
This is, after all, the same Mitch McConnell who, soon after Trump was elected, ended the age-old requirement that supreme court nominees receive 60 votes to end debate and allow for a confirmation vote, and then, days later, pushed through Trump’s first nominee, Neil Gorsuch. Just weeks before one of the most consequential presidential elections in American history, when absentee voting has already begun in many states (and will start in McConnell’s own state of Kentucky in 25 days), McConnell announced: “President Trump’s nominee will receive a vote on the floor of the United States Senate.” McConnell’s “principle” of waiting for a new president disappeared on Friday evening, after Ginsburg’s death was announced. No Senate leader had ever before asserted the right to block a vote on a president’s nominee to the supreme court. McConnell refused to allow the Senate to vote on Barack Obama’s nominee to the supreme court, Merrick Garland, in February 2016 – almost a year before the end of Obama’s second term – on the dubious grounds that the “vacancy should not be filled until we have a new president”. He is motivated entirely by the pursuit of power. Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader, exemplifies the second category. My most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is installed Ruth Bader Ginsburg Always concerned about the consequences of her actions for the system as a whole, she advised young people “to fight for the things you care about but do it in a way that will lead others to join you”. Ginsburg persuaded the supreme court that the 14th amendment’s guarantee of equal protection applied not only to racial discrimination but to sex discrimination as well.įor Ginsburg, principle was everything – not only equal rights, but also the integrity of democracy. When he nominated her in 1993, Bill Clinton called her “the Thurgood Marshall of gender-equality law”, comparing her advocacy and lower-court rulings in pursuit of equal rights for women to the work of the great jurist who advanced the cause of equal rights for Black people. Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who died on Friday night at the age of 87, exemplified the first.
