There was just one. During the debate over Brett Kavauagh’s Supreme Court nomination, opponents of the Republican jurist hoped to find two or three GOP senators who would vote “no,” but in the end, Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R) of Alaska stood alone.
Her willingness to break ranks was ultimately inconsequential — the new justice was confirmed anyway — but some of Murkowski’s fellow Republicans are not prepared to let their sense of betrayal fade away.
In a brief telephone interview with The Washington Post, Trump said voters in Alaska “will never forgive” Murkowski for voting against confirming Kavanaugh, and he forecast her defeat in a Republican primary should she run for reelection in 2022.
“I think she will never recover from this,” Trump said. “I think the people from Alaska will never forgive her for what she did.”
Donald Trump’s whining was bolstered by partisan grumblings from Murkowski’s home state. The Associated Press reported last night:
Alaska Republican party leaders plan to consider whether to reprimand U.S. Sen. Lisa Murkowski for opposing Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation.
The party has asked Murkowski to provide any information she might want its state central committee to consider.
Party Chairman Tuckerman Babcock says the committee could decide to issue a statement. Or he says it could withdraw support of Murkowski, encourage party officials to look for a replacement and ask that she not seek re-election as a Republican.
There are a few angles to this to keep in mind. The first is that Murkowski’s future is probably on firmer ground than her intra-party critics care to admit. In 2010, the GOP’s far-right base defeated her in a primary, forcing Murkowski to run for re-election as a write-in candidate. Despite having a tough-to-spell last name, the senator won by four points — and then won a landslide victory six years later.









