Trump Supreme Court pick heads toward Senate vote despite Democratic
protests
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[October 16, 2020]
By Andrew Chung, Patricia Zengerle and Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Republican-led
U.S. Senate on Thursday moved a step closer to confirming President
Donald Trump's U.S. Supreme Court choice Amy Coney Barrett, with the
Judiciary Committee scheduling an Oct. 22 vote on her nomination despite
Democratic objections.
The fourth and final day of the committee's confirmation hearing for the
conservative appellate judge wrapped up with testimony from outside
experts. Democrats protested what they called the rushed nature of the
proceedings and complained that Barrett had sidestepped questions about
presidential powers, abortion, climate change, voting rights and
Obamacare.
Republicans are aiming for a final confirmation vote on the Senate floor
by the end of October following next week's committee vote.
"I believe that this rushed, sham process is a disservice to our
committee," Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal said. "She has been
rushed in a way that is historically unprecedented ... and the purpose
of doing it is simply to have a justice on the Supreme Court, as the
president said, to decide the election and to strike down the Affordable
Care Act."
The Republican president has asked the Senate to confirm Barrett before
the Nov. 3 U.S. election in which he is seeking a second term in office.
Trump has said he expects the court to decide the election's outcome.
With Republicans holding a 53-47 Senate majority, her confirmation seems
assured. Barrett's confirmation would give the Supreme Court a 6-3
conservative majority. Barrett, 48, could serve for decades, alongside
Trump's two other Supreme Court selections, Brett Kavanaugh and Neil
Gorsuch.
"There is no way you will ever convince me that Amy Coney Barrett is not
qualified, using any reasonable standards of qualification," said
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, the committee chairman.
Barrett answered questions from senators during marathon sessions on
Tuesday and Wednesday. Outside witnesses testified in favor and against
Barrett's nomination on Thursday. Barrett was not present.
Despite some tense moments, the hearing was conducted largely with a
congenial tone. It stood in contrast to the Kavanaugh's contentious 2018
confirmation hearings in which he angrily denied sexual assault
allegations.
At the end, Graham told the Democratic senators, "You have challenged
the judge, you have challenged us, and I accept those challenges as
being sincere and not personal. I don't think anybody crossed the line
with the judge in terms of trying to demean her as a person."
A SENATORIAL HUG
The committee's top Democrat, Senator Dianne Feinstein, praised Graham
for the manner in which he conducted the hearing. Feinstein and Graham
then hugged at the end of the hearing. The liberal activist group Demand
Justice afterward called on Feinstein to step down as the committee's
ranking Democrat.
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Judge Amy Coney Barrett responds
to a question from Democratic vice presidential candidate Senator
Kamala Harris (D-CA) during the third day of her Senate confirmation
hearing to the Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC,
U.S., October 14, 2020. Michael Reynolds/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
The committee heard from two representatives from the American Bar
Association, a national nonpartisan lawyers' group that deemed
Barrett "well qualified" after an evaluation of her "integrity,
professional competence and judicial temperament."
Democratic senators again raised a number of misgivings about
Barrett's potential votes on the Supreme Court on matters ranging
from gun control to criminal justice matters, and expressed concern
that she avoided answering many critical questions including whether
a president can delay an election and queries related to transitions
of power.
"What was the purpose of this hearing if we've reached the point now
where we really don't know what she thinks about any issues?"
Democratic Senator Dick Durbin asked.
"I would be afraid to ask her about the presence of gravity on
Earth. She may decline to answer because it may come up in a case -
you know, it could come before the court some day," Durbin added.
Democrats were upset that Senate Republicans proceeded with the
confirmation process for Trump's nominee so close to an election
after refusing to act on Democratic President Barack Obama's 2016
Supreme Court nominee because it was an election year.
Democratic Senator Amy Klobuchar said Americans want the winner of
the election to decide who fills the court's vacancy created by the
death of liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
If confirmed, Barrett could be on the Supreme Court in time to
participate in a Nov. 10 case in which Trump and Republican-led
states are seeking to invalidate the 2010 Obamacare law, formally
called the Affordable Care Act.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York and Lawrence Hurley and
Patricia Zengerle in Washington; Editing by Will Dunham)
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