Biden Can't Let Manchin and Synema Derail His Court Nominee
When Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer announced his impending retirement, Democrats rejoiced. It isn't that they aren't pleased with Breyer's work -- he has served as a critical liberal vote on a court that has taken a sharp shift to the right in recent years. But stepping down will ensure President Joe Biden will nominate a replacement who could maintain a seat on the bench for decades to come.
A few potential nominees have already been floated around. DC Circuit Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson, who has experience as a public defender, has already survived the vetting process because of her appellate appointment. Leondra Kruger, one of the youngest appointees to the California Supreme Court at age 45, clerked for the late Justice John Paul Stevens and served as acting deputy solicitor general under former President Barack Obama. There's also South Carolina US District Court Judge J. Michelle Childs, who has strong support from House Majority Whip James Clyburn.
On paper, it should be smooth sailing for Biden to get his nomination confirmed. Since Senate Republicans carved out Supreme Court picks from the filibuster in 2017, the President only needs a simple majority to move through the confirmation process.
But the reality is likely to be messier. With the midterms approaching, Senate Republicans are likely to oppose the nomination -- whoever it is -- and use it to rally the base. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and his troops could warn that Biden's pick will threaten constitutional rights and open the door to all sorts of dangerous decisions -- whether it be protecting women's reproductive rights, allowing for stronger controls of gun sales or permitting federal mandates for life-saving vaccines.
Biden should be able to ignore all of that -- if he has the support of Sens. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona. But this raises the question of whether the President will face a repeat of the Build Back Better battle, with just two Democrats tanking the party's ability to move forward and allowing the Republican minority to rule the roost.
When we look back on US history, there have been a few Supreme Court picks that have caused intra-party divisions. In 2018, Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska broke with the Republican Party to vote against Justice Brett Kavanaugh, following accusations of sexual assault that emerged in the hearing process. (Kavanaugh has adamantly denied all accusations of wrongdoing.) In 2006, Sen. Lincoln Chafee of Rhode Island, one of the last Northeastern moderates in the GOP who was up for reelection in a Democratic state, voted against confirming Justice Samuel Alito to the bench. In these and other recent cases, a vote here or there was not decisive.
To be sure, there are other instances when intra-party dissention mattered more. When former President Richard Nixon nominated Clement Haynsworth in 1969, a bipartisan coalition of 17 Republicans and 38 Democrats ensured his defeat due to charges of ethical breaches and his hostile positions on unions and racial integration. Nixon's next pick, G. Harrold Carswell, also went down in bipartisan defeat because of his record on segregation.