The Columbus Dispatch

Gorsuch’s ascension to high court vindicates McConnell

- By Erica Werner

WASHINGTON — Neil Gorsuch’s ascension to the Supreme Court was vindicatio­n for Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, whose risky bet more than a year ago paid off big time for President Donald Trump and the Kentucky senator himself.

When Justice Antonin Scalia died in February 2016, McConnell decided immediatel­y that the Senate would not fill the seat until the next president was elected. McConnell never wavered. He ignored Democratic griping, misgivings from fellow Republican­s, and ultimately erroneous prediction­s that GOP Senate candidates would pay a political price.

Now McConnell can take credit for allowing Trump to put a young conservati­ve on the court for life, even though it took changing Senate rules to do it.

“No. 1, it’s courageous. No. 2, it’s genius, in that order, because he knew how much criticism he would get,” said Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla.

Democrats and some Republican­s predicted dire fallout from McConnell’s divisive Senate rules change that removed the 60-vote filibuster barrier for Supreme Court picks, and they warned of a more polarized Senate and court over time. But most in the GOP were full of praise for their wily leader.

“Mitch did what he thought was the right thing at the time, and I think the American people agreed with it, as was evidenced by the outcome of the election,” said Sen. John Thune, R-S.D. “And now we have a great justice on the Supreme Court.”

Frustrated Democrats grudgingly acknowledg­ed that McConnell got what he wanted and delivered for his party, even as they insisted that the damage done to the Senate in the process would not quickly be forgotten.

The next time Democrats control the White House and the Senate, they could be the ones to benefit from the rules change enacted under McConnell. That’s because the change will apply to all future Supreme Court nominees, too, eliminatin­g any need for input from the minority party in making confirmati­ons to the high court.

“The Republican­s engaged in historic obstructio­nism that made it possible for this confirmati­on process to be conducted,” said Sen. Ed Markey, D-Mass. “We now have a radical right-wing justice on the Supreme Court. And I think that was their goal all along. So it is successful.”

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