The Senate on Monday approved the nomination of Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to the federal appeals court in the District of Columbia, confirming President Biden’s first nominee to the U.S. appellate courts.
Senate Democrats really need to pick up the pace:
With Jackson’s confirmation, there are eight vacancies on the federal courts of appeals, which are the last stop for thousands of cases. The president has announced nominees for six of those seats.
Of the more than 80 open spots on the federal courts, Mr. Biden has named 13 candidates, who are diverse in both their backgrounds and professional experience. The Senate last week confirmed Zahid Quraishi to the U.S. District Court in New Jersey, making him the first Muslim-American federal judge in the nation’s history.
CBS News reports, Senate confirms Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson to powerful D.C. federal appeals court:
Jackson received bipartisan backing from the upper chamber in a 53 to 44 vote. Three Republicans — Susan Collins of Maine, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska — joined Democrats in confirming Jackson, a judge on the federal district court in D.C. She will fill the seat vacated by Attorney General Merrick Garland.
Jackson is considered a contender for the Supreme Court if a vacancy arises during Mr. Biden’s presidency, especially since the president has pledged to name the nation’s first Black woman to the high court if there is an open seat.
That prospect has led progressive judicial groups to call for Justice Stephen Breyer, who has been on the Supreme Court for 27 years and for whom Jackson clerked, to retire and allow Mr. Biden to name a successor while Democrats hold slim control of the Senate.
This just took on a new urgency today, as the “Enemy of The People,” the “Grim Reaper of Democracy,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell signals GOP would block Biden Supreme Court pick in ’24:
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) signaled Monday that Republicans, if they win back control of the upper chamber, wouldn’t advance a Supreme Court nominee if a vacancy occurred in 2024, the year of the next presidential election.
“I think it’s highly unlikely — in fact, no, I don’t think either party, if it were different from the president, would confirm a Supreme Court nominee in the middle of an election,” McConnell told right-wing radio host Hugh Hewitt.
McConnell declined to say what Republicans would do if a justice stepped down in mid-2023 and Republican controlled the Senate.
“We’ll have to wait and see what happens,” McConnell said, asked by Hewitt if the nominee would get a fair shot.
“It’s the single most consequential thing I’ve done in my time as majority leader of the Senate,” said Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY), in an interview with Hugh Hewitt, on blocking Barack Obama from appointing a new Supreme Court Justice to fill the late Antonin Scalia’s seat.
This evil GQP bastard is very proud of violating the Constitution and doing more to destroy American democracy than even “Orange Julius” Caesar, Donald Trump. McConnell used partisan jury nullification to block the conviction of Trump in two impeachment trials, despite later criticizing him for being the most corrupt and criminal president in American history for having incited a violent seditious insurrection against the U.S. government. I would ague that this was the most consequential thing he has ever done. Because the insurrection is not over, it is ongoing and continuing. Democracy hangs in the balance because of the actions of the “Enemy of The People,” the “Grim Reaper of Democracy,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell.
Steve Benen gets it exactly right. As McConnell effectively dares Senate Dems, will they respond?
In early 2016, when Senate Republicans imposed an 11-month blockade to prevent Barack Obama from filling a Supreme Court vacancy [he was already blockading federal court nominees], Democrats did little to hide their outrage. In late 2016, when several GOP senators announced plans to keep that blockade going for four years — effectively saying only Republican presidents are allowed to name justices — Dems were similarly incensed.
But in 2020, the political atmosphere grew more toxic. As regular readers may recall, we saw some early hints of this last August, when Senate Republicans openly discussed the possibility of rushing through a Supreme Court nominee — at the time, a hypothetical scenario. Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), a relatively moderate institutionalist not known as a partisan bomb-thrower, sent a shotacross the GOP’s bow with a reference to court packing.
“If they show that they’re unwilling to respect precedent, rules and history, then they can’t feign surprise when others talk about using a statutory option that we have that’s fully constitutional in our availability,” Kaine told NBC News, referring to Senate Republicans. “I don’t want to do that. But if they act in such a way, they may push it to an inevitability.”
GOP senators, of course, acted in precisely that way, confirming a Trump nominee Amy Coney Barrett eight days before Election Day 2020.
Kaine wasn’t alone. In remarks on the chamber floor in October, Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) lamented the fact that the traditional Senate “has been destroyed” through Republican recklessness on the judiciary. Soon after, Sen. Angus King, a Maine independent who caucuses with Democrats, said on CNN, “I don’t want to pack the court. I don’t want to change the number. I don’t want to have to do that. But if all of this rule breaking is taking place, what does the [GOP] majority expect?”
The day after Justice Amy Coney Barrett’s confirmation, Sen. Chris Coons (D-Del.), whom no one has ever described as a radical ideologue, conceded on The Rachel Maddow Show that it’s time for “a wide-open conversation about how do we rebalance our courts.” The Delaware Democrat added that he wants to see a “re-examining” of “the process, the results, and the consequences” surrounding what Republicans have done to the judiciary.
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) added on the Senate floor a day earlier:
“I want to be very clear with my Republican colleagues. You may win this vote. And Amy Coney Barrett may become the next Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. But you will never, never get your credibility back. And the next time the American people give Democrats a majority in this chamber, you will have forfeited the right to tell us how to run that majority. You may win this vote. But in the process you will speed the precipitous decline of faith in our institutions, our politics, the Senate and the Supreme Court. You will give an already divided and angry nation a fresh outrage, and open a wound in this chamber that may never heal. You walk a perilous road. I know you think that this will eventually blow over. But you are wrong.”
Schumer’s tone was unmistakable: he appeared to mean every word. The Democrats’ leader seemed genuinely disgusted by Republicans’ antics, and he gave every indication that the GOP should expect consequences for their actions. A few months later, Schumer became Senate majority leader, ostensibly putting himself in a position to follow through on his indignation.
But there’s been no retaliation — not because Schumer has decided to let bygones be bygones, but because some of Schumer’s members believe bipartisanship, on matters large and small, is more important than governing.
This is of renewed interest today because Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) said publicly that, if given the opportunity, he’ll impose another Supreme Court blockade on President Biden’s nominees.
For some, the first question may be, “Why does McConnell think he’ll get away with such brazenness?” But that gets the dynamic backwards: McConnell starts with the proposition that Democratic judicial nominations don’t count, then dares Democratic officials to do something about it.
Instead of acting, senators like Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema respond by allowing the Senate Republican minority to help dictate the terms of governance, while Justice Stephen Breyer responds by pretending politics doesn’t matter at all. McConnell, naturally, puts their naivete in his pocket, and explores new ways to pursue even more aggressive maximalist tactics.
Those who decry bitter partisanship need to realize how much bitter partisanship they encourage through their passivity and tolerance of extremism.
Wake the fuck up! This is a do or die moment. We cannot afford to lose American democracy because of a couple of prima donna putative democrats who are enabling the enemies of democracy.
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Huffington Post reports, “13 Progressive Groups Urge Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer To Retire”, https://www.huffpost.com/entry/supreme-court-justice-stephen-breyer-retire_n_60c8e0dfe4b09ba204a99ce7
Thirteen progressive groups on Wednesday will publicly call on Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer to step down to let President Joe Biden confirm his successor while Democrats control the Senate.
“Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer should immediately announce his intent to retire from the bench,” reads a forthcoming ad endorsed by national advocacy organizations including Demand Justice, Women’s March, Black Lives Matter and the Sunrise Movement.
“With future control of a closely divided Senate uncertain, President Biden must have the opportunity to nominate a successor without delay and fulfill his pledge to put the first Black woman on the Supreme Court,” they said. “If Breyer were replaced by an additional ultra-conservative justice, an even further-right Supreme Court would leave our democracy and the rights of marginalized communities at even greater risk.”
“For the good of the country, now is the time to step aside.”
Their message will run as a full-page ad in Politico.
Dan Pfeifer explains, “How to Stop McConnell from Rigging the Courts”, https://messagebox.substack.com/p/how-dems-could-respond-to-mcconnells
[W]e should be crystal clear that McConnell is elucidating an entirely new principle — a Republican Senate will never confirm a Democratic president’s nominee to the Supreme Court. It doesn’t matter when the vacancy occurs or who the president nominates to fill it. If a Republican can prevent that appointment, it is their duty to do so.
Now that McConnell has announced his plans in true Batman villain form, the question for Democrats is how do we respond?
[S]adly, too many Democrats are willing to turn the other cheek to McConnell’s aggression. This passivity opens the door to even more aggressive Republican attacks on democracy and paves the way for a stolen election in 2024.