You have to be blind to history to say something so ridiculous. A seat became vacant under President Obama many months before an election, but the Republican-controlled Senate would not even bring it up for a vote until Trump took office.
That is the correct historical fact although they didn’t know if Trump wold win. As a matter of fact, people didn’t think he would win.
They didn't know Trump would be the nominee when they started this game. It wasn't about Trump. It was about stopping a Democratic president from exercising his constitutional prerogative to appoint a Supreme Court justice--pure and unprecedented partisan overreach designed to thwart the spirit of the Constitution. While most people expected Trump to be defeated in 2016, polls showed that he had a reasonable chance to win the electoral count, which is what happened. Trump lost the majority, but he won with the Republicans' structural advantage in the electoral college count.
Then they rushed through both of Trump's nominations in expedited hearings with very limited vetting of the candidates. Barrett's nomination was rushed so quickly that it was approved literally days before the presidential election in 2020 in order to keep the appointment away from Democrats.
That was the Senate’s job, not Trump.
Nonsense. Trump was working with a list of conservative anti-abortion Supreme Court nominees that were handpicked by the Federalist Society. Senate leaders knew that, because he was using the same list to vet the politics of his other nominees for federal court positions. It was well known during Trump's administration that Trump was working hand in glove with Senate leaders to pack as many conservative federal judges as possible. He did so with record speed.
Trump's packing of the Supreme Court with partisan Senate power-grabbing made heads spin.
Trump did not pack the Supreme Court, he filled available seats. “Packing” would be when you purposefully add 6 more seats to get the Supreme Court to vote your way.
All of this is historical fact.
Today the Supreme Court is well balanced with it sometimes going liberal in decisions, sometimes conservative and sometimes 9-0 unanimous voting.
Kenny, there are many ways to "pack the court", one of which is to increase the justices on a particular court so that a new majority can be created. However, it can also refer to keeping the number the same and just changing the political makeup of the court to achieve a specific partisan political goal, because the aim of increasing the number is only to change the political balance on the court. When FDR tried to pack the Supreme Court back in 1937, he wanted to add six new justices that would presumably rubber stamp his New Deal agenda. SCOTUS had been overturning a number of his initiatives, and he wanted to change the politics of the court.
Politics had always played a role in Supreme Court picks, but presidents rarely get a chance to appoint more than one or two of the members of the court. So the process has been slow. Since Roe v Wade, the number of Catholics appointed to SCOTUS has skyrocketed for that reason, because many anti-abortion judges tend to be Catholic. The Federalist Society had compiled a list of Supreme Court nominees precisely for the purpose of overturning Roe v Wade. So it is arguably the case that the court has been specifically packed with anti-abortion justices, even though
a solid majority (63%) of Americans believe that abortions should be legal.