Manchin to Vote for KBJ, But GOP Scored Midterm Points
25 Mar 2022
CLAY: Joe Manchin โ senator from West Virginia who flirts with the Republicans on a regular basis, the most moderate of all of the Democratic senators โ announced this morning that he will be voting for Ketanji Brown Jacksonโs nomination on the United States Supreme Court, effectively ending any drama that might surround her ascension to the Supreme Court. So that is basically a done deal, barring some sort of crazy revelation, which itโs hard to imagine what that would entail.
So that will happen in early April. She will replace Judge Stephen Breyer when the court term ends. So I do think that the Republicans scored a lot of points politically, further elucidating the argument for why Republicans in the midterm makes so much sense. But in terms of what is going to happen to her and her nomination, she is effectively on the Supreme Court with that announcement from Joe Manchin. And now the only drama, to the extent that thereโs drama at all, will be to what extent will Republicans support her nomination? How many Republicans will she get? Two? Three? Whatever that number is, it doesnโt really matter.
BUCK: Whatโs your number, Clay?
CLAY: Iโm going to goโฆ I think Susan Collins in Maine will end up voting for her. I think there may be a couple of guys who are resigning โ โresigningโ is the wrong word, who are retiring โ from the Senate, who could consider her. I think itโs going to be two. I think there will be two Republicans who end up voting for. What about you?
CLAY: Iโll go four.
BUCK: You think four?
CLAY: Yeah.
CLAY: Yeah. I do think that the drama is that there will be a lot of attention to how, quote, unquote, bipartisan the voting is. But once Manchin came out and saidโฆ We talked about this, Buck. There was maybe a small chance that he could use this as an opportunity to announce, effectively, that heโs becoming a Republican. But these are the consequences โ and I think theyโre fairly significant โ of the run-up elections in Georgia.
Because Judge Breyer would not have stepped down, if Republicans had control of the Senate. I really donโt believe that he would have, and there wouldnโt have been any sort of massive pressure campaign on him to step down, meaning that you would continue at 6-3, but with an 80-plus-year-old. And, Buck, if you look โ positive news โ Clarence Thomas came out of the hospital today. Heโs been released. Heโs back home, hopefully back to being normal and recovering.
But when you got people over the age of 70, who are on the Supreme Court, as we saw with Antonin Scalia, at any point, thatโs how life works. You might have an unexpected death โ and that, by the way, could happen in the Senate as well, where you have a lot of older individuals, politicians, who are representing the Republicans and the Democrats. So there are consequences.
BUCK: I also think that the Republicans are not scared of the Democrats the way that we might have anticipated in terms of the backlash against going after Ketanji Brown Jackson.
CLAY: Yeah.
BUCK: I think one of the big takeaways of this whole week of the confirmation hearing is that if the Democrats werenโt in a place where theyโre writing think pieces โ and they are right now โ about how their side is making it too easy โ this was in the New York Times, too easy โ for a Republicans to just gain ground with independents, to gain ground not just with the Republican base, but with people who will be determining factors in the midterm election and then, of course, going forward to the presidential election after that.
Theyโre making it easy, in the sense, that theyโre failing on so many levels. Their poll numbers are terrible. Biden looks like an absurdity with each passing day. More like an absurdity with each passing day. So the usual, โOh, I canโt ask tough questions of this, the firstโ soon to be, I think, the first โblack female Supreme Court justice.โ Republicans were not actually scared to ask questions, even at the expense of being called โ unfairly โ racist by the Democrat media, or sexist. Both, obviously.
And I think thatโs just indicative of they arenโt really worried about what the Democrat Party is at right now. They donโt feel like people who are persuadable will see asking real questions and being willing to push back a bit on what was supposed to just a glide-through process here of a confirmation. GOP is feeling they can actually push a bit, and I think honestly, it was more than I expected to see this week.
CLAY: Yeah.
BUCK: It was a number of levels. It was obviously the Marsha Blackburn over the question of, โWhat is a woman?โ Speaking of think pieces, I sent this to you. Do you see now? This is a USA Today think piece, as much as you can call it that, and itโs amazing. โHealth and wellness,โ under USA Today: โMarsha Blackburn asked Ketanji Brown Jackson to define woman. Science says thereโs no simple answer.โ (laughing) Okay. Sure.
In the 13th hour of Judge Ketanji Brown Jacksonโs confirmation hearing, Sen. Marsha Blackburn asked: โCan you provide a definition for the word โwomanโ?โ https://t.co/Ikgkqxj83h
โ USA TODAY (@USATODAY) March 24, 2022
CLAY: Iโm going to disagree with that opinion piece. I do think youโre right, and I think this is consequential. Once you acknowledge that youโre 100% not going to get honest treatment from the media, I think thatโs liberating in some way to say exactly what you think as a politician. Because when you know that the Washington Post editorial board is going to come out and say, โJudge Ketanji Brown Jackson was treated worse than Judge Brett Kavanaugh in the hearings,โ thereโs no point of even arguing otherwise.
This is an unpersuadable, dogmatic, propagandist organization that has been created. And I do think thatโs an important point, because so many people are so afraid of Twitter, and theyโre so afraid and worried about whether theyโre liked or not, that it leads to โ even force politicians, certainly for high-powered executives and people in positions of power, many people โ afraid to say what they actually think, for fear of what the reaction will be.
And the media has so given up any notions of fair play, that I donโt think Republicans fear what the Washington Post is going to say or what the New York Times is going to say. And in many ways, they recognize that those attacks that theyโre going to get for doing their jobs just serves to further buttress the overall support that is out there. Thatโs why I always say, Buck, โI donโt care if people come after us for things that we say on the show, because the people that attack us, just make people that like us, like us more,โ and that is the world weโre in right now.
BUCK: I also think that the base of the Republican Partyโฆ I have a number of people who are friends of mine, who are very much, I think in line with the base and they will often send them to me and say, โWhatโs the point of the GOP?โ Thatโs the point of frustration. Why do we even do this if they will cave on the following? I feel like this week, the GOP decided, all right. They have the votes, but we know what the Democrats would do.
They would make this a real confirmation process. They would ask questions that might rattle this soon-to-be Supreme Court nominee and would at least show the public that you do have โ as Tom Cotton pointed out, by the way โ a far-left activist. Thatโs actually what he said. Senator Tom Cotton decided that he was just going to say it, Clay. He didnโt care that the media would attack him.
Judge Jackson has been a far-left activist for decades.
Her years as a judge havenโt changed that. pic.twitter.com/Sati40WeSy
โ Tom Cotton (@SenTomCotton) March 24, 2022
BUCK: I think itโs good that the American people know something about who the Supreme Court justice is, other than some of the obvious characteristics and background and resume, which is how Biden picked in the first place.
CLAY: I think also, Buck, the accusations of racism and sexism, donโt land anymore. Because when you brand everything as racist and sexist, it doesnโt work. And letโs be honest. If you really want to talk about direct racism, Joe Biden saying, โIโm picking a black woman,โ and specifying during the political campaign that he was going to pick a black woman, thereby eliminating 94%of the American population before it consideration for this particular job, is the very foundation of racism.
And youโre making a choice entirely based on race, which is in its essence, racism, and the American public disagreed, I believe. And I think this deserved to be argued even more, maybe the Republicans did. That takes away from the legitimacy of Ketanji Brown Jacksonโs ultimate appointment to the Supreme Court. Because if Joe Biden had done what Donald Trump had did and put out a list of 20 judges that he was considering and said, โThese people are all worthy of the Supreme Court. Iโm going to pick someone off of this list,โ and then he had picked Ketanji Brown Jackson as one of those 20, people wouldnโt have said, โThe only reason he picked her was because she was a woman and she was black.โ
BUCK: Right.
CLAY: But when you said, โIโm going to put a black woman on,โ you automatically undercut the legitimacy of your own choice.
BUCK: And thereโs a reason he did this. It was because that was what was best for Joe Biden, because he was trying to get help from the African-American community, during the primary from Democrat voters, and he made it an explicit quid pro quo essentially, going, โHey, Iโll do this. Give me more votes,โ and also wanted it to make it clear that he is taking credit for this, in advance of doing it, right?
If you just did it, Clay. Then afterwards, โWell, of course, yeah. Iโm the president who appointed the first black female Supreme Court justice. โ But the whole time, itโs been, โOh, we know we can count on Joe because the moment that he gets the opportunityโฆโ So he wanted to cash on it early. It was all about what was best for Joe Biden was the point. Because if it was what was best for the process, but honestly for Ketanji Brown Jackson, he would have done exactly what she said, lay out who the varsity team is, so to speak and then pick the all-star. Then pick the person who he thinks is the best. Instead, he narrowed it down to โ weโve done the math โ 3% of the population overall, not the legal profession.
CLAY: Yeah, 6% of the overall pongs are black women. And then, Buck, I think itโs 1.8% of attorneys are black women. So meaning โ you know, Iโm doing the live math on the air, which everybody knows is tough โ 98.2% of all attorneys were not considered for this seat, which is pretty wild to think about โ and, look, thatโs self-evident. Because he only had three or four people to even interview, right? There are only three or four people who were judges that were on the level that could even be considered for the Supreme Court.
BUCK: Do you agree, by the way? Do you think that affirmative action, as a generalโฆ This is not specifically affirmative action. Although, there are obviously discussions as it relates to affirmative action. Do you just it will get struck down โ
CLAY: Yeah. I do.
BUCK: โ in June, the next cycle? I think itโs โ which will be a fascinating way that that plays out across the country. Depends on obviously the breadth of the decision. And whether weโre right or not, but that will be interesting.
CLAY: I think that will. And then there will be an immediate attempt from all these woke corporations and universities to, again, define โaffirmative action,โ effectively in some way, that doesnโt quite fit the criteria that has been struck down by the Supreme Court. When that was the reality.
BUCK: I remember when I was an undergrad at Amherst College, the president of the school at the time held a forum. He was properly named. His name was Marx. Oh, yeah. Well-named. So he held a forum on affirmative action and he let the student body know, this was Grutter v. Bollinger, when it looked like the first time around it might โ he said, basically, โDonโt worry. Whatever the Supreme Court does, weโre still going to give certain minorities benefits from the application process, and just find a way to cover it up.โ He was open. He was pretty open about it at the time.
CLAY: Yeah. I think thatโs likely to occur, no matter what, even if the Supreme Court strikes it down.
BUCK: It would be fun to be like, โItโs illegal, everybody, to do this stuff.โ
CLAY: Yeah. And, by the way, vast majorities of people of all different races now disagree with the concept of affirmative action as the way itโs being implemented today. So this is not something that is popular in any way. But big picture, as we roll into the weekend, after the biggest, I would say, most significant news coming out of Washington, in terms of political news: Ketanji Brown Jackson is going to be elevated to the Supreme Court early in April. She will be confirmed, and then she will take over when Justice Breyer steps down.
BUCK: More left-wing than Sotomayor from the bench, or about the same?
CLAY: Honestly, this is one of those things where sheโs been such a stealth candidate, itโs hard to even get a great read on what her opinions are going to be. Certainly, more left-wing than Breyer, who could be at times very conciliatory in terms of the way that he felt his job as a justice existed. Breyer was at least cognizant in some way of business. I donโt think Ketanji Brown Jackson will. I think she wonโt be as left wing as Sotomayor. I think sheโll be somewhere to the left of Sotomayor, closer to Kagan.
BUCK: The old left believed in using the system to achieve power and use power through the system. The new left, just power.
CLAY: Yes.
BUCK: Whatever end state you want, whatever situation can get you there, thatโs the way it goes. The law is just kind of an impediment.
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