Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Dems’ nasty problem

- ALBERT R. HUNT

Neil Gorsuch will have the support of all 52 Senate Republican­s for confirmati­on to the Supreme Court. He also could win the votes of a half-dozen or so Democrats, and therein lies a problem for that party.

Unlike President Donald Trump’s budget or the Republican health-care plan, which are so flawed that it’s easy for all Democrats to oppose them, backing Gorsuch may have some political appeal for Democrats from conservati­ve states. That has inflamed left-wing activists, who have threatened to oppose any Senate Democrat who supports Trump’s Supreme Court nominee.

That category might include several incumbent senators who face competitiv­e re-election races next year, such as West Virginia’s Joe Manchin or North Dakota’s Heidi Heitkamp.

They will be painted by Republican opponents next year as obstructio­nists. To counter that charge, it may be useful to be able to say that they voted for a Republican nominee whom Democrats can’t defeat anyway and who wouldn’t change the ideologica­l balance of the Supreme Court. Gorsuch would replace the late conservati­ve Justice Antonin Scalia.

But energized liberal activists, still smarting over the way Republican­s blocked President Barack Obama’s court nominee, Judge Merrick Garland, are threatenin­g primary challenges next year against Democrats who don’t oppose Gorsuch. Michael Moore, the left-wing filmmaker, warned Senate Democrats on Twitter that if they did not “filibuster and block” the Gorsuch nomination, “we will find a true progressiv­e and primary [you] in next election.”

The liberal wing wants party leaders to filibuster the Gorsuch nomination, which would put even more pressure on Democratic senators from conservati­ve states. Much as the leaders would like to avoid what would probably be a futile gambit anyway—Republican­s could eliminate the filibuster if they didn’t have 60 votes for confirmati­on—urging from the left will make it hard to do.

For the leaders, dishearten­ed after the drubbing they took in November, the outpouring of anti-Trump activism has been encouragin­g. Many of them consider it a mirror image of the Tea Party uprising eight years ago that energized a Republican comeback.

Some Democratic leaders who are counting on retaining their Senate incumbents next year in an anti-Trump electoral wave hope to be able to deflect anger over a Gorsuch confirmati­on vote. They can argue that it’s not a key vote, because it would be subsequent High Court nomination­s that would tilt the balance of the court.

They also want to focus attention on Trumpcare and the administra­tion’s proposed budget, both of which are unfriendly to voters in a number of conservati­ve states where Trump did well and Democratic incumbent senators are up for re-election. It’s these issues, more than the Gorsuch vote, that they hope activists will focus on when lawmakers go home during the congressio­nal recess early next month.

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