Posted on 12/08/2021 3:06:42 AM PST by Kaslin
One theme of Democratic control of Washington has been frustration, especially among the party's progressive wing and its cheerleaders in the media, that Democrats have not been able to enact their progressive dream agenda from the 2020 campaign. Dreams such as nationalizing the administration of elections in ways favorable to Democratic candidates, packing the Supreme Court and eliminating the Senate filibuster.
Now, after Wednesday's abortion arguments before the Supreme Court, that frustration is mounting. The court has a 6-3 Republican-appointed majority that might overturn Roe v. Wade. How, some Democrats ask, could that have been allowed to happen?
Republicans might say it's not all that complicated. In 2016, after the election-year death of Justice Antonin Scalia, the GOP Senate majority rejected President Barack Obama's court nominee. Then, against the expectations of the entire political class, Donald Trump won the presidency. With a Republican Senate, Trump filled the Scalia seat. Then, still with Trump in the White House and a Republican Senate, Justice Anthony Kennedy retired. And then, still with Trump in the White House and a Republican Senate, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg died. Trump and the GOP Senate filled the seats. That's how it works.
But Democrats see a crisis, now playing out in the abortion case. "This week's Supreme Court argument on abortion has accelerated an urgency among Senate Democrats to fundamentally alter how the court operates," The Washington Post reported last week, "fueled in part by lingering anger over Republican confirmation maneuvers that have led to three new conservative justices in the past four years."
The thinking among those Democrats is that if the court does something they oppose, it has become "partisan." Now, they need to intervene to make it less "partisan."
"It is hard to watch [the abortion argument] and not conclude that the court has become a partisan institution," Democratic Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawaii told the Post.
"Yesterday, we saw the court is politicized," said Democratic Sen. Tina Smith of Minnesota.
"We've got to think about ways to sort of depoliticize the courts," said Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut. "And one of the ways to do that is to make sure that no one president gets to stack the bench."
Media allies stepped in to argue the court is an antidemocratic institution. The Washington Post's Philip Bump called Trump's three nominees -- Gorsuch, Kavanaugh and Barrett -- the "minoritarian third" of the Supreme Court. "The three [were] nominated by a president who lost the popular vote and confirmed by senators representing less of the country's population and who had received fewer cumulative votes than those who opposed the nominations," Bump wrote. In the words of another Washington Post opinion writer, "The Supreme Court faces an existential crisis of legitimacy."
The arguments were made by others all across the internet and cable news -- and even, astonishingly, inside the court itself, when during the abortion argument, Justice Sonia Sotomayor said, "Will this institution survive the stench that this creates in the public perception that the Constitution and its reading are just political acts?"
The idea for progressive Democrats is to undermine the legitimacy of anything the current Supreme Court does and then argue that the court needs "reform" in the form of more members appointed by a Democratic president.
Democrats have certainly had bad luck lately when it comes to the Supreme Court. If Scalia had died a year earlier, or if Ginsburg had died just a few months later, things might have been much different for the party, and some of its lawmakers might not support blowing up the court today.
As far as having the power to blow up the court is concerned, it should be noted that Democrats do not control a majority of seats in the Senate -- it is tied, 50-50, meaning the party depends on Vice President Kamala Harris to break any tie votes. That's not the kind of majority that can muscle through a huge change in the court. And that has, of course, led some of those same Democrats to urge getting rid of the legislative filibuster, by which Republicans (and some in their own party, too) can block them from packing the court. The progressives are eager to fundamentally alter the Supreme Court on the basis of a 50-50 tie vote broken in the Democrats' favor by the vice president.
But that doesn't appear likely to happen, either. So frustration mounts. Of course progressives want to change the world to suit their taste, but perhaps some of the current frustration is because of the Democratic Party's oh-so-tenuous hold on power in Washington. They have a handful-of-votes majority in the House, no majority at all in the Senate and a president whose advanced age has already spurred talk of his not running for reelection. And, somehow, progressives see that as a power base from which to remake the country. Of course they're frustrated.
“6-3 Republican appointed majority” So what? That bunch are Uniparty last line protectors, ready to sell out the Constitution at the drop of hat. Maybe Roberts could allow his FISA enforcers to bring pressure on any weak sister justice considering bucking the Uniparty monolith.
This has been going on since FDRs time.
The Dems have had years to enact abortion legislation when they controlled both executive and legislative branch (Carter, Clinton, Obama). Each time they did not do so. It isn’t the courts job to legislate.
Roberts is a-scared the ugly barren abortion supporters might riot
6-3 will become 4-5 (at best) on overturning Wade. I figger 5-4 will make it a state’s issue.
Mitch McConnell, you glorious bastard.
Life is good. The Dem/lib/progressive dream agenda is going nowhere. Dreams such as
<><>nationalizing the administration of elections to favor Democratic candidates,
<><> packing the Supreme Court
<><> and eliminating the Senate filibuster.
Now, that frustration is mounting. The court has a 6-3 Republican-appointed majority that might overturn Roe v. Wade. How, some Democrats ask, could that have been allowed to happen?
We have to hang on for one more year. Then the danger will have passed after the Red Tsunami that’s coming sweeps away the Democrat majority in the House and the tie in the Senate.
We need to every Supreme Court Justice to stay alive for one more year. Republicans in the Senate need to delay, delay, delay, the confirmation of any Biden appointees to the courts at both the Circuit and District levels.
Once the Republicans have a majority in the Senate, not one single resident Biden appointee is to be confirmed. That’s right. Not a single GD one. Block everything. Leave those seats open for Trump’s 2nd term. It is absolutely vital to make sure the Democrats do not profit from stealing the election in 2020.
Making it a States’ issue IS overturning Roe v Wade. That is my hoped for outcome.
What has been happening is people are sick if out of control government, in which the bounds of the Constitution are routinely ignored.
Several Republican Presidents appointed Supreme Court justices who were progressive or who turned progressive once on the Court.
Now, after decades of work to move the Supreme Court back toward enforcing the Constitution, the Left is angry.
But the Left is always angry. It is who they are.
6 conservative justices is nonsense. Tjere are three reliable conservatives, Alito and Thomas and Gorsuch. Two wishy washy “conservatives” Kavanaugh and Barrett, and one compromised “conservative” Roberts.
Barrett will vote to uphold Roe v. Wade to prove her Catholicism is not biasing her decision. Kavanaugh will vote to uphold Roe v. Wade to prove to feminists that he really isn’t all that rapey.
Roe v. Wade will stand. 5 to 4 in favor
Yep. As an example of Republican thought and strategy, if you chose 6 Republicans from FR, and asked them to decide a legal issue, you'd probably have 6 different opinions, unlike the Ds who would be united.
....seething frustration on the left is their every day reality.
Baby murder will become New York State’s new growth industry.
If for no other reason than they don’t want to deal with the uproar and rioting.
And Antifa showing up at their doorsteps and threatening their families.
Without a doubt although the left would love to run and fundraise on a threat to repeal legalized infanticide.
The CDC's "Shots For Tots" program is already a nationwide baby murder industry. Nowhere near the numbers as abortion of course, but a trend to keep an eye on.
“The Dems have had years to enact abortion legislation when they controlled both executive and legislative branch (Carter, Clinton, Obama). Each time they did not do so. It isn’t the courts job to legislate.”
The same is true for gun control and any other liberal hot button issue. I suspect the reason they never did so is because the sitting politicians are aware that the liberal hot button issues would get them fired if they really acted on them. Those hot button issues are so far away from the desires of middle America that middle America would revolt at the ballot box if they were enacted. Therefore, Congress passes off the problem to the courts.
The issue we have now is that many members of Congress live in and believe what they see in the Twitterverse. That, however, is not the real world.
“How, some Democrats ask, could that have been allowed to happen?”
Know how it happened? The left wouldn’t shut up about it. Every election it is about abortion, gay marriage and unfettered illegal immigration. People are sick of hearing the constant whining.
Re: “...the election-year death of Justice Antonin Scalia...”
My opinion: murder of Scalia.
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