U.S. Senator Ben Sasse (R-Nebraska) used his opening statement during Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation hearing on Tuesday to explain why confirmation process for Supreme Court justices has become so politicized. It is excellent and much needed amidst the hyper-partisan rhetoric directed at his appointment.Â
Watch below:
Below is the transcript of his remarks:
Senator Klobuchar, you did Madison, Lin-Manuel Miranda, the Magna Carta and your Dad taking you to court. Well done. I had all that on my BINGO card.Â
I have little kids and Iâve taken my two little girls to court a few times too, mostly to juvie just to scare them straight not to turn them into attorneys. Thereâs wisdom in Minnesota.Â
Congratulations, Judge, on your nomination.
Ashley, congratulations, and condolences. This process has to stink. Iâm glad your daughters could get out of the room and I hope they still get the free day from school.
Letâs do some good news bad news.
The bad news first, Judge: Since your nomination in July, youâve been accused of hating women, hating children, hating clean air, wanting dirty water. Youâve been declared an existential threat to our nation. Alumni of Yale Law School, incensed that faculty members at your alma mater praised your selection, wrote a public letter to the school saying quote, âPeople will die if Brett Kavanaugh is confirmed.â Â
This drivel is patently absurd and I worry that weâre going to hear more of it over the next few days. But the good news is, it is absurd and the American people donât believe any of it.Â
This stuff isnât about Brett Kavanaugh when screamers say this stuff for cable TV news. The people who know you better, not those who are trying to get on TV, they tell a completely different story about who Brett Kavanaugh is. Youâve earned high praise from the many lawyers, both right and left, whoâve appeared before you during your 12 years on the D.C. Circuit. And those whoâve had you as a professor at Yale Law and Harvard Law, people in legal circles invariably applaud your mind, your work, your temperament, your collegiality. Â
Thatâs who Brett Kavanaugh is. Â
And to quote Lisa Blatt, a Supreme Court attorney from the left who has known you for a decade, âSometimes, a superstar is just a superstar and thatâs the case with this Judge. The Senate should confirm him.â Â
Itâs pretty obvious to most people going about their work today, that the deranged comments donât actually have anything to do with you. So, we should figure out: why do we talk like this about Supreme Court nominations now. Thereâs a bunch thatâs atypical in the last 19-20 months in America. Â
Senator Klobucharâs right, the comments from the White House yesterday about trying to politicize the Department of Justices, they were wrong and they should be condemned and my guess is that Brett Kavanaugh would condemn them.Â
But really, the reason these hearings donât work is notÂ
because of  Donald Trump⊠Itâs not because of anything these last 20 months⊠These confirmation hearings havenât worked for 31 years in America. People are going to pretend that Americans have no historical memory and supposedly there havenât been screaming protestors saying, âWomen are going to dieâ at every hearing for decades. But this has been happening since Robert Bork. This is a 31-year tradition. Thereâs nothing really new the last 18 months.ÂSo, the fact that the hysteria has nothing to do with you means that we should ask, whatâs the hysteria coming from? The hysteria around Supreme Court confirmation hearings is coming from the fact that we have a fundamental misunderstanding of the role of the Supreme Court in American life now.Â
Our political commentary talks about the Supreme Court like they are people wearing red and blue jerseys. Thatâs a really dangerous thing and, by the way, if they have red and blue jerseys, I would welcome my colleagues to introduce legislation that ends lifetime tenure for the judiciary. Because if theyâre just politicians, then the people should have power and they shouldnât have lifetime appointments.Â
So, until you introduce that legislation. I donât believe you really want the Supreme Court to be a politicized body. Though thatâs the way we constantly talk about it now. Â
We can and we should do better than this. Itâs predictable now that every confirmation hearing is going to be an overblown, politicized circus. And itâs because weâve accepted a bad new theory about how our three branches of government should work â and in particular about how the Judiciary should work.
What Supreme Court confirmation hearings should be about, is an opportunity to go back and do School House Rock civics for our kids. We should be talking about how a bill becomes a law, and what the job of Article II is, and what the job of Article III is.
So, letâs try just a little bit. How did we get here and how do we fix it? I want to make just four brief points.Â
Number one: In our system, the legislative branch is supposed to be the center of our politics. Â
Number two: itâs not. Why not? Because for the last century, and increasing by the decade right now, more and more legislative authority is delegated to the executive branch every year. Both parties do it. The legislature is impotent. The legislature is weak. And most people here want their jobs more than they really want to do legislative work. And so they punt most of the work to the next branch.Â
The third consequence is that this transfer of power means that people yearn for a place where politics can actually be done. And when we donât do a lot of big actual political debating here, we transfer it to the Supreme Court. And thatâs why the Supreme Court is increasingly a substitute political battleground. It is not healthy, but it is what happens and itâs something our founders wouldnât be able to make any sense of.Â
And fourth and finally: we badly need to restore the proper duties and the balance of power from our constitutional system. ÂSo point one: the legislative branch is supposed to by the locus of our politics properly understood. Since weâre here in this room today, because this is a Supreme Court confirmation hearing, weâre tempting to start with Article III. But really we need Article III as the part of the Constitution that sets up the judiciary. We really should be starting with Article I, which is us. What is the legislatureâs job?Â
The Constitutionâs drafters began with the legislature. These are equal branches, but Article I comes first for a reason and that is because policymaking is supposed to be done in the body that makes laws. That means that this is supposed to be the institution dedicated to political fights. If we see lots and lots of protests, in front of the Supreme Court, thatâs a pretty good litmus test barometer of the fact that our republic isnât healthy. Because people shouldnât be thinking they ought to be protesting in front of the Supreme Court. They should be protesting in front of this body.Â
The legislature is designed to be controversial, noisy, sometimes even rowdy because making laws means we have to hash out that we donât all agree.Â
Government is about power. Government is not just another word for things we do together. The reason we have limited government in America isÂ
because we  believe in freedom. We believe in souls. We believe in persuasion. We believe in love. And those things arenât done by power.But the government acts by power. And since the government acts by power, we should be reticent to use power. And so it means when you differ about power, you have to have a debate. And this institution is supposed to be dedicated to debate and should be based on the premise that we know since we donât all agree, we should try to constrain that power just a little bit, but then we should fight about it and have a vote in front of the American people.
And then what happens? The people get to decide if they want to hire us or fire us. They donât have to hire us again.Â
This body is the political branch where policymaking fights should happen. And if we are the easiest people to fire, it means the only way the people can maintain power in our system is if all the politicized decisions happen here. Not in Article II or Article III. Â
So, that brings us to a second point. How do we get to a place where the legislature decided to give away its power? Weâve been doing it for a long time. Over the course of the last century, but especially since the 1930s and then ramping up since the 1960s, a whole lot of the responsibility in this body has been kicked to a bunch of alphabet soup bureaucracies. All the acronyms that people know about their government or donât know about their government are the places where most actual policymaking, kind of in a way, lawmaking is happening right now.
This is not what Schoolhouse Rock says. Thereâs no verse of Schoolhouse Rock that says give a whole bunch of power to the alphabet soup agencies and let them decide what the governance decisions should be for the people because the people donât have any way to fire the bureaucrats. Â
And so, what we mostly do around this body is not pass laws. What we mostly do is decide to give permission to the Secretary or the administrator of bureaucracy X, Y, or Z to make law-like regulations. Thatâs mostly what we do here. We go home and pretend that we make laws⊠No, we donât. We write giant pieces of legislation â 1,200 pages, 1,500 pages long that people havenât read. Filled with all of these terms that are undefined and we say the Secretary of such and such shall promulgate rules that do the rest of our dang jobs.Â
Thatâs why there are so many fights about the executive branch and about the judiciary because this body rarely finishes its work â and the House is even worse⊠I donât really believe that⊠it just seemed like⊠you needed to unite us in some way.
So, I admit, that there are rational arguments that one could make for this new system. The Congress canât manage all the nitty-gritty details of everything about modern government and this system tries to give power and control to experts in their fields where most of us in Congress donât know much of anything â about technical matters, for sure â but you can also impugn our wisdom if you want. But when youâre talking about technical, complicated matters, itâs true that the Congress would have a hard time sorting out every dot and tittle about every detail.Â
But the real reason, at the end of the day, that this institution punts most of its power to executive branch agencies is because it is a convenient way for legislators to have⊠to be able to avoid taking responsibility for controversial and often unpopular decisions. If people want to get reelected over and over again â and thatâs your highest goal â if your biggest long-term thought around here is about your own incumbency, then actually giving away your power is a pretty good strategyâŠÂ itâs not a good life but itâs a pretty good strategy for incumbency.
And so, at the end of the day, a lot of the power delegation that happens from this branch is because the Congress has decided to self-neuter. Well, guess what? The important thing isnât whether or not the Congress has lame jobs⊠the important thing is that when the Congress neuters itself and gives power to an unaccountable fourth branch of government, it means that people are cut out of the process.Â
Thereâs nobody in Nebraska⊠thereâs nobody in Minnesota or Delaware who elected the Deputy Assistant Administrator of Plant Quarantine at the USDA. And yet, if the Deputy Assistant Administrator of Plant Quarantine does something that makes Nebraskansâ lives really difficult â which happens to farmers and ranchers in Nebraska â who do they protest too? Where do they go? How do they navigate the complexity and the thicket of all the lobbyists in this town to do executive agency lobbying? They canât.Â
And so, what happens is that they donât have any ability to speak out and to fire people through an election. And so, ultimately, when the Congress is neutered⊠when the administrative state grows⊠when there is this fourth branch of government, it makes it harder and harder for the concerns of citizens to be represented and articulated by people that the people know they have power over.Â
All the power right now⊠or almost all the power right now happens offstage. And that leaves a lot of people wondering who is looking out for me.Â
And that brings us to the third point, the Supreme Court becomes our substitute political battleground. Itâs only nine people. You can know âem. You can demonize âem. You can try to make âem messiahs. But ultimately, because people canât navigate their way through the bureaucracy they turn to the Supreme Court looking for politics.Â
And knowing that our elected officials no longer care enough to do the hard work of reasoning through the places where we differ and deciding to shroud our power at times, it means that we look for nine Justices to be super-legislators. We look for nine justices to try to right the wrongs from other places in the process.
When people talk about wanting to have empathy from their justices, this is what theyâre talking about. Theyâre talking about trying to make the justices do something that the Congress refuses to do as it constantly abdicates its responsibility. The hyperventilating that we see in this process and the way that todayâs hearing started with 90 minutes of theatrics that are pre-planned with certain members of the other side here, it shows us a system that is wildly out of whack.Â
And thus, a fourth and final point. The solution here is not to try to find judges who will be policymakers. The solution is not to try to turn the Supreme Court into an election battle for TV. The solution is to restore a proper constitutional order with the balance of powers. We need Schoolhouse Rock back. We need a Congress that writes laws and then stands before the people and suffers the consequences and gets to back to our own MountÂ
Vernon, Â if thatâs what the electors decide. We need an executive branch that has a humble view of its job as enforcing the law, not trying to write laws in the Congressâ absence. And, we need a judiciary that tries to apply written laws to facts in cases that are actually before it.ÂThis is the elegant and the fair process that the founders created. Itâs the process where the people who are elected two and six years in this institution, four years in the executive branch can be fired because the justices and the judges, the men
and women who serve Americaâs people by wearing black robes â theyâre insulated from politics. This is why we talk about an independent judiciary. This is why they wear robes. This is why we shouldnât talk about Republican and Democratic judges and justices. This is why we say justice is blind. This is why we give judges lifetime tenure. And, this is why this is the last job interview Brett Kavanaugh will ever have. Because heâs going to a job where heâs not supposed to be a super legislator.ÂSo, the question before us today is not what did Brett Kavanaugh think 11 years ago on some policy matter, the question before us is whether or not he has the temperament and the character to take his policy views and his political preferences and put them in a box marked irrelevant and set it aside every morning when he puts on the black robe.Â
The question is, does he have the character and temperament to do that. If you donât think he does, vote no. But, if you think he does, stop the charades. Because at the end of the day I think all of us know that Brett Kavanaugh understands his job isnât to re-write laws as he wishes they were. He understands that heâs not being interviewed to be a super legislator. He understands that his job isnât to seek popularity. His job is to be fair and dispassionate. It is not to exercise empathy. It is to follow written laws.
Contrary to the Onion-like smears that we hear outside, Judge Kavanaugh doesnât hate women and children. Judge Kavanaugh doesnât lust after dirty water and stinky air. Â
No, looking at his record, it seems to me that what he actually dislikes are legislators that are too lazy and too risk-averse to do our actual jobs. It seems to me that if you read his 300+ opinions, what his opinions reveal to me is a dissatisfaction, I think he would argue a constitutionally compelled dissatisfaction with power-hungry executive branch bureaucrats doing our job when we failed to do it.Â
And in this view, I think heâs aligned with the founders. For our constitution places power, not in the hands of this cityâs bureaucracy â which canât be fired â but our constitution places the policy-making power in the 535 of our hands because the voters can hire and fire us. And, if the voters are going to retain their power, they need a legislature thatâs responsive to politics, not a judiciary thatâs responsive to politics. It seems to me that Judge Kavanaugh is ready to do his job, the question for us is whether weâre ready to do our job.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.