close_menu
Latest News

Dave Ross

Republicans need some honey before they bite into a Supreme Court deal

Two people familiar with the process say the White House is considering Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval as one of several potential nominees to the Supreme Court. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)

Will the Republicans eat their peas?

Republicans in the Senate have refused even to meet with any Supreme Court nominee President Obama might pick.

I understand how they feel. As a kid, I would absolutely refuse to eat my peas. My teeth were clenched.

Related: Can Republicans resist this holy man as Obama’s Supreme Court pick?

But what Mom would do was drip a little honey on them and suddenly peas were delicious.

So look at this – the first potential nominee being floated is a Republican. Brian Sandoval, a former federal judge appointed by George W. Bush, was re-elected Governor of Nevada with 70 percent of the vote in 2014. But he’s said he will fight Obamacare.

Floating the name of a guy who sued to stop Obamacare? That’s a lot of honey on the peas.

Oh, and he has one other credential: He’s Nevada’s first Hispanic governor.

This is the guy that Republicans are going to refuse even to meet with? That’s what they say. But there’s, at least, one conservative blog making he following argument:

Sandoval may be to left of Antonin Scalia, but he is nothing like the kind of flaming liberal Hillary Clinton would pick. And as for Trump – the thinking goes that Trump wins only if he drops his right wing talk show act and moves to the center, and since he doesn’t really care about moral issues, he too would appoint a liberal-leaning justice to get the Democrats to cooperate with all his HUGE plans.

That would make a guy like Sandoval the closest thing to a conservative Republicans are likely to get. So could it be time to (take a deep breath) give peas a chance? Sorry.

Dave Ross on KIRO Radio 97.3 FM

  • Tune in to KIRO Radio weekdays at 5am for Dave Ross on Seattle's Morning News.

About the Author

Dave Ross

Dave Ross hosts the Morning News on KIRO Radio weekdays from 5-9 a.m. Dave has won the national Edward R. Murrow Award for writing five times since he started at KIRO Radio in 1978.

Comments

comments powered by Disqus
close_menu
Latest News