"If only there had been some warning signs about Kavanaugh's dishonesty," quipped another advocacy group.
By Gary Markstein |
But late Monday, Politico reported that
right-wing Justices Neil Gorsuch and Brett Kavanaugh—Trump picks who Collins
voted to confirm—supported a 67-page draft opinion authored by Justice Samuel
Alito that, if finalized, would spell the end of Roe v. Wade and
imperil abortion rights across the United States.
While abortion rights advocates, citing the judges' records,
vocally warned at
the time of their confirmation hearings that both Gorsuch and Kavanaugh posed an
existential threat to Roe, Collins brushed such warnings aside when
it came time to usher them through the Senate, pointing to their
private assurances to her that they would not vote to overturn the 1973
decision.
In a statement issued
Tuesday morning, Collins finally conceded that, perhaps, Gorsuch and Kavanaugh
were not being fully honest with her in their closed-door conversations
about Roe.
"If this leaked draft opinion is the final decision and
this reporting is accurate, it would be completely inconsistent with what
Justice Gorsuch and Justice Kavanaugh said in their hearings and in our
meetings in my office," Collins said. "Obviously, we won't know each
justice's decision and reasoning until the Supreme Court officially announces
its opinion in this case."
Asked if she believes she was misled by the judges,
Collins told CNN,
"My statement speaks for itself."
Marie Follayttar, executive director of Mainers for Responsible Leadership—a group that has long targeted Collins over her right-wing voting record—told Common Dreams that it "looks like it's time for her to call for impeachment" of Gorsuch and Kavanaugh.
"If Senator Collins believes that both Justice Gorsuch
and Justice Kavanaugh lied to her and to the public during the confirmation
processes, we demand that she lead the charge calling for their immediate
impeachment," Follayttar added. "We cannot let public trust in our
judicial system—the final check and balance of our democracy—become
eroded."
Indivisible, a national progressive advocacy group, quipped
in response to Collins' statement, "If only there had been some warning
signs about Kavanaugh's dishonesty."
After Politico published its story on
Alito's far-reaching draft
opinion—which the Supreme Court confirmed as authentic on Tuesday while
stressing that it's not final—a video compilation resurfaced of Collins
declaring on multiple occasions in 2018 her belief that Kavanaugh would not
vote to overturn Roe:
The Daily Beast's Eleanor Clift argued in a column Tuesday
that "the one person most responsible for the looming loss of abortion
rights—aside from the president who appointed three anti-Roe justices—is
Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins, who in October of 2018 became the 50th and
deciding vote in the Senate for Brett Kavanaugh."
"He would not have been confirmed if it weren’t for
Collins, who wanted women to believe as she did that he would keep his word to
her," Clift wrote. "Maybe his fingers were crossed because whatever
he said to Collins, it was a lie. Kavanaugh's confirmation on a bare 50 to 48
vote was the beginning of the end for Roe v. Wade, and everybody
knew it except maybe Collins."
"Susan Collins told the women of America that they
could trust her to protect their reproductive freedom," Clift added.
"She let us down."