On the question of supreme court nominees, the Republican senator Susan Collins has repeatedly threaded the same political needle. It is one with a shrinking eye.
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A 64% majority of voters in Collins’ home state, Maine, believe abortion should be legal in all or most cases – yet Collins has voted to confirm Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh, two justices nominated by Donald Trump who could roll back abortion rights.
Collins has explained that based on her private impressions, the justices would not overturn the landmark Roe v Wade decision.
But with the death on Friday of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and a vow by Trump and the Senate majority leader, Mitch McConnell, to replace the liberal lion despite the proximity of a presidential election, the eye of the needle may have closed.
Collins is in the middle of a difficult re-election fight of her own, one in which voters will weigh her commitment on issues including reproductive rights. Recent polls have put her as much as 12 points behind her Democratic rival, Sarah Gideon.
Now, it appears Collins will be pressured to pass judgment on a third Trump nominee, whom the president pledged on Saturday to select “without delay”, even though the Senate might not vote until after election day. This time, in the judgment of activists on both sides of the abortion issue, a vote in favor would clearly be a vote in favor of overturning Roe.
Collins is not alone among senators for whom the death of Ginsburg has given rise to a potential political crisis. In battleground states across the country – North Carolina, Arizona, Colorado, Iowa, South Carolina, Georgia – Republicans are locked in close re-election fights that could be tipped by the battle over the next supreme court justice.
The political earthquake could shake the presidential election as well, as Joe Biden seeks to benefit from a surge of enthusiasm among progressive activists alarmed by the conservative hijacking of the court. Trump could likewise benefit if evangelicals are galvanized by an opportunity to capture the court for a generation.
Which way the politics will break is not clear. While McConnell has vowed to hold a vote on Trump’s nominee, he is working with a slim majority and it is not clear he will be able to rally his entire caucus behind him. Potential defectors, in theory at least, include Collins, who told the New York Times this month the calendar was too close to the election to advance a new justice.
“I think that’s too close, I really do,” she said.
Alongside Collins is Senator Lisa Murkowski, who told Alaska Public Radio on Friday: “I would not vote to confirm a supreme court nominee. We are 50-some days away from an election.”
Murkowski is not up for re-election and neither is Mitt Romney of Utah, seen as another potential defector, or Charles Grassley of Iowa, who when chairman of the Senate judiciary committee laid down a principle that supreme court nominees should not be advanced in election years.
But other key Republican senators are facing tight re-election bids that could yet define their vote. They include the current judiciary committee chair, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who like Grassley vowed never to consider a supreme court nominee in the last year of a president’s term; Thom Tillis of North Carolina; Cory Gardner of Colorado; Joni Ernst of Iowa; and Arizona’s Martha McSally.
In many of those states, pollsters have found higher levels of trust in Biden than in Trump when it comes to making a supreme court pick.
The fight over Trump’s third pick would be all-consuming, as likely to register on voters’ minds as any other development in a turbulent election year. Furthermore, Trump and Republicans in the Senate could face a political risk by picking such a fight in advance of the election.
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In Maine, 55% of voters told the New York Times they disapproved of Collins’ vote to confirm Kavanaugh in 2018, a decision that stoked huge fundraising for Collins’ opponent in Maine. The Times found that voters in Maine trusted Biden more than Trump to pick justices by a 22-point margin. The margin was 10 points in Arizona and three in North Carolina.
Analysts have recently seen an increased likelihood of Democrats capturing the Senate, based on Trump’s low approval rating and keenness among Democratic and some independent voters to eject the president from office.
If Democrats can take the Senate, they will assume the power to confirm any future supreme court nominees. But if the cost of their gaining that power is a third Trump justice, the change for many Americans could come too late.
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