How America Was Lost
How America Was Lost
Once upon a time, the death of a Supreme Court justice wouldnt have brought America to the edge of constitutional crisis. But that was a different country, with a very different Republican Party. In todays America, with todays G.O.P., the passing of Antonin Scalia has opened the doors to chaos.
In principle, losing a justice should cause at most a mild disturbance in the national scene. After all, the court is supposed to be above politics. So when a vacancy appears, the president should simply nominate, and the Senate approve, someone highly qualified and respected by all.
In reality, of course, things were never that pure. Justices have always had known political leanings, and the process of nomination and approval has often been contentious. Still, there was nothing like the situation we face now, in which Republicans have more or less unanimously declared that President Obama has no right even to nominate a replacement for Mr. Scalia and no, the fact that Mr. Obama will leave soon doesnt make it O.K. (Justice Kennedy was appointed during Ronald Reagans last year in office.)
Nor were the consequences of a court vacancy as troubling in the past as they are now. As everyone is pointing out, without Mr. Scalia the justices are evenly divided between Republican and Democratic appointees which probably means a hung court on many issues.
Republicans, in an effort to grasp complete power, are tossing the Constitution in the crapper, which puts lie to their regular exercise of wrapping themselves in it.