At the heart of the Republican strategy surrounding Amy Coney Barrett’s Supreme Court confirmation was a calculated bet: Democrats, GOP leaders concluded, would no doubt complain, protest, and plead with Republicans to be more responsible. But when push comes to shove, GOP leaders assumed, Democrats wouldn’t actually do anything.
As NBC News reported yesterday:
When Senate Republicans voted on a rainy Sunday to put Amy Coney Barrett on a glide path to a lifetime Supreme Court appointment one week before Election Day, they were making a bet that Democrats wouldn’t retaliate and erase conservative gains. “A lot of what we’ve done over the last four years will be undone, sooner or later, by the next election,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said Sunday after the 51-48 procedural vote against Democratic objections. “But they won’t be able to do much about this for a long time to come.”
Except, strictly speaking, “able” probably wasn’t the right word — because if Democrats reclaim the Senate majority, they’ll be “able” to do quite a bit.
The question is less about ability and more about will.
And while I won’t pretend to know which party will be in the majority next year, or whether Democrats will muster the strength and unity to take sweeping actions, I think it’s fair to say fury in Democratic circles has reached levels without modern precedent.
We saw the first hints of this in early August, when Senate Republicans openly discussed the possibility of rushing through a Supreme Court nominee — at the time, a hypothetical scenario. Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), a relatively moderate institutionalist not known as a partisan bomb-thrower, sent a shot across the GOP’s bow.
“If they show that they’re unwilling to respect precedent, rules and history, then they can’t feign surprise when others talk about using a statutory option that we have that’s fully constitutional in our availability,” Kaine told NBC News, referring to Senate Republicans. “I don’t want to do that. But if they act in such a way, they may push it to an inevitability.”









