Michael Steele Mocks Conservatives Over Liberal Court Decisions

bradwilmouth | June 19, 2020
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Cross posted to the MRC's NewsBusters blog

Appearing as a guest on Friday's MSNBC Live with Stephanie Ruhle, contributor Michael Steele was true to form as an MSNBC Republican as he mocked conservatives for disapproving of liberal victories in recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings, and bizarrely suggested that iconic former conservative Justice Antonin Scalia would approve of the decisions.

Host Ruhle set up the segment by recalling the recent liberal victories on both DACA and LGBTQ rights in spite of a right-leaning majority on the Court:

STEPHANIE RUHLE: Just one day after the Court ruled 5-4 to block the Trump administration from ending a DACA program that protects about 700,000 young immigrants from deportation, and just a few days after Trump appointee Neil Gorsuch sided with Chief Justice John Roberts and the liberal justices to protect the rights of LGBTQ workers.

She then paired liberal Republican Steele with liberal contributor Eddie Glaude as she added:

RUHLE: Joining me now to discuss, my dear friend Eddie Glaude, professor at Princeton University, and Michael Steele, former RNC chairman, two of my favorite guests. Michael, President Trump said this week's rulings are an indication we need new justices. Last I checked, this week was all about the rule of law.

Steele went right to mocking President Donald Trump for speaking out against the decisions, and claimed that the liberal rulings were in line with Scalia's thinking:

MICHAEL STEELE, MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR: Yeah, it was, and he just -- he didn't like the rule, he didn't like the law, and he apparently didn't like the constitutional underpinnings of the decision, particularly with respect to the Title VII case. What you see there was actually the spirit of Justice Scalia who, as everyone knows, was a textualist on the Court.

He further condescended to conservatives as he asserted that the Court's reasoning was "way too logical" for Republicans on the LGBTQ rights issue:

STEELE: He looked at the plain reading of the text and applied the Constitution to it and, in this case, made the argument around the basis of one sex as you would if it was a female complainant or male complainant. So he just -- he took it to its logical conclusion, and apparently that was way too logical for Lindsey Graham and way too logical for Donald Trump and others -- other conservatives who are back on their heels.

He then cheered for conservatives to be disappointed by future Court rulings as he concluded:

STEELE: And I've said for some time that, you know, people need to be careful in assuming that because these individuals are politically conservative, that they are judicially such. And if they are truly contextualists -- if they are truly constitutionalists -- then you're going to see more decisions like this. I mean, the flood gates opened with the health care decision. We now have a DACA decision -- we have an LGBTQ decision where conservatives are going, "What happened?" Well, what happened is the spirit of Scalia.

Below is a transcript of the relevant portion of the Friday, June 19, MSNBC Live with Stephanie Rule:

9:50 a.m. Eastern

STEPHANIE RUHLE: A live look back at the city of Atlanta on this Juneteenth -- people filling parks, about to take to the streets to support this important day. And this morning, the Supreme Court is emerging as a flashpoint for the 2020 election. Just one day after the Court ruled 5-4 to block the Trump administration from ending a DACA program that protects about 700,000 young immigrants from deportation, and just a few days after Trump appointee Neil Gorsuch sided with Chief Justice John Roberts and the liberal justices to protect the rights of LGBTQ workers.

Joining me now to discuss, my dear friend Eddie Glaude, professor at Princeton University, and Michael Steele, former RNC chairman, two of my favorite guests. Michael, President Trump said this week's rulings are an indication we need new justices. Last I checked, this week was all about the rule of law.

MICHAEL STEELE, MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR: Yeah, it was, and he just -- he didn't like the rule, he didn't like the law, and he apparently didn't like the constitutional underpinnings of the decision, particularly with respect to the Title VII case. What you see there was actually the spirit of Justice Scalia who, as everyone knows, was a textualist on the Court.

He looked at the plain reading of the text and applied the Constitution to it and, in this case, made the argument around the basis of one sex as you would if it was a female complainant or male complainant. So he just -- he took it to its logical conclusion, and apparently that was way too logical for Lindsey Graham and way too logical for Donald Trump and others -- other conservatives who are back on their heels.

And I've said for some time that, you know, people need to be careful in assuming that because these individuals are politically conservative, that they are judicially such. And if they are truly contextualists -- if they are truly constitutionalists -- then you're going to see more decisions like this. I mean, the flood gates opened with the health care decision. We now have a DACA decision -- we have an LGBTQ decision where conservatives are going, "What happened?" Well, what happened is the spirit of Scalia.

RUHLE: I don't know who your "everyone" is, Michael, but I love the fact that you think everyone knew that Scalia was a contextualist of the Court.

MSNBC

The Beat

June 19, 2020

BRITTNEY COOPER, RUTGERS UNIVERSITY ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR: When the young woman in Detroit talked about Donald Trump's dog whistle in terms of coming to the place of Black Wall Street to have this rally -- for folks who think that that's so unique and so shocking, remember that Ronald Reagan went in the 1980s to Philadelphia, Mississippi, the place where Chaney, Goodman, and Schwerner goes -- those wonderful luminaries of civil rights were killed -- to declare that he still supported states' rights. So this is actually part of a more recent Republican playbook that when you want to tell your base that you are not on board with African American freedom movements, you go to a place that is significant for the struggle for black freedom and civil rights and then you declare things that are absolutely opposite and antithetical to that.

ARI MELBER: Trymaine?

TRYMAINE LEE, MSNBC CORRESPONDENT: Brittney is always to eloquent and forceful and spot on everything she said

(…)

The McLaughlin Group

June 12, 2020

ELEANOR CLIFT, THE DAILY BEAST: Tulsa is the site of a white uprising mob violence against black people 99 years ago, and what it reminds me of is that President Reagan -- actually candidate Ronald Reagan opened his 1980 presidential campaign in Neshoba County, Mississippi, which was right near Philadelphia, Mississippi, where the three civil rights workers were murdered.

 

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