As President Obama introduced Merrick Garland on Wednesday as his choice for the U.S. Supreme Court, Republican lawmakers “doubled down” on their vow to block the election-year nominee.
Garland, who currently serves as chief judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, is widely considered a “moderate” choice, and thus a politically safe replacement for the late conservative Justice Antonin Scalia. Despite this, Republican lawmakers have for weeks threatened that they will hold neither a hearing nor vote on an Obama pick.
Following the White House press conference, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell gave a statement on the Senate floor declaring that Republican lawmakers would continue to uphold this vow.
Obama appeared to anticipate such a response during his remarks Wednesday when he directly appealed to Senate Republicans to give Garland “a fair hearing and then an up-or-down vote.”
“At a time when our politics are so polarized,” the president said, now is “precisely the time we should play it straight and treat the nomination with the care it deserves. The Supreme Court is unique, it is supposed to be above politics and should stay that way.”
Refusing to move this process forward, he continued, “won’t only be an abdication of the Senate’s constitutional duty…it will mean everything is subject to the most partisan of politics.”
He concluded: “The reputation of the Supreme Court will inevitably suffer. Faith in our justice system will inevitably suffer. And our democracy will ultimately suffer as well.”
With numerous important Supreme Court cases still hanging in the balance, many groups have added their voice to the dispute, calling on Senate Republicans to “do your job.”
“President Obama has fulfilled his constitutional duty by nominating Judge Merrick Garland, but instead of fulfilling their constitutional duty, Senate Republicans are hell bent on running out the clock for the next nine plus months in hopes of allowing President Donald Trump to make a pick in line with his racist and bigoted view of our country,” declared Ilya Sheyman, executive director of MoveOn.org Political Action.
“Senators who refuse to consider the President’s nominee are failing the American people. They are obstacles to progress and are not only snubbing the judge and the President, they’re shirking their sworn duty to ‘support and defend the Constitution’ and ‘faithfully discharge the duties’ of their offices,” said Miles Rapoport, president of the public interest group Common Cause.
“If employees don’t do their jobs, they get fired,” Rapoport continued. “Common Cause says unequivocally, Senate, Do Your Job!…Anything less will be an affront to the court, the Constitution, and the voters.”
Ilyse Hogue, president of NARAL Pro-Choice America, accused Senate Republicans of “intentionally leaving a vacuum in one of the most hallowed and significant institutions in our country and denying the American people a complete and full vetting of a new Supreme Court justice.”
The Sierra Club has vowed to mobilize its 2.4 million members to urge their lawmakers to hold a hearing “as soon as possible.” Last week the group sent a letter (pdf) signed by a coalition of environmental groups to McConnell and Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) specifically addressing the important environmental and climate cases that remain in flux with this empty position.
“For the protection of our air, water, wildlife and lands, a strong and intact judiciary system is as important as ever,” the letter stated. “With so many critical issues expected to come before the Supreme Court, including those dealing with public health and environmental safeguards, this is not the time to hobble our judiciary with extended vacancies caused by political gamesmanship.”
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