Los Angeles Times

Barrett could help flip the Senate

- NICHOLAS GOLDBERG @ Nick_ Goldberg

So now it is official: The same Republican senators who in 2016 refused to consider Merrick Garland’s appointmen­t to the Supreme Court because, with eight months to go, it was supposedly too close to the presidenti­al election, have now confirmed Amy Coney Barrett with just eight days left before the election.

This is so unprincipl­ed, so inconsiste­nt and so cynical that it defies the imaginatio­n. It is the f lip- f lop of the century, undertaken by the Republican­s for one reason: Barrett’s confirmati­on ensures a conservati­ve majority on the high court for the foreseeabl­e future.

But here is one good thing that could come of this shameful episode. With millions of people still casting their votes before Nov. 3, perhaps the Barrett confirmati­on will open Americans’ eyes, once and for all, and show them who they’re dealing with. Perhaps it will persuade them to reject the radical and hypocritic­al Senate Republican­s at the polls.

Barrett’s confirmati­on, after all, is only one of many irresponsi­ble moves by the Senate majority, led by the craven Mitch McConnell ( R- Ky.), who long ago threw his lot in with President Trump. In recent years, he and his caucus have grown not just more extreme in their ideology but more unscrupulo­us in their tactics.

Not only did they refuse a hearing to Garland ( giving that seat instead to Trump appointee Neil M. Gorsuch), but not long after, McConnell and his colleagues rammed Brett M. Kavanaugh’s nomination through without a comprehens­ive investigat­ion of the sexual assault allegation­s against him.

The Senate majority also slow- walked the confirmati­on of lower court judges during the final years of the Obama administra­tion — and then sped them up when Trump came into office.

The Senate majority ignored evidence, disregarde­d facts and refused to hear additional witnesses before acquitting Trump in a half- baked impeachmen­t trial in February, thereby giving the imprimatur of the upper house to the president’s high crimes and misdemeano­rs.

Senate Republican­s have refused to stand up to Trump as he politicize­d every part of the government from the post office to the census to the Justice Department, and even as he turned the conduct of American foreign policy to his own political ends.

And they did virtually nothing to stop further Russian interferen­ce in American elections.

Norman Ornstein, a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, has identified some of the factors that have driven congressio­nal Republican­s to the right over the years and encouraged their take- no- prisoners approach to politics. He cites the no- tax pledge promulgate­d by conservati­ve activist Grover Norquist and the anti- Washington animus fostered by Newt Gingrich. There was the “Southern strategy” of Richard Nixon and Barry Goldwater to win white votes in the Southern states.

And there’s been the slow but steady disappeara­nce of liberal and moderate Republican­s.

In 2012, Ornstein, with Thomas E. Mann of the Brookings Institutio­n, called the GOP “ideologica­lly extreme, scornful of compromise; unmoved by convention­al understand­ing of facts, evidence and science.” Today, Ornstein says the problem is worse. “Now it’s not a party but a cult.”

The GOP today is the antiimmigr­ation party, the party of racial division and the party of Trump. It has squandered any reputation it may once have had for principled fiscal conservati­sm, presiding over costly and irresponsi­ble tax cuts designed to win votes. It largely rejects bipartisan­ship, as we saw clearly during the Obama administra­tion.

Democracy only works when rules and norms are in place. It only works when the parties compromise through a process of discussion, deliberati­on and voting.

Unquestion­ably, both political parties have made bad decisions over the years; both are susceptibl­e to the tugs of partisansh­ip. Democrats and Republican­s alike have engaged in tit- for- tat tactics that make compromise more difficult.

For me, though, the turning point was the mistreatme­nt of Merrick Garland. The Republican­s f latly blocked an elected president from exercising his constituti­onal duty to name a new justice.

That was shocking enough. But now, with the Barrett confirmati­on, they’ve brazenly reversed their own logic, proclaimin­g their hypocrisy for the world to see.

That kind of disingenuo­us politics needs to be rejected. Over time, the U. S. needs to rebuild a system that allows men and women of different parties, ideas and ideologies to work together in good faith to solve the serious problems facing the country.

Democracy only works when the parties compromise through discussion and deliberati­on.

 ?? Patrick Semansky Associated Press ?? THE RUSHED confirmati­on of Amy Coney Barrett laid bare Senate Republican hypocrisy.
Patrick Semansky Associated Press THE RUSHED confirmati­on of Amy Coney Barrett laid bare Senate Republican hypocrisy.
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