Sentinel & Enterprise

The left simply wants a change in regime

- By Rich Lowry Rich Lowry is on Twitter @RichLowry (c) 2020 by King Features Syndicate

Constituti­onal revolution is going mainstream.

After delivering lectures about political norms for the entirety of the Trump era — often with good cause — much of the left is now threatenin­g to kneecap an important institutio­n of American government on a partisan vote in an act of ideologica­l vengeance.

If the Republican Senate confirms a Trump appointee to fill Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Supreme Court seat right before or after the election, progressiv­es say Democrats, if they sweep in November, should retaliate by packing the Supreme Court. This would do vastly more damage to the governing structure of the country than anything that President Donald Trump has said or done, but respectabl­e center-left outlets like The New Yorker and Vox have run pieces advocating it and Democratic leaders are making fraught “all options on the table” statements.

None of this comes out of the blue. The left is disenchant­ed with our country, and especially its governing institutio­ns, which it believes are shot through with racism and deeply undemocrat­ic. Democrats have gone from assuming a few years ago that they have a permanent majority to assuming that they can’t possibly win under such a rigged system.

They no longer want to live under a government that checks majoritari­an passions, recognizes the importance of states in our federal system and features a Supreme Court that is supposed to render independen­t judgments based on the law and the Constituti­on. All of this, once a matter of basic civics, is now for suckers.

Before its new fashion, court-packing used to be notorious, the ill-considered move that FDR couldn’t see through even at the height of his power.

For good reason. To add a bunch of new seats to the Supreme Court explicitly so a Democratic president could fill them would radically diminish the Court’s standing. It would invite Republican­s to counter with their own bout of court-packing when they again return to power. The Court would become merely a partisan plaything and essentiall­y an adjunct to the legislativ­e branch — all that would stay the same about the institutio­n would be the black robes.

And for what? To compensate for a duly elected Republican Senate acting on its prerogativ­es to block one Supreme Court nominee (Obama nominee Merrick Garland) and potentiall­y confirm another ( Trump’s nominee to fill the RBG seat).

The Senate itself is now an affront because small states get equal representa­tion with large states. Never mind that this arrangemen­t was at the center of the deal that gave us the Constituti­on. Never mind that the Constituti­on stipulates that this provision is unamendabl­e. Never mind that prior to 2014 the Democrats controlled the Senate and didn’t seem overly concerned about the body’s alleged lack of legitimacy.

The fact is that senators are chosen in democratic elections in their respective states, and it’s not a failing of our constituti­onal design that Democrats have made themselves so hateful to rural voters that they despair of reliably holding the Senate going forward. As a corrective, they are threatenin­g to eliminate the filibuster to allow them to add Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico as states to boost their number of senators, a maneuver that smacks of pre-Civil War era power politics.

All of this talk is an awkward fit for Joe Biden’s candidacy. We are told that Biden is an inoffensiv­e institutio­nalist and committed moderate, but if Republican­s defy his wishes on the RBG seat, he will respond by blessing outlandish changes to our system passed by narrow majorities.

And, by the way, Biden better win. Shadi Hamid of The Atlantic wrote a piece expressing his worry “that Trump will win reelection and Democrats and others on the left will be unwilling, even unable, to accept the result.” He raises the possibilit­y of “mass unrest and political violence across American cities.”

Accepting the result of an election is a pretty important norm — unless you’ve convinced yourself you live under a hideously undemocrat­ic regime with no legitimacy.

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