Democrats’ last-ditch efforts fail
Barrett confirmation process plows ahead at breakneck clip
WASHINGTON — The Senate is poised for a rare weekend session as Republicans race to put Amy Coney Barrett on the Supreme Court and cement a conservative majority before Election Day despite Democratic efforts to stall President Donald Trump’s nominee.
Democrats mounted time-consuming procedural hurdles Friday, but the party has no realistic chance of stopping Barrett’s advance in the Republican-controlled chamber.
Barrett, a federal appeals court judge, is expected to be confirmed Monday and quickly join the court.
Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer of New York warned Republicans that they were making a “colossal and historic mistake.”
Republicans appeared unmoved. In a lengthy speech, Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell praised Barrett as an “extraordinary” nominee and defended her quick confirmation.
“We will give this nominee the vote she deserves no later than Monday,” he said.
Barrett, 48, presented herself in public testimony before the
Senate Judiciary Committee as a neutral arbiter of cases on abortion, the Affordable Care Act and presidential power, issues soon confronting the court. At one point she said that “it’s not the law of Amy.”
Trump said this week that he is hopeful the Supreme Court will undo the health law when the justices take up a challenge Nov. 10, the week after the election.
Schumer called the fast-track confirmation process the “least legitimate process in the country’s history” as he forced procedural steps, including an unusual private Senate session, in hopes of changing Republicans’ minds.
But Republicans quickly convened then ended the closed-door meeting, pushing forward. Sen. John Cornyn, R-texas, dismissed the stall tactics as “frivolous.”
At the start of Trump’s presidency, Mcconnell engineered a Senate rules change to allow confirmation by a majority of the 100 senators rather than the 60-vote threshold traditionally needed to advance high court nominees over objections.
With a 53-47 GOP majority, Barrett’s confirmation is almost certain.
Most Republicans are supporting Barrett’s confirmation. Only Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine has said she won’t vote for a nominee so close to the presidential election.
Another, Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-alaska, early on said she would prefer not to vote ahead of the election.
But in a statement Thursday, Murkowski said that now that the process is moving forward, the decision on whether to vote to confirm Barrett is one “each senator has to make on their own.”
Republicans on the Judiciary Committee powered Barrett’s nomination forward Thursday despite a boycott of the vote by Democrats.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, the committee chairman, acknowledged the partisan nature of the proceedings but said he could not live with himself if the Senate failed to confirm someone he said is such an exceptional nominee.
Graham, R-S.C., called Barrett a “role model” for conservative women and for people with strongly held religious beliefs.