The Oklahoman

Can Trump, McConnell get through the 4 steps to seat a justice in 6 weeks?

- By Caren Morrison

United States Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bad er Ginsburg died on Sept. 18, thrusting the acrimoniou­s struggle for control of the Supreme Court into public view.

President Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have already vowed to nominate and confirm a replacemen­t for the 87-year-old justice and women's rights icon.

This contradict­s the justificat­ion the Republican­controlled Senate used when they refused to consider t he nomination of Merrick Garland, President Barack Obama's pick for the Court after t he death of Antonin Scalia in February 2016.

Garland, a moderate judge on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, was nominated in March 2016, but McConnell balked on the basis that it was an election year.

“The American people are about to weigh in on who is going to be the president,” said McConnell in March 2016. “And that's the person, whoever that may be, who ought to be making this appointmen­t.”

The 2020 presidenti­al election was just 46 days away on the day of Bader Ginsburg's death, but McConnell has apparently abandoned such considerat­ions this time around. Trump tweeted on Sept. 19 that he would nominate a replacemen­t “without delay.”

Since the1990s, the Supreme Court has increasing­ly split 5-4 along ideologica­l lines on many important cases, including decisions on voting rights, affirmativ­e action, gay marriage, the Affordable Care Act, gerrymande­ring and gun rights.

Being able to replace a reliable liberal voice on the Court with a conservati­ve justice would en trench a 6-3 tilt towards the right for years. There is bound to be vehement opposition from the Democrats.

However the politics play out, there is a process for Supreme Court nomination­s and confirmati­ons. Here are the four steps:

Step 1: The presidenti­al pick

The first thing to know is that the Constituti­on of the United States gives the power of nomination to the president.

Article II, section 2 provides that the president “shall nominate, and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint …judge soft he Supreme Court.”

By law, so long as he is in the White House, President Trump can nominate whomever he wants to replace Justice Ginsburg. Appointmen­t is really a three- step process: nomination (by the president), confirmati­on (by the Senate), and appointmen­t (by the president again).

Things can get tricky somewhere between nomination and confirmati­on. But changes made in the Senate–in particular, the rule change in 2017 that allows a Supreme Court Justice to be confirmed with 51 votes, instead of 60 – are likely to smooth the way considerab­ly.

Step 2: The Senate Judiciary Committee

Once the president has made a choice, the nomination is referred to the United States Senate.

Since the early 19th century, this has meant that the nomination will first be considered by a smaller group within the Senate, the Senate Judiciary Committee. The only exception was in 2016, when the Judiciary Committee refused to consider President Obama's nomination of Judge Garland.

The Judiciary Committee currently has 22 members – 12 Republican­s and 10 Democrats – and has a three-step process of its own.

First, it conduct san investigat­ion into the nominee' s background. This process can take 30 to 45 days, but it's easy to imagine it going a lot faster.

Second, the committee holds a public hearing, in which the nominee is questioned and may give testimony about everything from her judicial philosophy to her stand on abortion. This may give voters a chance to see the Democratic vice presidenti­al nominee, K am ala Harris, who also serves on the Judiciary Committee, display her prosecutor­ial skills during questionin­g of the nominee.

Finally, the committee will report i ts recommenda­tion to the full Senate as either favorable, negative, or no recommenda­tion.

The 10 Democratic members of the committee have already sent a letter to the chairman, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, calling on him to “state unequivoca­lly and publicly that you will not consider any nominee to fill Justice Ginsburg's seat until after the next President is inaugurate­d.”

But that seems highly unlikely, given Graham's new statements backtracki­ng from his 2018 assertions that he would not want a confirmati­on vote on a Supreme Court appointmen­t in a presidenti­al election year.

“I want you to use my words against me ,” said Graham at the time ,“[ if] 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.”

Once the public hearin gs have concluded, if the Democrats want to buy time, they can delay the committee vote for a week. But after that, it's on to the main floor of the Senate.

So let's move on to the next stage, shall we?

Step 3: The full Senate

There are 100 senators in the United States Senate – two for each state. Currently, the Senate is majority Republican, with 53 Republican­s, 45 Democrats and two Independen­ts, who both caucus with the Democrats.

While the Senate has historical­ly followed rules so arcane and incomprehe­nsible that otherwise reasonable writers freely refer to them as “insane,” they can now be changed by a simple majority vote, which simplifies matters for the majority party considerab­ly.

If the motion that the nomination be considered is made during a special “executive” session of the Senate, then the motion itself is debatable and can be blocked by filibuster – that movie-ready delay tactic in which which a senator recites Shakespear­e, Dr. Seuss or recipes for fried oysters until everyone gives up and goes home.

But closing debate on the motion so that the Senate could move on to a vote no longer requires a super majority of 60 votes, just a bare 51- Senator majority. So filibuster­ing is likely to be about as effective as a paper hammer.

After that, the Democrats can insist on a minimum of 30 hours of debate, and then, they will be out of options to delay or stop a confirmati­on vote.

Step 4: The vote

The vote to confirm requires a simple majority of the senators present and voting. If the nominee i s confirmed, t he secretary of the Senate will t r ansmit t he confirmati­on vote to the president.

The president then will sign a commission appointing the person to the Supreme Court.

The timing

The real question is whether all of this can be accomplish­ed before the election on Nov. 3, or if it will roll over into the lame-duck session of Congress after the election.

Either way it will be a first. The Senate has never filled a Supreme Court vacancy this close to a presidenti­al election. The closest time in the past was when Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes resigned from the Court to run for president. And that was 150 days before the election.

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