4 key players in the
Supreme Court brawl are right here in Nevada
Chuck
Muth
February
18, 2016
Since
Nevada is at ground zero in the coming mega-battle over who will replace the
late, great conservative Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, let’s set the
stage and clear the air.
First,
I say Nevada is at the center or the storm because we have four political
figures who are deeply ingrained in the controversy: Senate Minority Leader Harry
Reid, Gov. Brian Sandoval, Rep. Joe Heck
and a “mystery guest.”
More on them in a
minute.
As
for the air-clearing, understand this: Yes, President Barack Obama has the
right to nominate a replacement. Not an
obligation. The right.
Yes,
the Senate, for its part, has the power to approve or reject Obama’s pick.
And thanks to the filibuster – which Democrats,
including Reid and Obama, used extensively to block judicial nominations in the
past – Republicans in the Senate have the right, though not obligation, to
return the favor.
Before
Scalia’s death the Supreme Court was evenly divided philosophically, with four conservative
justices, four liberal justices, and Justice Anthony Kennedy who blows like a
reed in a wind storm.
As such, another
liberal Obama pick like the ones he’s already put on the bench would
dramatically shift the court’s disposition to the left.
Which
is why Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has already thrown
down the gauntlet and declared that no Obama nominee will be confirmed by the
Republican-controlled Senate.
McConnell
believes American voters should have a say in this decision by delaying it
until after the November elections and let the new president and Senate,
elected by the people with full knowledge of what’s at stake, resolve the
matter.
That,
of course, doesn’t sit well with Reid, who believes – and not without good
reason – that Republicans will cave-in to outside pressure and consider a “closet
liberal” nominee put up by Obama.
Enter
tax-hiking RINO Sandoval.
Reid put him
on the federal bench once before and seems perfectly willing to do so again if
it means not letting a potential new Republican president pick Scalia’s
replacement.
Yes,
an ideology-free Sandoval would be perfectly acceptable to Democrats, and
probably some mush-headed Republicans.
But conservatives knew Justice Scalia.
And Brian Sandoval is no Antonin Scalia.
More like David Souter. McConnell
& Company would be nuts to replace Scalia with Sandoval.
Which
brings us to Heck.
Senate
Republicans are defending a lot more seats this cycle than Democrats, and
control of the Senate is absolutely up for grabs.
Heck, running to replace Reid - against Reid's hand-picked successor, Catherine Cortez-Masto-Reid - is really the
only shot the GOP has of picking up a Senate seat, which may determine who
controls the Senate confirmation process next year.
So
the big question now is whether or not our “mystery guest,” Sharron Angle, will
jump into the GOP primary and challenge Heck.
Since Republicans rarely blow an opportunity to blow an opportunity, don’t
be surprised to see her try to blow this one for conservatives.
Again.
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