reConservative Justice Amy Coney Barrett, 48, a mother of seven, is expected to fill the seat left vacant on the United States Supreme Court following the death of Ruth Bader Ginsburg, an icon of left-wing liberalism not only in the United States. United. If the Senate approves the president’s proposal, and that is likely despite a narrow Republican majority, then Donald Trump would have held three Supreme Court Justice seats during his first term. The conservative majority would be large and stable for many years, even decades.
It is this perspective of a permanent majority that rejoices the conservative evangelical and traditionalist Trump electorate and makes them forget the president’s frivolities. After all, four years ago many had chosen him primarily for that reason. This is the new trump card that Trump will play in just over a month to win a second term. It is his “legacy”; condemned by one, canonized by the other.
The fact that Republicans want to go ahead with the Senate nomination is politically embarrassing, but not legally denied. It was silly that four years ago, when a judge had died eight months before the election date, they refused even to debate Obama’s draft proposal, on the flimsy argument that the new president should have the right to nominate. It showed how deep they had sunk back then, into the snake pit of the political war of positions, into which the Supreme Court was also dragged.