Mitch McConnell |
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., on Sunday tried
to shut down Beltway musings that President Obama’s latest pick for the Supreme
Court could still find a way to be confirmed in the lame duck session if
Hillary Clinton wins the election.
When asked
whether he would completely rule out a “lame duck scenario” for Obama’s
nominee, Judge Merrick Garland, McConnell said on NBC’s “Meet the Press”:
“We’re not going to be confirming a judge to the Supreme Court under this
president.”
When pushed on the possibility that someone more liberal than
Garland could be nominated in 2017 if Hillary Clinton wins the presidency,
McConnell responded, “It’d be hard to be more liberal than Merrick Garland, but
it’s my hope that she will not be making the appointment.”
The Kentucky senator said that while he doesn’t want to move the
court left, the fact that the Senate will not consider Garland isn’t about his
judicial record.
“It’s not the person. It’s the principle. Who ought to make this
lifetime appointment? It’s the next president, not this one,” McConnell said.
Minority Leader Harry Reid meanwhile expressed doubt that
McConnell would be able to hold his ranks together and keep Garland from
getting considered in the Senate.
“I don’t know why McConnell has done this to his senators. He’s
marching these men, women over a cliff. I don’t think they’re going to go,”
Reid said. Reid said he told Garland that there will be a “breakthrough.”
“In addition to the people agreeing to meet, we have Republican senators and a veteran senator who said, ‘Well maybe what we should do is do it
in a lame duck.’ Orrin Hatch, Lindsey Graham, others have said that. But if
they’re going to do it in lame duck, do it now,” Reid proclaimed.
Both McConnell and Reid dismissed their own past comments about
whether Supreme Court nominees should be considered during a president’s last
year. Reid’s response to the idea that this is all political calculation: “This
is not a tit-for-tat. This is Republicans wanting to do everything they can to
hurt President Obama.”
And this is how McConnell responded to his own past statements
about nominations: “Nobody’s been entirely consistent. So let’s just look at
the history of it. It hasn’t happened in 80 years, and it won’t happen this
year.”
McConnell also refused to take sides on the Republican side of
the presidential race. When asked if he was “comfortable” with Donald Trump
being the GOP’s standard bearer, McConnell demurred, “I’m going to support the
nominee. I’ve got an obligation to my colleagues and to my party to support the
nominee and I fully intend to do that.”
But he did leave his Senate colleagues some wiggle room on
whether they should run towards or away from Trump if he ends up being the
nominee.
“I think we’ve got a bunch of Senate races in purple states that
are very competitive,” McConnell said. “And each of those races will be crafted
very differently to try to appeal to the people in New Hampshire or
Pennsylvania or Ohio, Wisconsin, Nevada, Colorado, Illinois. Every one of those
races are going to be individual, standalone contests with people who we think
have a great chance of winning in November. … I think every campaign will have
a different strategy to appeal to different kind of voters that we have in
different parts of the country.”
No comments:
Post a Comment