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Mitch McConnell pledges Senate will vote on Ginsburg's supreme court replacement – live Mitch McConnell pledges Senate will vote on Ginsburg's supreme court replacement – live
(32 minutes later)
McConnell in 2016 argued it would be wrong to confirm a Democratic president’s nominee in the year before a electionMcConnell in 2016 argued it would be wrong to confirm a Democratic president’s nominee in the year before a election
‘She’s dead? Wow.’ Reporters inform Trump Ginsburg has died
NBC News has the moment on video:
Average number of days to confirm a Supreme Court justice: 69.6
Days until the 2020 presidential election: 45.
Romney spokesperson denies claim that he won’t support a nominee now
The Utah senator is seen as a potential Republican swing vote, part of a small handful of Republicans who might prevent the confirmation of a Trump appointee until after the November election.
But his spokesperson just called a claim that he would not support a nominee until after inauguration day “grossly false”.
Ted Cruz: confirm a conservative replacement for Ginsburg before election day
The Republican Senator Ted Cruz was added to Trump’s supreme court nominee short list earlier this month. Trump quipped at a campaign rally tonight that Trump would get an easy nomination to the court, with backing from even Senate Democrats, since they would all be so eager to get Cruz out of the Senate.
The crowd of mourners in front of the supreme court is growing
A historic war for the future of the supreme court, and for Americans’ rights
Ginsburg’s death has set up nothing short of a historic war for the future of the court – and American life under the law. Donald Trump and Republicans in the Senate are determined to replace Ginsburg with a conservative justice. Their doing so could decisively tilt the ideological balance of the court for a generation and would probably constitute the most lasting legacy of the Trump presidency.
At stake: reproductive rights, voting rights, protections from discrimination, the future of criminal justice, the power of the presidency, the rights of immigrants, tax rules and laws, and healthcare for millions of vulnerable Americans, to name a few issues. Every big issue in American life is on the line.
Trump released an updated list of potential supreme court nominees, including current Republican senators Ted Cruz, Josh Hawley and Tom Cotton, on 9 September.
Cotton’s response to being added to the list was to say that it’s time for the supreme court to make abortion illegal. Verbatim: “It’s time for Roe v Wade to go,” he said.
That landmark 1973 case found that women had a constitutional right to choose whether or not to have an abortion without excessive government interference.
As the Washington Post reported, Cotton also responded to Trump’s short list “by saying he ‘will always heed the call of service’ and that that he is ‘honored’ and ‘grateful’ to have the president’s confidence.”
Trump, before boarding Air Force One: ‘She just died? I didn’t know that’Trump, before boarding Air Force One: ‘She just died? I didn’t know that’
The president offered brief comments to the press about Ginsburg before boarding Air Force One, according to the White House pool report:The president offered brief comments to the press about Ginsburg before boarding Air Force One, according to the White House pool report:
“She just died? I didn’t know that.She led an amazing life, what else can you say? Whether you agree or not ... she led an amazing life.”“She just died? I didn’t know that.She led an amazing life, what else can you say? Whether you agree or not ... she led an amazing life.”
Trump avoids live reaction to news of Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s deathTrump avoids live reaction to news of Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death
For more than an hour, as the news of the death of a key liberal Supreme Court justice left Americans shaken, and as a fierce political battle began to confirm a Republican Supreme Court nominees before the election, Trump was on camera, at a campaign event in Minnesota, talking and talking and talking. For more than an hour, as the news of the death of a key liberal supreme court justice left Americans shaken, and as a fierce political battle began to confirm a supreme court nominee before the election, Trump was on camera, at a campaign event in Minnesota, talking and talking and talking.
He riffed on one issue and then another, returning more than once to the issue of the Supreme Court, apparently unaware of the fundamental change in the political landscape. None of his staff intervened to notify him. An NBC News reporter covering the rally noted that someone in the crowd tried to yell the news to Trump at least once, but did not appear to be heard. He riffed on one issue and then another, returning more than once to the issue of the supreme court, apparently unaware of the fundamental change in the political landscape. None of his staff intervened to notify him. An NBC News reporter covering the rally noted that someone in the crowd tried to yell the news to Trump at least once, but did not appear to be heard.
Full text of McConnell’s pledge to get Trump a vote on his supreme court nomineeFull text of McConnell’s pledge to get Trump a vote on his supreme court nominee
The full statement GOP senate majority leader Mitch McConnell sent out, barely an hour after the news broke that liberal Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had died. The full statement Mitch McConnell, the GOP Senate majority leader, sent out, barely an hour after the news broke that liberal supreme court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had died.
Trump is still talking about the supreme court, doesn’t know Ginsburg is deadTrump is still talking about the supreme court, doesn’t know Ginsburg is dead
It’s truly bizarre to watch the president continue to speak publicly about the importance of the supreme court in the 2020 election at a campaign rally, apparently unaware that Ginsburg has just died. Trump will apparently learn about this news later than many Americans, who watching him speak and riff on different subjects with apparently no idea that the world has fundamentally changed.It’s truly bizarre to watch the president continue to speak publicly about the importance of the supreme court in the 2020 election at a campaign rally, apparently unaware that Ginsburg has just died. Trump will apparently learn about this news later than many Americans, who watching him speak and riff on different subjects with apparently no idea that the world has fundamentally changed.
Republican senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, who argued that it would be wrong to confirm a Democratic president’s supreme court nominee in the year before a presidential election, now argues that it’s absolutely right to confirm a Republican supreme court nominee just 47 days before a presidential election.Republican senate majority leader Mitch McConnell, who argued that it would be wrong to confirm a Democratic president’s supreme court nominee in the year before a presidential election, now argues that it’s absolutely right to confirm a Republican supreme court nominee just 47 days before a presidential election.
This is how McConnell is justifying why the rules are simply different, depending on what benefits Republicans.This is how McConnell is justifying why the rules are simply different, depending on what benefits Republicans.
Key GOP senators who will face pressure not to vote to confirm Ginsburg’s replacementKey GOP senators who will face pressure not to vote to confirm Ginsburg’s replacement
Republicans have only a narrow majority in the Senate. Will enough Republicans decide to block the confirmation of a Trump-approved supreme court justice so close to the election?Republicans have only a narrow majority in the Senate. Will enough Republicans decide to block the confirmation of a Trump-approved supreme court justice so close to the election?
Senator Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski were both on the record as opposing, in theory, confirming a supreme court justice at a time that’s too close to the 2020 election.Senator Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski were both on the record as opposing, in theory, confirming a supreme court justice at a time that’s too close to the 2020 election.
But they will face tremendous pressure to change course:But they will face tremendous pressure to change course:
And, as NBC’s Katy Tur points out, there is a real electoral cost for any GOP senator who votes against Trump on this key vote.And, as NBC’s Katy Tur points out, there is a real electoral cost for any GOP senator who votes against Trump on this key vote.
Trump still does not appear to know Ginsburg has died
Right now he’s talking about negotiating over the price of Boeing planes.
‘An extraordinary champion of justice and equal rights’
Remembering Ruth Bader Ginsburg: a Video Obituary
Ruth Bader Ginsburg: A Life in Pictures
A powerful collection of images from the trailblazing lawyer and Supreme Court justice’s life.
Timeline of Ginsburg’s illness: May, July, September
My colleague Tom McCarthy has a more in-depth look at the timeline of statements about Ginsburg’s illness before the sudden announcement of her death:
In mid-July, Ginsburg had been admitted to hospital with a fever and chills but was released after about 24 hours, with the court reporting that she was recovering well.
After her discharge, Ginsburg announced that she had been undergoing chemotherapy since May to treat cancerous lesions on her liver. A scan on 7 July had revealed “reduction of the liver lesions and no new disease”, she said.
Ginsburg had survived four cancer treatments going back to 1999. She participated in oral arguments in May from a hospital bed while receiving treatments believed at the time to be for a malignant tumor on her pancreas diagnosed in 2019. Ginsburg had announced in January that she was cancer-free.
Reactions to the death of ‘Notorious RBG’ continue to roll in
NBC: Trump, onstage, still hasn’t been told about Ginsburg’s death
Before Ginsburg’s death, Murkowski said she would not confirm a replacement
Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski is a key swing vote in the Republican- controlled senate.
Hillary Clinton, others React to Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s Death
Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death just over six weeks before Election Day is likely to set off a heated battle over whether President Donald Trump should nominate, and the Republican-led Senate should confirm, her replacement, or if the seat should remain vacant until the outcome of his race against Democrat Joe Biden is known, the Associated Press reports.
Ginsburg spent her final years on the bench as the unquestioned leader of the court’s liberal wing and became something of a rock star to her admirers. Young women especially seemed to embrace the court’s Jewish grandmother, affectionately calling her the Notorious RBG, for her defense of the rights of women and minorities, and the strength and resilience she displayed in the face of personal loss and health crises.
She resisted calls by liberals to retire during Barack Obama’s presidency at a time when Democrats held the Senate and a replacement with similar views could have been confirmed. Instead, Trump will almost certainly try to push Ginsburg’s successor through the Republican-controlled Senate — and move the conservative court even more to the right.
When Justice Antonin Scalia died in 2016, also an election year, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell refused to act on Obama’s nomination of Judge Merrick Garland to fill the opening. The seat remained vacant until after Trump’s surprising presidential victory. McConnell has said he would move to confirm a Trump nominee if there were a vacancy this year.
Reached by phone late Friday, Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, declined to disclose any plans. He said a statement would be forthcoming.