The Mercury News

Republican­s’ galling bad faith about Supreme Court

- By Michelle Goldberg Michelle Goldberg is a New York Times columnist.

Four years ago, when many Republican­s believed that Hillary Clinton was about to be elected president, conservati­ves plotted to stop her from reshaping the U.S. Supreme Court.

“The Senate should decline to confirm any nominee, regardless of who is elected,” Michael Stokes Paulsen wrote in National Review. “More than that, it is time to shrink the size of the Supreme Court.” Paulsen proposed that Congress reduce the court to six justices, its original size. “It is entirely proper for Congress to adjust the size of the court either to check judicial power or to check executive appointmen­ts,” he wrote.

This was not, at the time, an outré position on the right. In October 2016, Sen. Ted Cruz suggested that the Senate, which had refused to even consider Barack Obama’s nominee to fill Antonin Scalia’s seat, wouldn’t move on a Clinton nominee either, essentiall­y reducing the court to eight judges. “There is certainly long historical precedent for a Supreme Court with fewer justices,” he said. Sen. John McCain, now remembered as an icon of bipartisan institutio­nalism, said that if Republican­s held the Senate, they might not let Clinton fill any Supreme Court seats, though he later tempered his stance.

Now, facing another presidenti­al election that they expect to lose, Republican­s are caterwauli­ng about Democratic calls to expand the court. As they prepare to jam through Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Amy Coney Barrett, Republican­s are shocked — shocked! — that Democrats would contemplat­e playing constituti­onal hardball just as Republican­s do. If Democrats jettison the Senate filibuster and add judges to the Supreme Court, Sen. Ben Sasse said on “Fox News Sunday,” they’d be “suicide bombing” U.S. institutio­ns.

Say this for Republican­s: They are very good at umbrage. It might even be sincere; from Reconstruc­tion to the New Deal to the civil rights revolution, conservati­ves have long felt genuinely victimized by the prospect of equality. That doesn’t mean, however, that bad-faith right-wing arguments about the courts merit a respectful hearing.

Throughout Obama’s administra­tion, Republican­s went to extraordin­ary lengths to stop the president from appointing federal judges, describing his ordinary attempts to fill vacant seats as “court packing.” Sen. Tom Cotton, then in the House, even sponsored a bill, the Stop Court-Packing Act, that would have shrunk the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit from 11 judges to eight.

The Republican blockade of Obama’s picks eventually led the Senate majority leader at the time, Harry Reid, to abolish the filibuster for most federal court nominees in 2013. But Reid didn’t do it in time; Republican­s won back the Senate in 2014 and essentiall­y shut down the confirmati­on process for lower court judges. One of the nomination­s Republican­s scuttled was that of Myra Selby, whom Obama chose for the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. In 2017, Republican­s installed Barrett in that seat.

Republican­s did all this because they could. Now that Democrats might respond in kind, diluting conservati­ve control of the courts and thus depriving Republican­s of their prize for enabling Trump, Republican­s have the audacity to pose as scandalize­d norm-protectors.

Should they win control of Congress and the presidency, Democrats really do hope to restore some of the checks and balances immolated by Trumpism. Consider the Protecting Our Democracy Act, an omnibus reform bill introduced by Democratic leaders in the House that would, among other things, strengthen Congress’ subpoena power, limit presidents’ use of emergency declaratio­ns, and make it harder for them to use acting appointmen­ts to circumvent the Senate confirmati­on process.

Republican­s once insisted that Merrick Garland, Obama’s final Supreme Court nominee, didn’t deserve a hearing because the election was only 11 months away. They should be taken exactly as seriously when they claim, after nearly four years of Trumpism, to care about the unwritten rules of U.S. governance.

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