KS-SEN: Kansas Senate debate sees clashes on Supreme Court, climate
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) The Republican nominee for Kansas open Senate seat called Saturday for quick action to replace the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg and dismissed his Democratic opponents disavowal of Green New Deal environmental proposals so often in a debate that she admonished him, Stop deceiving voters.
Republican Roger Marshall, a two-term congressman for western and central Kansas, repeatedly attacked Democrat Barbara Bollier, a Kansas City-area state senator, for switching parties in late 2018 after having been elected to office as a moderate Republican. He suggested that her choosing to leave the GOP showed that she was out of touch with most voters in their Republican-leaning state and had embraced liberal values.
Marshall repeatedly referred to the Green New Deal during the candidates first debate, livestreamed on Facebook and broadcast live by WIBW radio of Topeka as well as public and agricultural radio stations across the state. Republicans have derided the Democratic plan for weaning the U.S. off fossil fuels and combatting climate change as ruinous for the economy, and Marshall sought to tie Bollier to it, even though she said several times that she opposes it.
The two candidates also differed dramatically over how quickly the Senate should move to fill the vacancy on the Supreme Court created by Ginsburgs death Friday. Bollier, like many Democrats, argued that the Senate should wait, that leaders elected in November should make the decisions.
We should not be politicizing our Supreme Court, she said.
But Marshall fully embraced U.S. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnells plan to have a confirmation vote on President Donald Trumps nominee. Republicans in 2016 blocked consideration of Democratic President Barack Obamas nomination of Merrick Garland after conservative Justice Antonin Scalias death nine months before Obama left office, but Marshall said this year is different because voters elected a GOP president and Senate with a Republican majority.
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