battles this year in states Trump won handily. None has given a hint of how they will vote on Kavanaugh, but they face an exceedingly difficult choice and will undoubtedly be under intense pressure at home.
Vice President Mike Pence appeared on a West Virginia radio program and expressed hope that Manchin would be among those voting to confirm Kavanaugh.
“At the end of the day, I truly do believe this will be a choice for Sen. Manchin — whether he’s going to stand with Chuck Schumer and liberals in Washington, D.C., who are prepared to oppose the most qualified, the most deserving nominee to the Supreme Court in the United States today,” Pence said.
Fresh off Trump’s announcement Monday night, Kavanaugh came to the Capitol on Tuesday to begin visiting with senators. Joined by Pence, he met with McConnell, who praised his selection.
Supporters of Kavanaugh were mobilizing as well. Leading social conservative political groups, like the Family Research Council, the Susan B. Anthony List, the Faith and Freedom Coalition, and Concerned Women for America, quickly praised Kavanaugh as a qualified pick and are rallying the anti-abortion grass roots to support his confirmation with ads, rallies and online campaigns.
Top anti-abortion evangelical and Catholic leaders were not invited to the White House on Monday evening.
But for now, any unease among the base is not likely to have any real operational effect. Conservative efforts to support the nominee emain the same no matter the pick, and attacks by Democrats on abortion are likely to only make it easier to energize the conservative grass roots.