2020
ELECTIONS
Liberals want blood. Joe Biden is sticking with
bipartisanship.
The Democratic nominee shrugged off calls within his
party to embrace the kind of pure power tactics Republicans are adopting.
By
CHRISTOPHER CADELAGO
09/20/2020
08:57 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/09/20/joe-biden-liberals-bipartisanship-419127
Liberals
are furious. And they want Joe Biden to channel their angst and calm their
nerves by advocating for every tactical maneuver available to stall Donald
Trump’s coming Supreme Court nomination in the Senate.
Biden did
something else on Sunday, using his first extended remarks about the future of
the high court since the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg to strike notes that have
formed the basis of his campaign: respect for precedent, appeals to reason,
bipartisanship, devotion to checks and balances.
In
imploring a handful of Republican senators who control the fate of Trump’s
third nomination in four years to defy the president, Biden again landed
squarely on the themes even many Democrats ridiculed as archaic, possibly naive
— right until his party rewarded him with the nomination.
So it’s not
surprising that Biden skipped over progressive wish list items like court
packing, something he said more than a year ago would cause Democrats to “rue
that day.” While some Democrats want him to embrace and advocate court reforms
more broadly, one official said privately he saw the speech as designed to
address the moment, rather than moments that still might come.
With a
steady lead in national and battleground-state polls, the former vice president
has also refused to entertain every idea or respond in real time to every
pressure point the Trump campaign tries to apply. Biden outright rejected calls
to release a list of potential Supreme Court nominees, arguing doing so could
sway their decisions and expose them to unrelenting political attacks. (There’s
some recent precedent for this: He never confirmed a list, but many of Biden’s
vice-presidential contenders came under intense scrutiny, sometimes privately
from each other.)
A creature
of the Senate for more than three decades, Biden has long argued that once
Trump is out of the way some old norms will be restored and the two parties
might be able to collaborate. But before Sunday, he’d never tested his own
ability to persuade — especially his optimism, despite evidence it's
unwarranted — as a presidential nominee in such an explicit way.
“Please,
follow your conscience,” Biden urged the small group of Republican senators
still weighing whether to act on a nominee under circumstances being driven by
Trump and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. "Don’t go there. Uphold
your constitutional duty, your conscience, let the people speak.
"We can’t keep rewriting history, scrambling
norms, ignoring our cherished system of checks and balances.”
Biden’s
middle-road approach has so far worked for him electorally. Voters seem
intrigued by noble notions of bipartisanship more than they do the onerous
compromise it requires.
Biden saved
his toughest talk for Trump and the Senate leader, though he also called out
Lindsey Graham, the Judiciary Committee chair. For Trump, Biden contended, it’s
all a game, a play to “gin up emotions and anger." And with Trump,
McConnell is trying to, jam through the nomination as “an exercise in raw
political power.”
“I don’t
believe the people of this nation will stand for it,” Biden said, turning to
the hypocrisy of the GOP's quest.
Biden noted
that McConnell and other Republicans argued the opposite position when former
President Barack Obama nominated Merrick Garland to replace the late Justice
Antonin Scalia in 2016.
McConnell,
meantime, secured the support of Sen. Lamar Alexander, who is on his way out
and had been viewed as a potential swing vote. So far, only a pair of
Republican senators have pledged to oppose a confirmation vote before Election
Day: Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska.
Increasingly,
Biden's speech is looking like it was aimed at not a group of three or four,
but an audience as small as one: Sen. Mitt Romney. If Romney were to oppose
McConnell’s push for a quick vote, the majority leader would have no votes to
spare — and Vice President Mike Pence would have to step in to break the tie.
Asked about
the overtures to Republicans from the National Constitution Center in
Philadelphia, Republican strategist Scott Jennings shot back, “lol.”
“If his
view of politics is that because Republicans were mean to Obama, they must now
be mean to Trump, a president of their own party, grow up,” Jennings said, pointing
to Biden and Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer’s calls for confirmation
hearings for Garland in 2016.
“The
constitution gives the Senate a big, independent hand in this deal and
conservatives are pretty happy that Mitch McConnell knows how to use it,”
Jennings added. “Biden would be better off worrying about the radicals in his
party promising to expand and pack the court and impeach the president to stall
this out, if he’s worried about norms and fairness.”
If those
proposals do worry Biden, he’s trying to direct attention elsewhere. An aide
said Biden is closely coordinating with Schumer and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.
They described them as unified in the belief that the Supreme Court fight
underscores the importance of the election, particularly around health care
during the pandemic, with the Trump administration trying to undermine the
Affordable Care Act in the courts.
On ABC’s
“This Week” Sunday, Pelosi argued that Trump has sped up the court timeline to
rush a nominee in place for a Nov. 10 hearing on Obamacare. “He doesn’t want to
crush the [coronavirus]” she said, “he wants to crush the Affordable Care Act.”
However,
Pelosi wouldn’t rule out the possibility of launching impeachment proceedings
to block the Senate from confirming Trump’s pick, contending Sunday that
Democrats possess “arrows in our quiver” to gum up the process. A day earlier,
Schumer delivered a similar message.
“Let me be
clear: If Leader McConnell and Senate Republicans move forward with this, then
nothing is off the table for next year,” Schumer said during a Democratic
Caucus call Saturday, warning of possible payback if Republicans fill the seat
before January.
Biden said
he won't weigh in on the possibility of the Senate confirming a successor to
Ginsburg on the eve of the election — or in the lame-duck session this fall
should Trump lose. Even going there would concede that Democrats have already
lost, he said.
“I’m not
going to assume failure at this point,” he said. “I believe the voices of the
American people should be heard.”
If Biden's
appeal to conscience and reason again came off as quaint or out of touch with
the moment, no one can dispute it's worked for him so far.
“It was an
old-fashioned appeal to decency,” said Jim Manley, who spent 21 years working
in the Senate, a dozen with the late Ted Kennedy and six with former Majority
Leader Harry Reid. "He acknowledged the hyper-partisanship out there, but
he wanted to cool things down a little bit before it gets really ugly."
Manley
added: "What [Biden] said is largely in sync, for better or for worse,
with how he’s operated for months.”


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