Sentinel & Enterprise

Partisan poppycock does not trump the US Constituti­on

- By Jacob Sullum Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine.

The process for filling a Supreme Court vacancy is straightfo­rward: The president chooses a new justice “with the advice and consent of the Senate.” Any other conditions, including those imagined by Republican­s in 2016 or by Democrats now, are nothing but self-serving nonsense.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., who has promised a vote on President Donald Trump’s nominee to replace Ruth Bader Ginsburg by the end of the year, has been accused of forsaking the supposed norm he defended in 2016, when he blocked considerat­ion of Merrick Garland, Barack Obama’s choice to replace Antonin Scalia. Yet, McConnell’s position now is arguably consistent with the one he took then. That does not mean it makes any sense.

While most Democrats and some Republican­s remember McConnell as saying the Senate should not consider a Supreme Court nomination in a presidenti­al election year, his stance was more ambiguous. He also said a president should not be allowed to fill a vacancy close to such an election when the Senate is controlled by the other party.

“Who ought to make the decision, a lame-duck president on the way out the door, or the president we’re in the process of electing right now?” McConnell asked on CNN four days after Garland’s nomination. “What is the tradition?”

McConnell cited two purported traditions. “It’s been 80 years — 80 — since a vacancy created in a presidenti­al election year was filled,” he said. “You have to go back to 1888, Grover Cleveland in the White House, to find the last time a vacancy created in a presidenti­al year was filled by a Senate of a different party from the president.”

McConnell made similar comments on three other Sunday talk shows that day. “Since the 1880s,” he said last Friday, “no Senate has confirmed an opposite-party president’s Supreme Court nominee in a presidenti­al election year.”

That’s true only if you don’t count Anthony Kennedy’s confirmati­on in 1988. And Dwight Eisenhower, a Republican, picked William Brennan for a recess appointmen­t to the Supreme Court shortly before the 1956 presidenti­al election, when Democrats controlled the Senate.

Eisenhower’s decision suggests the “tradition” emphasized by McConnell was more historical happenstan­ce than venerated norm. The broader rule that Democrats are suddenly keen to defend — no new justices when voters are about to pick a president — was violated by William Taft, Woodrow Wilson, Herbert Hoover, Franklin

Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan, all of whom nominated justices who were confirmed in presidenti­al election years.

History aside, what can be said in favor of the modified “McConnell Rule” or the broader version that Democrats are now advocating in their eagerness to prevent Trump from picking a third justice? Both sides claim they are defending democracy. According to McConnell, things are different now. “Americans re-elected our majority in 2016 and expanded it in 2018 because we pledged to work with President Trump and support his agenda.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States