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The whispers behind Justice Ginsberg’s health

<p>Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg has cancer – a particularly deadly form of cancer&period;  And it is not her first bout&period;  She has contracted and defeated cancer multiple times&period;  She is what we colloquially call &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;a tough old gal&period;”<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>She is currently undergoing chemotherapy and other medical treatments&period;  She has issued statements proffering optimism in terms of future longevity – and her ability to keep up with  Supreme Court responsibilities&period;  That may be true to a degree&comma; but the combination of age and health makes modifications to her schedule and workload necessary&period;  The increasingly frequent trips to the hospital are evidence of that&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In that&comma; the entire nation wishes her a quick and speedy recovery – even though that is not a likely outcome&period;  At 87&period; Ginsberg is on the precipice of eternity&period;  Everyone knows that&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Given her age and condition&comma; most justices would step aside&period;  The reason that she does not is the talk of the town &&num;8212&semi; but only whispered in the cloistered rooms of political power&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Her desire to maintain her seat on the Supreme Court is driven by one overriding fear – that President Trump would name her successor and win approval in the Republican Senate&period;  That same fear has the left totally apoplectic&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Should Trump be re-elected&comma; it is almost certain that he would be replacing Ginsberg&period;  That makes the Supreme Court a defining issue for many voters&period;  Even worse&comma; a second term could give Trump a number of nominations to the High Court&period;  It has been reported that several conservative justices – including Clarence Thomas – would step down sometime in the next four years&period;  But of particular concern is Justice Stephen Breyer &&num;8212&semi; one of the Court’s more consistently liberal members&comma; who is currently weeks away from his 82<sup>nd<&sol;sup> birthday&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>It is no exaggeration that the future of the Supreme Court is in the balance in the next four years&period;  The precarious liberal&sol;conservative balance will most likely be shifted more decidedly in one direction or the other – depending on who is sitting in the Oval Office&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The most intriguing and intense whispered speculation is what happens if Ginsberg passes or absolutely must leave the Court before January 20&comma; 2021 – before Trump leaves office&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Democrats and their media pals will scream that the choice should be made after January 20<sup>th<&sol;sup> – resurrecting the old 1992 &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Biden Rule” against nominating a candidate in the last year of a presidential term&period;  It was proffered to stop President George H&period; W&period; Bush from nominating a justice while he was facing a tough re-election campaign&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Democrats – including Biden – argued against the Biden Rule when Democrats wanted Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to approve President Obama’s nomination of Merritt Garland&comma; who was nominated in Obama’s last year in office&period;  Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell held out&comma; citing the Biden Rule&period;  His political gamble paid off when Trump won the presidency and put Justice Neil Gorsuch on the high court&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So … the political class is speculating quietly behind closed doors on what would happen if the Ginsberg seat were to be vacated for whatever reason in the near future&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In my judgment&comma; the answer is rather simple – but it all depends on when the vacancy takes place&period;  There is no precise demarcation point&comma; but I suggest that if the vacancy were to occur prior to December 1<sup>st<&sol;sup> – and Biden was the President-elect – McConnell would preside over the fastest confirmation process in American history&period;  And there is nothing that could be done to stop him because he and the GOP control all the rules&period;  There is nothing illegal&comma; immoral or unconstitutional about it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>For sure&comma; there would be outrage on the left that would make the confirmation of Justice Brett Kavanaugh look like a love-in&period;  But there would be no reason for McConnell not to do what politicians do all the time – use the constitutional and legal powers of the office to pursue their political interests&period;  That is why we see so-called principles being flipped and flopped back and forth depending on whether the people doing flipping and flopping are in office or out of office&period;  It is called hypocrisy – and it is a mainstay of political life&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>That is why the left is praying … uh … make that hoping … that Ginsberg will hang on until next year – at which time she is most likely to hand in her resignation&period;  And let’s face reality&comma; a lot of Republicans are secretly hoping that Ginsberg will give Trump one more shot at the Supreme Court&period;  If that sounds too cold&comma; just keep in mind all those radical Democrats who have been overtly wishing for the demise of Trump&period;  They have wanted him out of the White House – whether by impeachment&comma; resignation&comma; or feet first from the day he got elected&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Ginsberg is facing her own mortality with courage and dignity&period;  She is a class act&period;  But she is also realistic enough to know that whether she can stay well long enough to prevent Trump from filling her seat is no longer up to her&period;  It is more in the hands of doctors and providence&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>But a drag-out political battle over a Supreme Court nomination on top of the Covid-19&comma; the economic crash and the civil unrest is beyond the imagination of the most creative political fiction novelists&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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