Gunnar wrote:Let's hope that doesn't happen! I share your fear that it will, though.Doctor CamNC4Me wrote:What do you think will happen in a week when nothing beyond what is known is found? If I had to guess, after this 'FBI INVESTIGATION' wraps up in totes one week, the vote goes party line (with maybe one GOP Senator dissenting for some reason).
- Doc
ETA: Another thing that scares me is that even if both Collins and Murkowski vote against Kavanaugh, and are joined by Flake, it is still not a sure thing he will be rejected. There are at least 4 Democrat Senators who seem to be on the fence on this issue.
I missed where the link to Townhall.com talked about the Democrats who may align with Republicans on this, but I thought the closing argument is worth bringing forward:
This isn’t about honoring the traditions of the process right now. The victory we would clinch in this Supreme Court fight is too good to pass up. Senate majority be damned for now, we can always win back Congress. Democrats will overreach, Trump will have the perfect punching bag for his 2020 re-elect, and the far left lunacy that will be peddled out won’t catch on with voters. In the meantime, a solid conservative majority will be on the Court. It’s time to fix bayonets, GOP.
I've seen liberals in various places say they hope Kavanaugh will get confirmed because it will ensure a motivated Democrat turnout in next month's midterms. Every time I read that it reminds me how politically naïve so many liberals are compared to conservatives. While the argument is really academic (the Republicans are almost certain to get someone on the bench before January) the idea that a Supreme Court justice, with a lifetime appointment with decades of influence, is balanced out by taking Congress for two years is just plain stupid. It's why we ended up with Trump in the first place, because dummies who couldn't do math and realize voting in Clinton for 4-8 years guaranteed two young, liberal justices (Alito's replacement, and Ginsberg's) with a possibility of a third if Kennedy had decided to retire with a Democrat in office was a major reason to show up LAST damned NOVEMBER. But Clinton gave talks to big corporations for a paycheck and had email issues, voted to authorize the Bush administration's war in Iraq, and wasn't prone to authoring dead on arrival bills with ideologically lofty titles that were pragmatically impossible so “F” that. Choosing to vote third party, stay home, or even worse, "We'd be better off with Trump because he's an Washington outsider and will “F” things up in Washington,"...

But the article above gets how the branches of government work, terms limit the impact of any one election, and that it's inevitable any major takeover of Congress will fail to meet expectations so the motivational swings will go the other way in a measly two years.