Jonny
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- Joined
- Sep 8, 2009
- Messages
- 3,137
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- FREE
I wasn't ignoring your post, just taking time to think about what I want to say.
It would indeed be nice if there wasn't a shitstorm, but as we learned throughout the Trump presidency. This is what politics have become due to the media's blatant bias and censorship. The Democrats are usually the ones that refuse to do anything bi-partisan. Just look at how the house treats Trump, and Pelosi refusing to vote on more Covid relief because she doesn't want Trump's name on the check. I have never seen Trump not try to negotiate with Democrats.
The president is elected for four years, not three. Trump had every legal right to nominate a new judge, and it isn't even that big of an issue as it is made out to be. I think it's a bit hypocritical to bring up precedence, when this presidency and year have been everything but. i.e. see impeachment and Russian collusion scandal as an example of unprecedented corruption by intelligence agencies and people in power.
Judges are to remain apolitical. I don't really believe just because Trump nominated someone, doesn't mean they are skewed right or left. Because it is a judge's job to interpret the law, not enact it. There have been plenty of right wing people who voted in favor of gay marriage for example, because it is constitutional.
Health coverage is something I really don't think is a matter of coverage, in terms of fixing it. There is a tremendous web of corporate and political interconnections make any real regulation and improvement impossible. From monopolies, to money laundering for administrative and political elites. Also, while we are on that subject. I do support government health care, but only if it can compete with private. And not cost an arm and a leg. I personally think insurance is part of the problem. Where does that money go? Why are tests etc so expensive? Those are the real questions we should be asking.
Pelosi is refusing to vote on the Republican proposal in the same way as the Senate is refusing to vote on the Democrat's proposal. The house has already passed a COVID relief bill. This is how negotiations between the two sides work. It is disingenuous to say that only one side is refusing to help people.

And as you'll recall, Republicans in the Senate refused to consider Obama's nomination of Merrick Garland. On March 16, 2016, then President Obama nominated Garland to replace Justice Scalia, who had died just a month before. Republicans held the seat vacant until Gorsuch was confirmed on April 7, 2017, over a year later. This time, Amy Coney Barrett was nominated on September 26, 2020, less than a week after Justice Ginsburg died, and she is on track to be confirmed about in record time.
You're right, Trump is within his legal right to nominate Barrett and the Republicans have the political power to confirm her. That doesn't change my opinion that the process should be reformed. It has become too political on both sides.
You may not believe that "...just because Trump nominated someone, doesn't mean they are skewed right or left," but it turns out that, in practice, that is highly explanatory. For example, SCOTUS just ruled 5-3 that Alabama could ban curbside voting intended to accommodate individuals with disabilities and those at risk for COVID-19. All republican nominated justices supported the ban, and all democratic nominated justices opposed it. Go figure.
Again, we can argue about specific policy differences, but my main point is that the current process of nominating and approving members to SCOTUS has become far too partisan. One of the strengths of the court is the public perception that it is a bipartisan institution. To the extent that substantive reform can take place to bolster that perception, the better.