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It appears that the death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia is turning the race for the White House into a battle over the U.S. Constitution.
Just hours after his death was announced on Saturday, the 2016 candidates began arguing over whether President Obama should nominate a successor for Scalia, a duty bestowed to the commander-in-chief by the Constitution.
Republican candidates say it would be unreasonable for the president to nominate a replacement because Obama’s term is set to run out at the end of the year. Additionally, the GOP contends that it would be wrong to give the president a chance to select another jurist because his previous Supreme Court appointments—Justices Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotomayor—are radical liberals.
Republican Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says he that he’ll block any attempt by President Obama to nominate a Supreme Court justice—a move that is largely welcomed by the base of the Republican party. But, according to Takeaway Washington Correspondent Todd Zwillich, such a plan could hurt Republican senators facing tough re-election campaigns in moderate states, and disrupt the GOP’s relatively thin 54-46 majority in the Senate.
“They have to be worried because this is a big complication with potential risks and potential rewards for re-election, not to mention the presidential [campaign],” he says.
Come November, at least five Republican senators will have to defend their seats from Democratic challenges in states that President Obama won—twice.
“People like Rob Portman in Ohio, Kelly Ayotte in New Hampshire, Ron Johnson in Wisconsin, Pat Toomey in Pennsylvania, didn’t say anything at first,” says Zwillich. “Since, each of them has said, ‘No, no, I’m on board. This is a good idea; we should wait until there’s a new president to consider a new Supreme Court nominee because the stakes are just too high.’”
Republican Senator Mark Kirk, who represents President Obama’s home state of Illinois, faces a tough race for re-election and has not yet said whether he will back McConnell’s decision to block a nominee put forth by President Obama.
“The most important senator in all of this, of course, is Ted Cruz, the Republican conservative of Texas who’s in a battle with Donald Trump for the presidential nomination,” Zwillich says.
To rally conservative voters, Senator Cruz has already started using this issue in advertisements (see video below).
“Ted Cruz is really the one leading this charge that says, ‘We will not consider any Obama nominee,’ and not just in the primary,” says Zwillich. “This is Cruz’s theory for the general election: ‘I don’t need moderate voters; I don’t need six percent in purple states. I am going to rally evangelicals and other conservatives to my cause.’”
But President Obama and the Democratic Party may be taking Cruz’s stance into account. Zwillich says it is possible that the president will intentionally pick a moderate, centrist nominee—if he were to do so and Republicans blocked the nominee anyway, the party may wind up appearing radical and unreasonable.
“That could be a huge advantage for a Democrat,” he says. “You can see lots and lots of risks and benefits woven all through this thing.”
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