In order to derail the Republican Party’s Supreme Court scheme, four GOP senators would need to break ranks and stand in support of principle. As of yesterday morning, two Republicans — Alaska’s Lisa Murkowski and Maine’s Susan Collins — both committed to an honorable course.
The next obvious contender was Sen. Mitt Romney (R-Utah), who, as we’ve discussed, has frequently expressed discomfort with some of his party’s more indefensible antics. In fact, it was earlier this year when Romney voted with Democrats to remove Donald Trump from office as a consequence of the president’s illegal extortion scheme.
Will the Utahan decide eight months later that the Senate should nevertheless jam through Trump’s choice, propriety be damned? The answer is coming into focus. Politico reported this morning:
Sen. Mitt Romney said he would support a floor vote on President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court, essentially clinching consideration of Trump’s nominee this year despite the impending election…. “I intend to follow the Constitution and precedent in considering the president’s nominee. If the nominee reaches the Senate floor, I intend to vote based upon their qualifications,” the Utah Republican said in a statement.
He didn’t commit to voting for Trump’s nominee, but he did endorse the process of considering the president’s choice.
In other words, Romney simply intends to ignore the context, the calendar, the recent history, and the responsibility senators are supposed to have to act honorably. It’s a reminder of a nagging detail that often goes overlooked: the senator may clash with Donald Trump, but Romney remains a Republican senator, who’s fully committed to his party’s far-right agenda — and part of that agenda is moving the federal judiciary even further off the conservative cliff.








