Post Reply 
To Change the Future, Children Need History
10-09-2020, 01:28 PM
Post: #13
RE: Senator Harris and Lincoln
(10-09-2020 12:21 PM)David Lockmiller Wrote:  
(10-09-2020 08:57 AM)mbgross Wrote:  Did anybody catch Senator Harris's remarks, concerning Lincoln, during the recent VP debate? Is what she said historically correct? Thanks!

Kamala Harris’s ‘little history lesson’ about Lincoln’s Supreme Court vacancy wasn’t exactly true -- Washington Post, 10/9/2020.

Kamala Harris:

“I’m so glad we went through a little history lesson. Let’s do that a little more,” Harris responded. “In 1864 … Abraham Lincoln was up for reelection. And it was 27 days before the election. And a seat became open on the United States Supreme Court. Abraham Lincoln’s party was in charge not only of the White House but the Senate. But Honest Abe said, ‘It’s not the right thing to do. The American people deserve to make the decision about who will be the next president of the United States, and then that person will be able to select who will serve on the highest court of the land.’”

So, is that true?

Harris is correct that a seat became available 27 days before the election. And that Lincoln didn’t nominate anyone until after he won. But there is no evidence he thought the seat should be filled by the winner of the election. In fact, he had other motives for the delay.

On Oct. 12, 1864, Chief Justice Roger B. Taney died at the age of 87. He had been chief justice for nearly 30 years but will always be best-known — or rather, notorious — for writing the majority opinion in the Dred Scott v. Sandford case, in which he declared that Black people were inferior and “had no rights which the White man was bound to respect.” (The House voted to remove a bust of Taney from the U.S. Capitol over the summer amid the George Floyd protests.)

Lincoln was preoccupied with both his campaign and the Civil War — Sherman’s troops had just captured Atlanta and would soon march to the sea. He told his aides he wouldn’t nominate anyone immediately, because he was “waiting to receive expressions of public opinion from the country,” according to historian Michael Burlingame in “Lincoln: A Life.”

But that didn’t mean he was waiting for ballots so much as the mail. Letters flooded in from all over the country.

The overarching effect of the delay is that it held Lincoln’s broad but shaky coalition of conservative and radical Republicans together. And it kept rivals like Chase in line. Chase, who had often been critical of Lincoln in the past, immediately began stumping for the president across the Midwest . . . .

Congress was in recess until early December, so there would have been no point in naming a man before the election anyway. Lincoln shrewdly used that to his advantage. If he had lost the election, there is no evidence he wouldn’t have filled the spot in the lame-duck session.

Lincoln was, of course, reelected. And the day after the Senate was back in session, he nominated Chase for chief justice. He hoped the august appointment would “neutralize” Chase’s designs on the presidency. (It didn’t.)

So Harris is mistaken about Lincoln’s motivations in this regard.

But there’s one thing Lincoln definitely supported that Harris has yet to weigh in on: court-packing. In 1863, he and Republicans in Congress passed a law to create a 10th Supreme Court seat for largely partisan reasons.

[End of Washington Post story.]

This will be the only option if Biden is elected President, the Democrats gain control of the Senate, and the six-to-three Republican Supreme Court majority overturn Roe v. Wade and other Supreme Court precedents. If the situation were in reverse, I am certain that Senators McConnell and Graham would do the same, based on recent actual "political" precedent.


THANKS!
Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
Post Reply 


Messages In This Thread
Senator Harris and Lincoln - mbgross - 10-09-2020, 08:57 AM
RE: Senator Harris and Lincoln - mbgross - 10-09-2020 01:28 PM

Forum Jump:


User(s) browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)