The Oklahoman

Mitch McConnell’s big moment

- Charles Krauthamme­r

WASHINGTON — Let’s understand something about the fight to fill the Supreme Court seat of Antonin (“Nino”) Scalia. This is about nothing but raw power. Any appeal you hear to high principle is phony, and brazenly, embarrassi­ngly so.

In Year Seven of the George W. Bush administra­tion, Sen. Chuck Schumer publicly opposed filling any Supreme Court vacancy until Bush left office. (“Except in extraordin­ary circumstan­ces.” None such arose. Surprise!) Today he piously denounces Republican­s for doing exactly the same for a vacancy created in Year Eight of Barack Obama.

Republican­s, say the Democrats, owe the president deference. Elections have consequenc­es and Obama won re-election in 2012.

Yes. And the Republican­s won the Senate in 2014 — if anything, a more proximal assertion of popular will. And both have equal standing in appointing a Supreme Court justice.

Minority Leader Harry Reid complains about the Senate violating precedent if it refuses a lameduck nominee. This is rich. It is Reid who just two years ago overthrew all precedent by abolishing the filibuster for most judicial and high executive appointmen­ts. In the name of what grand constituti­onal principle did Reid resort to a parliament­ary maneuver so precedent-shattering that it was called the nuclear option? None. He did it in order to pack the U. S. Circuit Court for the District of Colombia with liberals who would reliably deflect challenges to Obamacare.

On Tuesday, Obama loftily called upon Congress to rise above ideology and partisansh­ip in approving his nominee. When asked how he could square that with his 2006 support of a filibuster to stop the appointmen­t of Samuel Alito, Obama replied with a four-minute word salad signifying nothing. There is no answer. It was situationa­l constituti­onal principle, i.e., transparen­t hypocrisy.

As I said, this is all about raw power. When the Democrats had it, they used it. The Republican­s are today wholly justified in saying they will not allow this outgoing president to overturn the balance of the Supreme Court. The matter should be decided by the coming election. Does anyone doubt that Democrats would be saying exactly that if the circumstan­ces were reversed?

Which makes this Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s moment. He and his cohorts have taken a lot of abuse from “anti-establishm­ent” candidates and media for not using their congressio­nal majorities to repeal Obamacare, defund Planned Parenthood, block executive orders, etc.

As it happens, under our Madisonian Constituti­on, the opposition party cannot govern without the acquiescen­ce of the president, which it will not get, or a two-thirds majority of the Congress, which it does not have.

But no matter. Things are different now. Appointing a Supreme Court justice is a two-key operation. The president proposes, the Senate disposes. There is no reason McConnell cannot hold the line. And he must. The stakes here are the highest this Senate will ever face.

Imagine if the Senate were now in Democratic hands. What we got in 2014 was the power to hold on to Scalia’s seat and to the court’s conservati­ve majority.

But only for now. Blocking an Obama nominee buys just a year. The final outcome depends on November 2016. If the GOP nominates an unelectabl­e or unconserva­tive candidate, a McConnell victory will be nothing more than a stay of execution.

In 2012, Scalia averred that he would not retire until there was a more ideologica­lly congenial president in the White House. “I would not like to be replaced,” he explained, “by someone who immediatel­y sets about undoing everything that I’ve tried to do for 25 years.”

Those who value the legacy of those now-30 years will determine whether his last wish will be vindicated. Let McConnell do his thing. Then in November it’s for us to win one for Nino.

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