Las Vegas Sun

March 28, 2024

Bitter tenor of the Senate reflects a country at odds with itself

Kavanaugh

T.J. Kirkpatrick / The New York Times

Supporters of Judge Brett Kavanaugh and President Donald Trump rally in Washington, Sept. 27, 2018. To the right and left alike, Kavanaugh’s nomination appears less like a final spasm of division — a sobering trauma, followed by calm resolution — than an event that deepens the national mood of turbulence.

As he helped speed Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s embattled Supreme Court nomination toward a vote this week, Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, the Republican chairman of the Judiciary Committee, declared that the Senate was approaching “rock bottom” and needed to right itself.

Grassley, 85 and a senator for nearly four decades, said it was time for “mending things so we can do things in a collegial way, that the United States Senate ought to do.”

That sentiment, from a lawmaker who fiercely defended Kavanaugh and helped block President Barack Obama’s nominee to the Supreme Court, Judge Merrick Garland, drew skepticism or scorn from many in the political world. It also felt like a glaring understatement: Brute partisanship in the Senate is a symptom of a much larger national contagion.

To the right and left alike, Kavanaugh’s nomination appears less like a final spasm of division — a sobering trauma, followed by calm resolution — than an event that deepens the national mood of turbulence. The country is gripped by a climate of division and distrust rivaled by few other moments in the recent past.

This time, historic grievances around race and gender are coming to a boil under the eye of a president who is dismissive of the concept of national unity, with a political base that passionately celebrates the combative way in which he has upended Washington. President Donald Trump campaigned as a rough-speaking warrior against the political establishment and its consensus economic policies, and his supporters have mainly applauded him for governing the same way.

Beyond government, the country’s collective institutions — including the news media, the clergy and even professional sports and the entertainment industry — are so weakened and distrusted that no obvious balm appears within reach. The Supreme Court, long a contested body, may now be viewed emphatically by one side as an institution under shadow.

Rather than calls for comity from political leaders like Grassley, a feeling of apprehension has pervaded the highest levels of U.S. politics. Joe Biden, the former vice president, warned in Rhode Island last weekend that something greater than even the legitimacy of the judicial branch was at stake, faulting Republicans for their “blind rage” in the Supreme Court battle.

“It threatens not only the Senate and the Supreme Court,” Biden said. “It threatens the basic faith the American people have in our institutions.”

Joanne Freeman, a professor of American history at Yale University, said that since the nation’s founding there had been only “a handful of other times that have been this ugly,” including the run-up to the Civil War.

“There are moments in American history where we get such extreme polarization that the government no longer functions the way it’s supposed to function,” Freeman said, offering a grim diagnosis of the present: “It’s a virtually systemic abandonment of norms, to a degree that I find alarming.”

The great trend in U.S. politics has been not toward muting political disagreements but rather toward confronting them — sometimes detonating them at deafening volume over social media. Trump, in turn, became president in large part by mastering the existing divisions at the heart of the country’s culture, exploiting fissures around identity, ethnicity, sex, religion and class to forge a ferociously loyal coalition that represents a minority of the country but votes with disproportionate power.

But those divisions have only grown since 2016, and Trump has continued to embrace and aggravate them, from his equivocal response to a white-supremacist gathering in Charlottesville, Virginia, to his mockery this week of the #MeToo movement and Christine Blasey Ford, the woman who says Kavanaugh attempted to rape her as a teenager. At a rally in Mississippi on Tuesday, the president flouted the pretense that support for the judge could coexist with authentic concern for victims of sexual assault.

Trump went far beyond questioning Blasey’s account or defending Kavanaugh, instead ridiculing her and stoking the resentments between genders. He warned voters in Mississippi that lying women could come forward to falsely accuse their loved ones of sexual misconduct: “Think of your son,” he urged them. “Think of your husband.”

Even Republicans who are supportive of Trump’s agenda, including Kavanaugh’s nomination, have expressed a kind of impotent unease — even agony — over his role as a proud divider.

Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb., a philosophical conservative who supports Kavanaugh, gave an emotional speech on the Senate floor addressing the #MeToo movement and acknowledging: “We all know that the president cannot lead us through this time.”

And it was in ominous terms that Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, explained her decision Friday to oppose Kavanaugh’s nomination. In language reminiscent of Biden’s, she told reporters that questions of the government’s legitimacy were at stake.

“I believe we’re dealing with issues right now that are bigger than the nominee and how we ensure fairness and how our legislative and judicial branch can continue to be respected,” Murkowski said, adding: “We’re at a place where we need to begin thinking about the credibility and integrity of our institutions.”

The one thing most voters seem to agree on is that the political process itself has become intolerable. “The divisiveness now is the worst,” said Reeny Sovel, a jeweler in Fenton, Michigan, who is a Democrat. “Trump said he wanted to drain the swamp, but I think he’s actually inflamed it.”

Brandon Peabody, a Republican businessman in the same area, where a competitive congressional campaign is underway, said politics was “tough to handle right now,” even with his party on top. “The results are strong,” he said, “but the drama is hard to watch.”

If the Supreme Court faces new questions about its integrity, with Kavanaugh as the cornerstone of a conservative majority, it would only worsen the court’s steady decline in public estimation. A Gallup survey measuring perceptions of major institutions found the court afflicted by the same collapse in trust afflicting the presidency, Congress, the media, banks, schools and churches. At the start of the millennium, half the country said it had substantial confidence in the Supreme Court; this year, that fraction was 37 percent.

In Gallup’s 2018 survey, the only government institutions earning powerful support from the public were the military and the police.

And those institutions, too, have fallen prey to the partisanship and cultural conflict of the time: Trump has thundered against football players who kneel during the national anthem to protest police violence, accusing them of disrespecting the flag and the armed forces. In a sign of Trump’s passionate bond with his overwhelmingly white political base, 9 in 10 of his supporters said they disapproved of athletes’ protests, according to New York Times polling. About three-fifths of Americans who don’t support Trump view the protests favorably.

Trump’s supporters also, with near unanimity, disbelieve Blasey’s account of being assaulted by Kavanaugh in the 1980s. Among voters who disapprove of Trump, just 6 percent disbelieve the allegations.

For all the public expressions of angst, there is little obvious appetite on the left or right for rebuilding some semblance of bipartisanship in Washington or in lowering the temperature of political debate. Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., the Democratic minority leader, drew eye-rolling reactions in both parties for suggesting this week that the Senate could return the standard for ending debate on a Supreme Court nomination to 60 votes — a threshold abolished last year by Republicans, after Democrats ended it for lower-court nominations under the Obama administration.

More in line with the mood of the Democratic base has been Michael Avenatti, the Trump-bashing trial lawyer who is exploring a run for president. He has called for adding two seats to the Supreme Court and filling them with Democratic appointees, and impeaching Kavanaugh if he is seated. On Friday, as Kavanaugh’s nomination neared a vote, Avenatti attacked the “old approach” of the Democratic Party, urging instead: “We must fight fire with fire.”

There remains, chiefly among moderate elites and independent voters, a melancholy hope that somehow a new era of conciliation — even cooperation — might take hold in government, perhaps once Trump is no longer president.

For her part on Friday, as she announced her support for Kavanaugh, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, lamented the country’s “great disunity” and an impulse, among different tribes of Americans, toward “extreme ill will toward those who disagree with them.”

“One can only hope that the Kavanaugh nomination is where the process has finally hit rock bottom,” Collins said.