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The New York Times
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    The New York Times‏Verified account @nytimes Sep 5

    Pandemonium, protesters and partisanship: Is this the new normal for Supreme Court confirmations?https://nyti.ms/2Q5h1Ik 

    4:50 AM - 5 Sep 2018
    • 85 Retweets
    • 193 Likes
    • kamchad RatAnaburee MD.MITHU HOSSAIN Rahul hassan haj ConnieDC toledokate DMac The one Jessica Zhang✞
    126 replies 85 retweets 193 likes
      1. New conversation
      2. Sarah O'Neil‏ @soneil4336 Sep 5
        Replying to @nytimes

        The protesters are not creating a “new normal.” The #GOP is by trying to ram through a nomination without providing the required background information. The protesters are responding appropriately. #StopKanavaugh

        2 replies 25 retweets 63 likes
      3. 1 more reply
      1. Sharon Cardoza‏ @hunt033 Sep 5
        Replying to @nytimes

        You better believe it, no one is truly standing up for the people of this country we have to do it ourselves.

        0 replies 2 retweets 11 likes
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      1. Bobby C.‏ @bootleg_bob63 Sep 5
        Replying to @nytimes

        If We The People can't count on our elected officials to act in our best interests, then yes, this is the new normal

        0 replies 1 retweet 12 likes
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      1. New conversation
      2. Shannon Kirk‏ @ShannonCKirk Sep 5
        Replying to @nytimes

        Here you go again @nytimes, normalizing the aberrant Trump administration. It is Kavanaugh who is not normal. The protestors ARE NORMAL. So no, it’s not a “new normal” at all. @GOP, how about a regular judge? With a solid record and not such overt extremism?

        1 reply 1 retweet 5 likes
      3. 1 more reply
      1. New conversation
      2. Patricia‏ @SpicyTricia Sep 5
        Replying to @nytimes

        Yes this is a stolen seat!! #StopKavanuagh

        1 reply 1 retweet 11 likes
      3. 1 more reply
      1. AmericanGirl‏ @jch2407 Sep 5
        Replying to @nytimes

        It is the new normal for any opportunity to offer resistance to a triad of powers which are no longer working independently as a curb to one another, but to reinforce an increasingly authoritarian agenda.

        0 replies 1 retweet 6 likes
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      1. New conversation
      2. Linda Bolduc‏ @mommbold Sep 5
        Replying to @nytimes

        Would this be the case if we returned to regular order, saw all the documents, and could rely on sound judgement instead of partisan posturing?

        2 replies 1 retweet 9 likes
      3. Latwon Washington‏ @latwonwash Sep 5
        Replying to @mommbold @nytimes

        More documents have been produced on him than any other SCOTUS nominee in the history of the U.S.

        1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      4. 1 more reply
      1. New conversation
      2. David M. Russell‏ @pragmaticNYC Sep 5
        Replying to @nytimes

        What can we expect when a SCOTUS seat was stolen and the partisan nominees put forth are hand selected by extremist conservative groups and foisted upon the Senate without providing requested documentation that was ALWAYS provided in the past.

        1 reply 1 retweet 4 likes
      3. 1 more reply
      1. New conversation
      2. whitesuburbanmom‏ @mamagrumpypants Sep 5
        Replying to @nytimes

        When republicans don't even meet with a nominee because there's a year left in a democrat's term and then withhold thousands of documents on their guy? Yes, blame @SenateMajLdr for this circus.

        1 reply 1 retweet 5 likes
      3. Opinionated Witch‏ @smokenashes911 Sep 5
        Replying to @mamagrumpypants @nytimes @senatemajldr

        Actually, blame Former Senator Reid for this. He changed the rules - you have to live with them.

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      4. whitesuburbanmom‏ @mamagrumpypants Sep 5
        Replying to @smokenashes911 @nytimes @senatemajldr

        I disagreed with Reid’s change. I don’t recall him deciding that a president can’t even get a hearing for his SCOTUS nominee because he had a year left in his presidency. That was all McConnell

        1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      5. 1 more reply
      1. New conversation
      2. Matthew Whiz Buckley‏ @WhizCheck6 Sep 5
        Replying to @nytimes

        No It started with Democrats Well done @chuckschumer briefed all of these Shenanigans the day before on a conference call Harry Reid destroyed the Senate years ago with the nuclear option and Democrats continue to this day

        2 replies 0 retweets 4 likes
      3. Verity Pace‏ @VerityPace Sep 5
        Replying to @WhizCheck6

        Because if the Democrats had meekly gone along with Republican obstructionism in the first place, Republicans would have stopped immediately, and returned to regular order, bipartisanship, and compromise, and Merrick Garland would be a SCOTUS Justice today. 🙃

        1 reply 0 retweets 1 like
      4. Matthew Whiz Buckley‏ @WhizCheck6 Sep 5
        Replying to @VerityPace

        You do know that Harry Reid destroyed the Senate and the 60 vote margin correct? Or are we going to ignore that

        0 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
      5. End of conversation

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