What does the Constitution actually say about the Supreme Court nomination/appointment process? After all, that is the main question, now that a nomination is made.
What process most upholds the Constitution?
Not: What process best serves a political party, or a President, or a Senator, or a candidate, or a nominee, or a future President. Those are political questions and special interest questions, not Constitutional ones. (The Constitution does not mention political parties by the way or guarantee their existence; instead, it's the popularly ratified Constitution that is the foundation of our republic based on popular sovereignty.)
Article II Section 2 says that the President "shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, shall appoint...Judges of the supreme Court." (The caps/no-caps here are original text.)
Constitutional Observations:
- The word "shall" precedes the President's duty to "nominate" and "appoint". Shall denotes a mandatory duty of the Executive power to nominate and appoint, which is not to say the Senate is Constitutionally mandated to agree.
- The words "by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate" denote reciprocal cooperation between President and Senate, not unilateralism by either. If someone says you must do something "by and with" someone else's "advice and consent" what does this imply to you? The Constitution requires a cooperative, not a unilateral, process.
- The Constitution does not set a deadline or timeline for this process.
- The Constitution does not set the number of Supreme Court Justices. (It lets Congress do that.)
- The Constitution neither requires nor prohibits action within the term of the nominating President.
You be the judge. Based on this language, what should Senators do? Not what should they do politically. What should they do Constitutionally? Based on the words in Article II above cited, should Senators not hold public hearings to consider, for all of us to hear, the pros and cons of a particular nominee to serve? The nomination has been made. The Constitution does not require that the nominee be accepted.
But the Constitution does, with the language "by and with the Advice and Consent" require reciprocal cooperation between elected President and elected Senators in a public process including We the People. Constitutionally-directed cooperative process isn't something any elected official sworn to uphold the Constitution should dismiss.