Cape Breton Post

Panel approves Barrett

- RICHARD COWAN REUTERS

WASHINGTON — The Republican-led U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee approved President Donald Trump’s nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to a lifetime Supreme Court seat on Thursday, despite a Democratic boycott, clearing the way for a final Senate confirmati­on vote planned for Monday.

By a 12-0 vote, the panel approved Barrett with all Republican members voting yes and the 10 committee Democrats boycotting the meeting after calling the confirmati­on process a sham. With Trump’s fellow Republican­s holding a 53-47 Senate majority, Barrett’s confirmati­on appears certain.

Trump, who asked the Senate to confirm Barrett before the Nov. 3 U.S. election in which he is being challenged by Democrat Joe Biden, applauded the committee vote, writing on Twitter: “Big day for America!”

Barrett, 48, has been a federal appeals court judge since 2017 and previously was a legal scholar at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana. Her confirmati­on would give the top U.S. judicial body a 6-3 conservati­ve majority, including three justices named by Trump.

“The Senate majority is conducting the most rushed, the most partisan and the least legitimate process in the long history of Supreme

Court nomination­s,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer told reporters after the vote.

Judiciary Committee Chairman Lindsey Graham said the Democratic boycott was “their choice.”

“It will be my choice to vote the nominee out of committee. We’re not going to allow them to take over the committee,” Graham said.

The empty seats for the Democratic committee members had posters placed upon them bearing photograph­s of people who they argue would be hurt if the Affordable Care Act healthcare law, also known as Obamacare, is struck down as Trump has sought in a case to be argued before the justices on Nov. 10.

Barrett, nominated on Sept. 26 to succeed the late liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, has criticized previous rulings upholding Obamacare, but said during her confirmati­on hearing she has no agenda to invalidate the measure.

Democrats were incensed that Senate Republican­s moved forward with Barrett’s confirmati­on process so near an election after refusing in 2016 to allow the chamber to act on a Supreme Court nomination by Trump’s Democratic predecesso­r, Barack Obama, because it was an election year.

Schumer called the Republican hurry to confirm Barrett “a naked power grab” through a “sham vote,” arguing that Republican­s broke the committee’s own rules by approving the nomination without Democrats present.

No nominee to the Supreme Court has ever been confirmed by the Senate this close to a presidenti­al election. More than 45 million ballots already have been cast. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has planned a confirmati­on vote on the Senate floor on Monday.

Calling the committee vote “a groundbrea­king historic moment,” Graham said of Barrett: “The ‘law of Amy’ will not be applied to a case in controvers­y. It will be the law as written in the Constituti­on or by statute or whatever regulatory body she’s going to review. She will take her job on without agenda.”

A favorite of Christian conservati­ves, Barrett frustrated Committee Democrats during her confirmati­on hearing last week by sidesteppi­ng questions on abortion, presidenti­al powers, climate change, voting rights, Obamacare and other issues.

Trump has said he believes the Supreme Court will decide the election’s outcome and has made clear he wants Barrett on the bench for any election-related cases.

Republican­s are hoping Barrett’s confirmati­on can give a boost to incumbent senators in the party facing tough re-election fights, including Graham in South Carolina and Judiciary Committee members Joni Ernst in Iowa and Thom Tillis in North Carolina.

Some on the left have floated the idea of expanding the number of justices - fixed by federal law at nine — if Biden wins to counter the court’s rightward drift in light of the actions of Senate Republican­s in 2016 and now. Republican­s have decried the idea as “courtpacki­ng.”

Biden told the CBS program “60 Minutes” that if elected he would create a bipartisan commission of constituti­onal scholars to examine reforms for the “out of whack” federal judiciary, saying there could be various alternativ­es to consider besides expanding the Supreme Court.

Graham said expanding the number of justices after presidenti­al elections would mark “the end of the independen­ce of the court.”

 ?? CAROLINE BREHMAN • POOL VIA REUTERS ?? Posters sit in the seats of Democratic senators on the Senate Judiciary Committee as they boycott the committee vote on Amy Coney Barrett to serve as an associate justice on the Supreme Court of the United States, during a Senate Judiciary Committee Executive Business meeting in Washington on Thursday.
CAROLINE BREHMAN • POOL VIA REUTERS Posters sit in the seats of Democratic senators on the Senate Judiciary Committee as they boycott the committee vote on Amy Coney Barrett to serve as an associate justice on the Supreme Court of the United States, during a Senate Judiciary Committee Executive Business meeting in Washington on Thursday.
 ?? REUTERS ?? Amy Coney Barrett
REUTERS Amy Coney Barrett

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada