Senate Majority Whip John Thune (R-SD) spoke strongly Tuesday in support of moving forward with a nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court.
“One thing I can say is that Republicans won’t be deterred from performing our constitutional role by Democrats’ undemocratic threats. We will work to fill this Supreme Court vacancy, and I look forward to receiving and reviewing the president’s nomination in the near future,” said Senator Thune.
Thune also honored the life of Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and recognized the passion and perseverance that she displayed throughout her career.
Video of Thune’s remarks and excerpts of his comments appear below.
Mr. President, in the wake of a Supreme Court justice’s death, the Senate has to turn its thoughts to considering the next Supreme Court nominee.
The president has indicated that he expects to nominate Justice Ginsburg’s successor as soon as this week. He has also made it clear that he intends to nominate a woman.
Whomever he nominates, I am confident that she will be in the mode of the president’s other Supreme Court appointments – a nominee with a profound respect for the law and the Constitution.
Someone who understands that the job of a Supreme Court justice – or any judge – is to interpret the law, not make the law. To call balls and strikes, not rewrite the rules of the game.
Now, Mr. President, predictably Democrats are in an uproar over the fact that President Trump will nominate a third Supreme Court justice.
They want Republicans to refuse to consider the president’s nomination – before the president has even named anyone.
They claim that the fact that a Republican-led Senate did not consider the nomination of Merrick Garland during President Obama’s final year means that Republicans should decline to consider President Trump’s nominee.
Now, Mr. President, it’s perfectly true that the Senate did not vote on President Obama’s final Supreme Court nominee – that’s something that the Senate can choose to do.
Any Senate, led by either party, can decline to take up a nominee.
At the time, we felt that since voters had recently chosen a Republican-led Senate, while the president was a Democrat on his way out of office, the new president should choose the next Supreme Court nominee.
That was wholly in line with the history of the Senate – and with the rule promulgated by Joe Biden when he was chairman of the Judiciary Committee, and endorsed by the current Democrat leader in 2007.
As a Wall Street Journal op-ed explained, ‘This exception was popularized in 1992 by Sen. Joe Biden, then chairman of the Judiciary Committee. He urged President George H.W. Bush to refrain from making any Supreme Court nominations in that election year. What made 1992 different from other election years, Mr. Biden explained, was that ‘divided Government’ reflected an absence of a ‘nationwide consensus’ on constitutional philosophy. ‘Action on a Supreme Court nomination must be put off until after the election campaign is over,’ the future vice president insisted. No vacancy arose until 1993, when Bill Clinton was in the White House and Ginsburg’s nomination easily passed a Democratic Senate. But the Biden rule fit 2016 to a tee.’
For the past 130-plus years, no Senate has approved a Supreme Court nominee in the final year of a president’s term if the Senate majority and the president were of different parties.
On the other hand, a number of Supreme Court nominees have been confirmed during a president’s final year in office when the Senate was led by the same party as the president.
There have been 15 situations in U.S. history where a Supreme Court vacancy arose in a presidential election year and the president nominated someone that same year.
In eight of those cases, the president and the Senate majority were of the same party. And in all but one of those eight cases, the president’s nominee was confirmed.
Democrats are free to disagree with Republicans’ application of the Biden-Schumer rule in 2016, but no one can dispute that voting on or rejecting a nominee is the constitutional prerogative of the Senate.
Mr. President, there should be nothing disturbing about the Senate fulfilling its constitutional role of advising and consenting on a Supreme Court nomination.
What is disturbing are Democrats’ threats as to what they will do if Republicans in the Senate don’t yield to their demands.
Those threats include, but are not limited to, eliminating the legislative filibuster (the Senate rule that helps ensure that bills that come before the Senate require bipartisan cooperation) and packing the Supreme Court with additional justices so that Democrats can ensure a rubber stamp for their agenda.
Some are even considering impeaching the president. Again.
What they would impeach him for is not exactly clear.
Fulfilling his constitutional responsibility to name someone to the Supreme Court?
Some Democrats have gone as far as to say that nothing is off the table when it comes to retribution for considering the president’s nominee – a particularly insidious and irresponsible threat at a time when political violence is at a high in this country.
Mr. President, one thing I can say is that Republicans won’t be deterred from performing our constitutional role by Democrats’ undemocratic threats.
For many of us, confirming principled judges who will uphold the constitution and the rule of law has been a core tenet of our public service—and a shared goal of those who elected us.
We will work to fill this Supreme Court vacancy, and I look forward to receiving and reviewing the president’s nomination in the near future.
Comments