More Death by Stupid

There’s a massive motorcycle rally going on at Lake of the Ozarks, Missouri, right now.

The event started Wednesday and was expected to grow in size through the weekend. By Thursday, bikers packed into bars and restaurants along the Bagnel Dam Strip in Lake Ozark.

Hundreds of bikes were parked in the center turn lane of the town’s main drag. Only a handful of the tourists that crammed into town were spotted wearing masks. There are no limits on mass gatherings in this part of the state. And though larger cities like Kansas City and St. Louis have mandatory mask orders, few places around the lake have such measures.

Bikefest attracted 125,000 bikers last year, which is not nearly as many as the 500,000 who attended the infamous Sturgis, South Dakota rally last month. Researchers are arguing over how much of a spike Sturgis actually caused, but there is widespread agreement that that “the Sturgis event led to a spike in COVID-19 cases in the county that hosted the rally as well as in surrounding areas.”

Lake of the Ozarks is a few counties away from me, but I’m sure some local bikers are there now. And St. Francois County is now number 1! The county’s 465 new cases over the past seven days gives us a cases-per-100,000 population rate of 692, which is the highest rate of the state. In comparison, St. Louis County had 1,213 new cases over the past seven days, but their cases-per-100,000 rate is just 122.

The Lake of the Ozarks region stretches across three counties with cases-per-100,000 rates ranging from 224 go 320. We’ll see how that changes.

I wrote a couple of days ago that the county had instituted a mask mandate, to begin Monday. Today the local paper is reporting that the county has been pressured to back off. The mandate is still supposed to start on Monday, but apparently it’s not going to be enforced.

I don’t go anywhere.

Mask protesters in front of the St. Francois County courthouse on September 18. Daily Journal photo.

What Now?

What a punch in the gut, huh? So what happens next?

We all know that Trump and McConnell will attempt to put a SCOTUS nomination in front of the Senate before the end of the month — maybe before the end of next week — and odds are the Senate will approve the nomination. Is there even a faint hope that won’t happen?

David Frum writes that McConnell’s position may not be as strong as it appears. For one thing, Frum questions whether McConnell will have a majority vote. “McConnell cannot afford more than three defections in the face of what will certainly be united Democratic opposition to any last-minute Trump nominee,” Frum writes.

For a few Republican senators in tight elections, approving some right-wing nutjob to the Court now might ensure the end of their Senate careers. It’s possible Mitch would get his SCOTUS win at the cost of his majority. Frum continues,

The polls do not favor Susan Collins, Cory Gardner, or Thom Tillis—senators from Maine, Colorado, and North Carolina up for reelection this cycle. Yet these competitors may not be ready to attend their own funerals. They may regard voting against McConnell’s Court grab as a heaven-sent chance to prove their independence from an unpopular president—and to thereby save their own seats.

Lisa Murkowski of Alaska has also made skeptical noises, and even Lindsey Graham of South Carolina may flinch. He faces an unexpectedly tough race this year, and he is extra-emphatically on the record vowing not to support a Supreme Court confirmation vote in the later part of a presidential year.

See Lindsey Graham promising to not try to confirm a Supreme Court nominee during an election, below. However, Lindsey Graham has already gone back on his word, arguing that Merrick Garland’s nomination was different.

Michelle Goldberg thinks it is unlikely four current senators would vote against Trump’s nominee. If the confirmation vote isn’t taken until after the election, however, it’s possible that Mark Kelly — should he beat Martha McSally in Arizona — could be sworn in immediately, since McSally was appointed and not elected to the Senate. Note that it usually takes about 50 days for a Supreme Court nominee to be chosen and confirmed, which are fewer days that we have until the election.

Frum also says it might not be that easy to find a candidate willing to put herself in the eye of a political storm of the ages.

Any last-minute Trump nominee will face a gantlet of opposition in the Senate, a firestorm of opposition in the country, and probably a lifetime of suspicion from the majority of the country.

Can McConnell and Trump find an appointee willing to risk all that for the chance—but not the guarantee—of a Supreme Court seat? Specifically, can they find a woman willing to do it? The optics of replacing Ginsburg with a man may be too ugly even for the Trump administration. And if they can find a woman, can they find a woman sufficiently moderate-seeming to provide cover to anxious senators? The task may prove harder than immediately assumed.

See also Mark Joseph Stern, The Top Contender for RBG’s Seat Has a Fundamentally Cruel Vision of the Law.

Another argument from Frum seems farfetched to me. Frum thinks Trump may balk at shoving forward a nominee before the election if he sees that McConnell’s overreach is mobilizing Democrats and hurting his own election chances. I don’t think Trump is smart enough to see that. Edward-Isaac Dovere writes at The Atlantic, 

The prospect of a conservative-heavy Court persuaded many Trump-wary conservatives to support him in 2016. This election, Ginsburg’s death will likely energize Biden-wary Democrats—millions of dollars have been raised online since news of her death broke last night—but Trump will also hope for an enthusiasm boost. He’ll aim to shift the conversation away from his mismanagement of the pandemic toward an ideological battle for the future of abortion rights and other contentious issues in American culture.

I honestly don’t think that will help Trump, because I don’t see culture wars winning over any voters who weren’t already in his pocket. But again, I don’t think he’s smart enough to see that.

The next option on the table will be possible only if Joe Biden wins the White House and the Dems take the Senate majority: Court packing. Michelle Goldberg:

And if Republicans do give Ginsburg’s seat to some Federalist Society fanatic, Democrats must, if they win back the presidency and the Senate, abolish the filibuster and expand the court, adding two seats to account for both Garland and Ginsburg.

This goes against Joe Biden’s instincts toward bipartisanship and national reconciliation. But if Republicans continue to ruthlessly bend the rules to establish the domination of the minority over the majority, only hardball tactics can restore democratic equilibrium. Republicans will shriek, but their brazen hypocrisy should justify such dramatic moves in the eyes of the public. They’ll be the ones who’ve annihilated whatever legitimacy the court has left.

David Atkins:

The most immediate steps Democrats must take are killing the filibuster, adding states to the union and expanding the courts. …

… A federal court system in which the majority are appointees of popular-vote-losing presidents who then proceed to stymie all popular legislation enacted by a duly elected majority of legislators is both immoral and untenable. The balance must be rectified. There is nothing in the Constitution outlining the number of judges on any given court. Indeed, the Supreme Court has been expanded before.

Would this potentially create an arms race in which each unitarian majority government proceeded to expand the courts to govern however they please? Perhaps. But the danger to democracy and, frankly, to the country and the planet from allowing minority-rule theft of power to prevent any significant action on the country’s pressing problems would be far greater.

Will Joe Biden have the balls to do this? I do not know. He may need a lot of shoving. But it will have to be done.

 See  also: Honoring a ‘superhero’ outside the Supreme Court.