Justice Ginsburg has died; McConnell vows to fill the vacancy

raimius

New member
Kell, this is probably better left to another thread, but if you don't think Democrats in high places have plans for confiscation, you have not reviewed their public statements and policy proposals. Biden has not publicly stated he wants mandatory "buybacks," but the guy he promised to put in charge of gun policy (O'Rourke) very publicly did.
 
it states that dems are sure to pack SCOTUS with 15 justices and generally commit other shenanigans if and when the they win the election

Nothing new. FDR tried those things in the 1930s, and both backfired spectacularly. The idea of abolishing the filibuster or expanding the court poll really badly, even when people dare voice the idea.

Furthermore, both concepts seem like a good idea if my guys are in power. What happens when the balance shifts in a few years, and the other guy's party decides to expand the court to 17 Justices? What happens when I realize he only needs a bare majority to ramrod legislation through?

There are simply too many moderates to let this happen, and the fact such outrageous threats are being made at all is a signal of desperation. It's like threatening to nuke the site from orbit because a fire hydrant is leaking.
 

KyJim

New member
The filibuster rule is just that, a rule. It is not a constitutional provision. It is not even a statute. I don't have a problem with getting rid of it.

I think this is an outstanding argument for filling the court vacancy now:
[O]ur position is simply that the President has the duty to nominate a candidate to fill the current Supreme Court vacancy and the Senate has the duty to “advise and consent,” which means to hold hearings and to vote on the nominee.

Article II of the Constitution is explicit that the president “shall nominate . . . judges of the Supreme Court.” There is no exception to this provision for election years. Throughout American history, presidents have nominated individuals to fill vacancies during the last year of their terms.

Likewise, the Senate’s constitutional duty to “advise and consent” – the process that has come to include hearings, committee votes, and floor votes – has no exception for election years. In fact, over the course of American history, there have been 24 instances in which presidents in the last year of a term have nominated individuals for the Supreme Court and the Senate confirmed 21 of these nominees.
https://web.archive.org/web/2016100.../files/Con Law Scholars on Scotus Vacancy.pdf

The interesting part of the argument was when it was made --- February 24, 2016, President Obama's last year in office. And, while I haven't looked up every person who signed onto it, one who did is well-known constitutional scholar, Prof. Erwin Chemerinsky. Now, however, he has changed his mind:
I hope that four Republican senators will join the Democrats to keep this seat on the Supreme Court open until after the winner of the November 3 election is inaugurated on January 20, 2021. But if the Republicans, in an exercise of astounding hypocrisy, approve a Trump nominee before then, Democrats must be prepared to act. They must consider expanding the size of the Supreme Court to overcome how the Republicans manipulated the process to block Garland and confirm Trump’s nominee to succeed Ginsburg.
https://prospect.org/justice/supreme-court-how-did-we-get-here-ginsburg-trump-conservative-nominee/

So, don't think the "hypocrisy" is all on one side. It is not. If we take Prof. Chermerinsky's 2016 letter at face value, President Trump has a constitutional duty to fill the seat and the Senate has a constitutional duty to consider it---on the merits because the filibuster rule is not of constitutional dimension.
 

ballardw

New member
The popular media is completely ignoring most of the "precedents" involved.

John Marshal nominated Jan 20, 1801 (yes over 200 years ago), confirmed Jan 27, 1801. AFTER the election of 1800 was held, nominated by John Adams but before the new president, Thomas Jefferson, inaugurated. Plus he was the second nominee after the 1800 election.

So the so-called "Gardner Precedent" has about as much truth as <nothing I want to go on record as actually writing>.
 

zxcvbob

New member
The president has a duty to make a nomination, although there doesn't seem to be a time limit. What the Senate does with that nomination is not the president's problem.

Yes, McConnell is a hypocrite. Big deal. I *think* I'd say the same thing if Schumer pulled the same shenanigans, but maybe I'm a hypocrite too.
 

Spats McGee

Administrator
.....The interesting part of the argument was when it was made --- February 24, 2016, President Obama's last year in office. And, while I haven't looked up every person who signed onto it, one who did is well-known constitutional scholar, Prof. Erwin Chemerinsky. Now, however, he has changed his mind:....
KyJim wins the Understatement of the Day for calling Chemerinsky a "well-known constitutional scholar." ;)

I kept one of his hornbooks on my shelf for the first 15 years of practice. I made the mistake of loaning it out, and that's the only reason I don't have it any more.
 

44 AMP

Staff
When it is not an election year, and when we don't have COVID screwing up the normal order of things, appointing a new Supreme Court Justice has been, political theater and high drama, particularly in recent decades.

The entire idea that a Justice should be someone with the personal integrity to rule on the law, and not involve their own personal views on ANY matter seems to have been lost in the hubub about "where they stand on issues" and "Litmus tests" or them not, perhaps, being pure saints in their personal lives before becoming a nominee.

No one with any desire to be some degree of "activist judge" should ever be considered for such a position. However, we get the choices we get, and lately it seems pure partisan politics counts for more than the rule of law and the duty to the American people.

The sitting President has the duty and responsibility to nominate a replacement when there is a vacancy. NO ONE ELSE DOES.

All cries for the President to wait until after the elections are the ravings of whiners who are not currently in power to make the needed decision, but HOPE to be in that position to nominate THEIR choice AFTER they win the election.

The Pres COULD do that, but is under no obligation, legal or moral to do so.

Personally I don't think he should wait. DO BUSINESS as usual without pandering to the political opposition, but, that's just my opinion, worth what you paid for it.
 

TruthTellers

New member
IMHO, yes.

The Supreme Court is in a delicate balance at the moment. One of the staunch conservative justices, Clarence Thomas, isn't going to live forever. If he dies or retires during a Democratic administration, his replacement will almost certainly be anti-2A, because it's inconceivable that a Democratic President would nominate anyone who isn't vehemently anti-2A. Roberts is either squishy on the 2A, or quietly against it.

That means (again, IMHO) that getting a pro-2A or, at least, 2A-neutral strict constructionist/originalist justice in place now to replace Ginsberg is indeed crucial. If a pro-2A justice is confirmed, we might then see the SCOTUS actually take up a few more 2A cases before Thomas departs the Court. And, since Roberts claims to support stare decisis (which means he doesn't like to upset previous SCOTUS decisions), getting a few more pro-2A decisions on the record could prove to be pivotal for generations to come.
I wouldn't say Robert's is against it, he was key in the Heller and Macdonald rulings. Squishy... we really don't know. We do know the other eight justices have no idea how he's going to rule on a gun related case, which is why we haven't seen one granted cert (that wasn't later mooted) in a long time.

It was clear that he would have ruled in favor of NY Rifle and Pistol had the city not removed that law in record time once SCOTUS took the case.

With a third Trump nominee tho, SCOTUS would clearly have an overwhelming majority to make extreme pro 2A rulings, whether Roberts is part of the court or not. I say that because for the past 10 years he has been obsessed with his legacy and with five conservatives, three liberals, and himself, the court is appearing to take a hard turn to the right for the next 10+ years.

I get the feeling that Roberts may very well resign in the next few years regardless of who is President in an effort to protect his legacy.

That would be even more likely if Justice Breyer, who at 82 is now the oldest member of the court, were to retire or die. So, the ticking clock applies to more than Thomas and Alito.
 

TruthTellers

New member
I’ve been thinking about this . Can/should mitch change the rules back if they loose the senate and add to change the rules again you need 60 votes ??? That what he should do if he can IMHO . I think it was wrong when Reed did it and although understand why Mitch did it . We really should go back to the old rules and make it harder to change them .
I wouldn't because if you see the last two Trump appointees, plus Alito and Thomas, none of them got 60 votes in the Senate and with how centralized the Democrat party has become, it's impossible for any Republican nominee to ever get a Democratic senator to vote for them in the future.

OTOH, Republicans are more than willing to vote for justices nominated by Democratic presidents, including the vehement anti-gun Ginsberg.

It would be a zero sum game for those center-right and right because it would mean only people like Roberts and Kennedy would get approved.
 

TruthTellers

New member
When it is not an election year, and when we don't have COVID screwing up the normal order of things, appointing a new Supreme Court Justice has been, political theater and high drama, particularly in recent decades.

The entire idea that a Justice should be someone with the personal integrity to rule on the law, and not involve their own personal views on ANY matter seems to have been lost in the hubub about "where they stand on issues" and "Litmus tests" or them not, perhaps, being pure saints in their personal lives before becoming a nominee.

No one with any desire to be some degree of "activist judge" should ever be considered for such a position. However, we get the choices we get, and lately it seems pure partisan politics counts for more than the rule of law and the duty to the American people.

The sitting President has the duty and responsibility to nominate a replacement when there is a vacancy. NO ONE ELSE DOES.

All cries for the President to wait until after the elections are the ravings of whiners who are not currently in power to make the needed decision, but HOPE to be in that position to nominate THEIR choice AFTER they win the election.

The Pres COULD do that, but is under no obligation, legal or moral to do so.

Personally I don't think he should wait. DO BUSINESS as usual without pandering to the political opposition, but, that's just my opinion, worth what you paid for it.
It didn't stop Obama. The only thing that did was McConnell and the precedent of a President in his final year in office not having a justice confirmed since the 30s. McConnell, while very Machiavellian when it concerns his own financial well being and political clout, has shown the past 4 years that he is steadfast when SCOTUS is the focus.

He was wise enough to understand how feckless Republicans are and had Garland been given hearings in 2016, I think he thought there would have been a handful of Republicans (McCain, Collins, Graham, Coats, Murkowski) who would have voted to appoint him, enough to get him confirmed.

The President should always, ALWAYS go ahead with nominating a SCOTUS justice. It's up to the Senate to do the rest and when the Senate is controlled by the opposite party (which it typically is for near all Presidents in the last half or their second term) then the President doesn't get his nominee confirmed.

Oh well.
 

rc

New member
In A Knife Fight, No Pillows Allowed

I think that both sides fight dirty but the Democrats have been taking things to a whole new level of dirty politics with non stop impeachment and tabloid politics based on fabricated accusation and scandal. They never accepted the loss of Hillary to Trump. They cry about the constitution when it serves their purpose and then try to change the rules of the game to take rights or money or power away from average citizens while packing their pockets with cash from business deals their decisions impact like stock investments or with knowledge of major policies coming that impact asset values. If the shoe was on the other foot and the democrats had the senate and the presidency they would not wait to fill the court appointment no matter what they say publicly today. One thing for sure, politicians lie. Democrats would ram through a progressive who aligned with their agenda to transform America into something none of us would recognize. RGB held on to power till the end but the power of life and death was out of her control. Her dying wishes mean nothing in constitutional terms. If she wanted a liberal replacement she could have stepped down when Obama was in office but what happened when Scalia died probably influenced her delay to retire. But the Republicans controlled the senate then and had power to affect the process granted in the constitution and they do now too so like a knife fight there is no hard and fast rules of behavior when talking about the future of our country. If there was we would still need 60 votes in the senate to pass laws and confirm nominations. Winner takes all, no compromises. The threats of open rebellion in the streets are just one more attempt to coerce the country down a path of increasing socialism and mob rule. I pray that sanity and common sense and civility return to our government or the future will be one where each generation has less opportunity than the last. The current trend towards racial division, political division, no accountability for behavior, no respect for laws, unequal treatment by the justice systems depending on who you are and redistribution of wealth by Government fiat at taking us down a very dangerous path. If filling RGB's seat with a solid conservative before the election can change the history of our country for the better.... I say fight dirty. The other side will no matter how nice we are to them today.
 

DaleA

New member
I just like the quote:

If it wasn't for double standards our politicians wouldn't have any standards at all.
 

TXAZ

New member
I’m not impressed with either side, more akin to “none of the above“.
But I’m more worried about erosion of 1st and 2nd rights, so that eliminates 1.
 
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5whiskey

New member
I see Trump nominated the one person I believe his opposition feared this go around. I briefly read up on Amy Barrett during the last scotus vacancy (I recall her being on the short list then). After reading a little more in depth the past couple days I believe she has a lot to offer. She’s obviously 2A friendly. Trumps political opponents have probably waken in cold sweats the past couple of nights. The two attacks I’ve seen is that she is :Gasp: catholic (how intolerant and narrow minded is that!?) and that she will “strike down” Obamacare. You know, that poorly conceived law that has largely already been gutted by the courts over the years until now it’s just a hollow shell of what it was supposed to be.

I say hold confirmation hearings but don’t vote to confirm until after the election. Get the anti gunners and anarchy lovers on record attacking Amy Barrett before the election (I believe she will destroy them anyway), don’t appear rushed, show voters why they need to keep pro 2A politicians in (the continuing need to do their duty), and there’s always the probability of confirming her in the lame duck session if republicans do lose the senate.
 

Metal god

New member
Yeah , she is so pro 2nd she thinks none violent felons should be able to keep the right . I’d like to find that opinion she wrote , it’s actually a dissent but I don’t know the case . I’ve only heard about it but haven’t seen what she actually wrote
 

Metal god

New member
Thanks kkb

Barret said:
Some maintain that there are certain groups of people—for example, violent felons—who fall entirely outside the Second Amendment’s scope. . . . Others maintain that all people have the right to keep and bear arms but that history and tradition support Congress’s power to strip certain groups of that right.

In other words, the conceptual question is whether a certain class of persons simply has no Second Amendment rights at all or has such rights but can be permissibly stripped of them. I think of this distinction as similar to that between void vs. voidable contracts. Judge Barrett opts for the voidable view; a felon is protected by the Second Amendment unless and until the legislature strips her of that right. Or, as she puts it, “a person convicted of a qualifying crime does not automatically lose his right to keep and bear arms but instead becomes eligible to lose it.” On her view, then, there’s no first step when dealing with persons. They all fall within the protection of the Second Amendment and the only question is whether the government may permissibly take away their right. After surveying the historical arguments for doing so, Judge Barrett concludes that the government can only permissibly take away the rights of those felons who are dangerous. Because the government provided no evidence that Kanter was himself dangerous, or that mail fraudsters as a class are dangerous, the application of § 922(g)(1) to him violated the Second Amendment.


Interesting , I've lived my whole life with that restriction on the books so never gave it any in depth thought really . I still have to process this more . Not to unlike the argument mamajuana and dealing it should not be a felony or a crime at all . I believe once you have engaged in breaking the law , breaking more laws is just a simple step away . I should stop there because I don't have a fully thought through opinion on this yet . I do know , don't think we should convict people for what they might do in the future so not sure how that fits in here yet .
 
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Carne Frio

New member
The Senate could just bring it up for a vote; no hearing required.
Then the country would not have to put up with the circus that
the hearing will provide. Only a majority vote would be needed.
 

44 AMP

Staff
only question is whether the government may permissibly take away their right.

I have a problem with the language used here. I don't think it is correct.

The Government cannot take away something it does not grant. And the Government of the United States does not grant our unalienable (natural) rights. It recognizes them, but it does not grant them.

Therefore it cannot take them away. What is taken away is the ability to lawfully exercise the right. In essence the right is not removed, it is denied.

In practical terms the effect is the same, but there is, and should be a specific difference in the language used and its actual meaning.
 

Metal god

New member
44 , My question would be is there in inalienable right to possess a firearm or is the inalienable right purely to self-defense . Inalienable is often referred to as a God-given right , does that mean God gave us the right to keep and bear arms .

Put another way how is it in alienable right something that requires a man-made object ?
 
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