The Daily - A Historic Opening for Anti-Abortion Activists
Episode Date: September 23, 2020President Trump appears to be on course to give conservatives a sixth vote on the Supreme Court, after several Republican senators who were previously on the fence said they would support quickly inst...alling a replacement for Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.In our interview today with Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the anti-abortion Susan B. Anthony List, she says she senses a turning point. “No matter who you are, you feel the ground shaking underneath,” she said. “I’m feeling very optimistic for the mission that our organization launched 25 years ago.”In pursuit of that mission, the Susan B. Anthony List struck a partnership with Mr. Trump during the 2016 election. The group supported his campaign and provided organizational backup in battleground states in exchange for commitments that he would work to end abortion rights.Ms. Dannenfelser described the partnership as “prudential.”“Religious people use that term quite a lot because it acknowledges a hierarchy of goods and evils involved in any decision,” she said. “and your job is to figure out where the highest good is found.”Guest: Marjorie Dannenfelser, president of the Susan B. Anthony List.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily Background reading: The transformation of groups like the Susan B. Anthony List from opponents of Mr. Trump early in the 2016 campaign into proud and unwavering backers of his presidency illustrates how intertwined the conservative movement has become with the president — and how much they need each other to survive politically.For months, abortion has been relegated to a back burner in the presidential campaign. The death of Justice Ginsburg and the battle to replace her has put the issue firmly back on the agenda.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today.
President Trump has now secured the support he needs from Senate Republicans
to swiftly confirm a replacement for Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court,
all but assuring that he will cement
its conservative majority.
A conversation with the anti-abortion activist
whose unlikely partnership with the president
helped bring the court to this moment.
It's Wednesday, September 23rd.
Hey, how are you? It's Michael Barbaro.
Hello, Michael. It's great to meet you.
Very nice to meet you, and thank you for making time for us.
Well, I'm very grateful. I've been looking forward to it.
Really?
I have. You think I haven't?
Not everybody looks forward to conversations with journalists.
I do.
It's actually one of the things I like the best.
I'm not kidding.
I really do.
Well, we're grateful for your time.
And I want to start with the difficult but necessary question of asking you how to pronounce
your last name.
It's Dannon Felser.
Dannon Felser.
Is it okay if I call you Marjorie? Of course, yes. Okay.
So, Marjorie, the reason we wanted to talk to you and talk to you right now is because you lead an
organization, the Susan B. Anthony List, that seeks to end abortion in the United States, in part by
electing lawmakers who oppose abortion and in part by confirming conservative justices to the federal bench and ultimately to the Supreme Court in order to eventually overturn Roe v. Wade.
Does that summarize the group's mission accurately?
Yeah, I think you got it.
Yeah.
So I have to imagine this is quite a day to be talking to you because it is now about
103 in the afternoon on Tuesday, And we have just watched as several Republican
senators who seem to be on the fence about filling Justice Ginsburg's vacant seat said that they
would seek to confirm a replacement for her in the coming weeks, the latest of those being
Senator Mitt Romney. And so it very much seems like you are on the cusp of a historic victory for social and religious conservatives and for the mission of your group.
I think that's right.
And I think, you know, no matter who you are, you feel the ground shaking underneath, wondering where the nation is going.
For me, it is a surreal moment.
It is actually very hard to put into words.
I'm feeling very optimistic for the mission
that our organization launched on 25 years ago. I wonder if in 2015, when you were first facing
the prospect of a Donald Trump presidency, if you could have ever imagined that just over four years
later, it would get you here to this point? Michael, I was deeply opposed to the candidacy of this president.
He was the last on a very long list and a distant last of people that I thought should
be among, I mean, I think there were 17 at the high point candidates.
And I put out letters in South Carolina and in Iowa saying, not this guy.
So I did get dragged kicking and screaming to the candidacy.
And so the answer to your question is, yeah, I would have been shocked to hear that this president would operate as the most pro-life president in history, and that he would be the one to be naming a self-described
pro-life Supreme Court Justice 3 that could turn the tide of events on abortion law after
four decades since Roe v. Wade.
Well, let's talk a little bit more about that journey that you and your organization went
on, the kicking and screaming.
I realize this is asking a lot of someone who now has a close relationship with the president. But if you could go back to your worst views and fears of him at the time
and describe for me what you were thinking about him and what he represented to you in that early
period of 2015, 2016. I don't mind talking about it because I actually, as a convert on this cause,
I can say that it's very much reflective of what people probably used to think of me when I was very strongly pro-choice. You
know, my view changed pretty diametrically to the position I had, but whatever people felt about me
at that point is exactly how I felt about this president. We can't possibly have somebody who
just converted overnight be the candidate. And I didn't like
the caustic comments to Carly Fiorina, who I adored at the time. So what I saw, I wasn't
pleased with. And it's the point I would say that in my entire life, I've never been so happy to be
so incredibly wrong about the commitments that he would make and how he would actually govern.
And when you say conversion, you mean his conversion from someone who supported abortion
rights, supported candidates who supported abortion rights, to someone who was opposed
to abortion, who was pro-life.
That's right.
Well, before we get to those commitments, I want to slow down just a little bit and
talk about the journey that you went on, and not linger too much on it, but I do think it's important to understand.
During the period when you had objections to him, you did not mince words.
And I just want to put a pin in how strongly you doubted him during that period, because
you mentioned letters that you had issued against his candidacy.
And there is a very pointed letter that I recall you addressed to Republican voters as the Iowa caucuses were about to get underway.
And I was in Iowa during that time, so I remember this.
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
And this is what you said.
Quote, we urge Republican caucus goers and voters to support anyone but Donald Trump
on the issue of defending unborn children and protecting women from the violence of abortion.
Mr. Trump cannot be trusted.
And there is, thankfully, an abundance of alternative candidates
with proven records of pro-life leadership whom pro-life voters can support.
And you went on to say,
as women, we are disgusted by Mr. Trump's treatment of individuals, women in particular. So
how were you able to get from there to the decision that you needed to build a relationship
with the president and start talking about commitments and partnerships?
Well, that's a double-edged question. One is, how could you form a relationship after saying that
from his perspective, right? That's one thing. And the other, how from my end, right? So to me, there was no choice. It was a choice between someone who wanted to
preserve abortion and expand it and have people pay for it. That was Hillary Clinton. And he who
made commitments to only pro-life judges and other things. So what do you do when you're given that
choice? As imperfect as the choices look, there was a better choice.
So just to be clear, you're saying the journey was essentially Donald Trump's victory in the primaries,
that once he started to win, you didn't feel you had a choice between his views on abortion and Hillary Clinton's views on abortion.
You had to make a compromise.
That's right. That's what the world of politics is. But I would not have done it if he had not made those commitments. I mean, we had
to have something to take door to door to over a million homes in battleground states to say,
this is who this is. So, yes, it was the primary and it was those commitments. And then as we were
moving into the general, he got stronger on the issue, not weaker. And the general direction of candidates is the opposite, that first they are all about you.
They love you and you're the best person on the planet.
And then they get into the general and they start to moderate.
Well, that is not how he treated the issue.
And he instead embraced it and communicated it and made sure that there was a contrast between his policies and his opponents and
Hillary Clinton's.
And that's what you hope and dream for, that there's that perfect clarity and that voters
know the choice that they're making.
And he's the first person that did it like that.
Well, let's talk about the commitments that you're referring to.
What exactly were the commitments and how did they come to be?
Well, we knew what our priorities were.
So we wrote them down and said, these are the commitments we would like for you to make.
And they were pro-life Supreme Court justices.
Now, I'm very aware about how that term, pro-life Supreme Court justices, goes across
to quite a number of people.
One, they don't even know what that means.
It's not accurate.
Does that mean reverse his way?
Does that—we wanted to be very clear that it means they take a position on abortion that is
in alignment with our own. So that was the first commitment. And it was that it'd be very clear
what type of Supreme Court justices you're going to have. And what else did he commit to? Because
my sense is it wasn't just justices on the court. That's right. The Supreme Court piece is the most
important piece, but there was also a commitment to protect the Hyde Amendment, meaning no taxpayer funding of
abortion, to sign a 20-week pain-capable bill into law, that means no abortions on the national level
after five months, and also defunding and reallocating Planned Parenthood's funding to
other qualified health centers. So pretty sweeping commitment. So were you surprised
when he agreed to do all of this, when you got everything you wanted from him?
I was a little bit surprised because we didn't have any leverage. He was already the candidate.
Generally, candidates in that position aren't going to put their name to anything because
they don't have to anymore. But he's a different kind of candidate. And he had taken this position
and he wants the benefit of it. And all we needed was that letter and we gave it to him. And then the rest is history. Our battleground state activity
was incredibly helpful and he knows it in the wind. Then it made everything worthwhile because
every single thing he promised and beyond, he did. Well, let's talk a little bit about what you mean
when you said it made everything worthwhile. Because I have to say that the journey that you went on was a very long journey in a relatively short period of time. did it not really matter whether he fundamentally in his heart believed it because he was effectively signing up to be the vehicle
through which you could try to achieve what you had always been working towards?
In other words, did it not really matter if he maybe didn't believe what he was signing on to?
It just mattered that he would do the things he signed up to do.
And did it really matter if some of his actions were at odds with your faith
in his personal life, especially?
I think what really mattered is that he take these positions.
And yes, the constant question was, does he really think this?
Voters care if he really believes it.
And I think it's the unanswerable question, what's deep in the chambers of your heart?
You know, what are your intentions?
What do you, you know, it's very difficult to know.
I know what he...
Do you care?
Do you care? Do you care?
He—if you'll notice on this issue, people say, well, he's always scripted on it.
Well, he's scripted because he doesn't want to get it wrong.
It's too important.
This is one thing that I know.
He knows how important it is.
And it is important to him because he's done everything and beyond that he ever promised to do. I mean, what you're describing is, and tell
me if you think this is uncharitable or, you know, too practical, but you're describing a very
transactional understanding with a presidential candidate in this stage. Well, if it were only
that, that would be fine. But I don't think it is only that. So that's how I look at it. You know,
it does matter what's in the human heart. It also matters what the human does.
So his actions and our gambling with the idea that he was going to follow through on were far better than the gamble that we had with Hillary Clinton.
There was no transaction possible with her.
There was only one possible with him.
And he grew into the commitment.
to the commitment. But to the listener of Faith, who's hearing this conversation and is thinking,
but how can you watch something like the Access Hollywood video, which came out at the end of the campaign, so after he had made this commitment to you, how could you watch that and support him
regardless of what you end up getting out of it? I'm sure you've been asked this question before,
but how do you answer it? Because here you're talking about someone boasting about sexually
assaulting women, and soon after women came forward and said, that's what he did to me.
So I'm just, how did you think about that? Well, I thought about it in a couple ways. One,
it was painful. And we're still left with the same choice. Pain and two choices.
There is a prudential choice that you have to make. And we knew what Hillary Clinton
was going to do. And we knew the commitment that the president had. And so we had to make that
choice. And we did. And once we're in, we're all in. You know, I will never apologize for those
actions or those comments. But I will, till the day I die, advance the policies that he committed
to. And just around the corner, we're seeing the fruits of having done that.
You use the word prudential, and that caught me a little bit
because you're not using a word that conveys morality or faith.
You're saying prudent, if I'm hearing that word correctly.
Yeah, I think actually religious people use that term quite a lot
because it acknowledges a hierarchy of goods and evils involved in any decision.
That decisions of great consequence often involve a blend of goods and bads.
And your job is to figure out where the highest good is found.
Which choice leads to the highest good?
And that's the choice we had to make in that moment.
And in your mind, the highest good was a candidate who would fulfill your mission
on the future of abortion in the United States.
That's right.
When the president does go on to win the office,
I wonder how much it felt like support
from groups like yours mattered.
My sense is that it was pretty meaningful.
I've spoken to a couple of my colleagues here at The Times who we really trust on this subject, and they said that the president likely would not have won several key states like Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania without support from Christian conservatives and groups like yours.
and groups like yours. Yeah, I think that he knows that. In fact, he called me right after the election to say that. And I, you know, take a little bit of exception. Sometimes the pro-life
people that are part of his election are sometimes Catholic, sometimes evangelical, and sometimes
neither. Sometimes Democrats, sometimes Republicans, sometimes independents. It's one of those
issues, especially in the Rust Belt states that you just mentioned, that transcends a lot of boundaries.
And so I think he gets that. I know he gets that.
And once in office, in part with your support, right away, President Trump gets a chance to
put a justice on the court to kind of do what it is you care so much about. And he puts forward and gets confirmed a conservative jurist,
Neil Gorsuch, who your group supported.
He gets a second vacancy.
He fills that with another conservative jurist, Brett Kavanaugh,
who you again supported.
So were you surprised by how quickly this promise was kept by President Trump?
And did it start to feel that in very short order,
your work was more or less kind of done? That's a really good question. I think we've had so many
disappointments over time, where you seem like we're so close, you know, it looks just within
reach. And then all of a sudden something happens and it's not. So the only way I know how to handle
this is within the grace of daily obligation, doing the thing that has to be done today that is the best possible strategic and smart choice that you can make. And so, therefore, even right now, I don't take anything for granted. So, yes, I'm very hopeful, very optimistic, but not wild-eyed.
hopeful, very optimistic, but not wild-eyed. Well, I want to talk about where we are right now and what you have been fighting for over these past few days since Justice Ginsburg's passing.
Another seat, a third seat opening on the court during this presidency. And the question for
most people was, would a nomination to replace her happen before the election? Would it happen
after the election, given the tactics and actions of the Republican leadership in the Senate in 2016,
or not until there was a new president or the re-election of President Trump?
But I sense that for you, there was only one option, right?
All right.
You don't play roulette with that when the stakes are this high, in my opinion, and that's how we're acting. So I think getting, to be honest, to get wrapped up in what other presidents and
senates have done and other times historically, it's not nearly as important as the result.
They were elected to do a job and they should be doing it now.
So you're saying that's all beside the point to you, like when people talk about
the precedent of Merrick Garland or the promises that Lindsey Graham made very explicitly to the public. I'm not trying to be,
I'm not trying to be cavalier about this, but it sounds like your approach is sort of like,
who cares? That's process. Yeah. I mean, I think that nobody cares about process,
but I also think that if you have a shot, you do it now. You don't wait.
And so just to be clear, what did you make clear that you wanted to have happen when Justice Ginsburg died, that the president put forward a nominee and that, which is not in question, and that it be quickly done. And that's what all of our
conversations have been. And why exactly do you want it to be done so quickly and even before
the election? Why not wait until post-November, even if Donald Trump loses? Why can't he nominate
the candidate? Or why can't the Senate hold hearings on the candidate between November and January?
Why does it have to happen so quickly?
Well, a couple of things.
One is that you wait and you lose all the discipline.
All the cats move in different directions.
They behave differently in a lame duck.
They just do.
People aren't under the gun of an election.
You lose the pressure.
You lose the leverage.
Also, I think it will benefit the president to go in as a winner, you know, and that being a compelling case at the
ballot boxes. And also, if the Arizona election goes against Martha McSally, they'll seat immediately
a Democrat there, and that changes the numbers. So it's a very concrete and practical reason to
go ahead and do it now. Right. You referred to roulette earlier. You just don't want to take any risk that might involve a changing dynamic or a changing electoral math in the Senate, which you believe right now favors getting this done before the election.
That's right. You don't play roulette when the consequences are that high.
You don't play roulette when the consequences are that high.
What do you think was the most important thing that happened over the last few days in convincing some of these senators to get on board with your desired path? Because there were, on paper, significant obstacles, including these public statements that had been made, these commitments that had been made by several of these senators, whether it was Chuck Grassley, whether it was Lindsey Graham.
several of these senators, whether it was Chuck Grassley, whether it was Lindsey Graham.
I think the weight of that decision and the consequence of delay is an argument in itself.
It has to be made by several people. It's made by the president and the vice president. It's made from me and people like me directly. And also, look, I think about it this way, too, is Lamar Alexander, I think, said it better than anybody.
And Lamar Alexander was somebody that was very much on the, oh, no, what is he going to do list.
And he just made the most compelling statement that I think he really believes.
And I think Romney believes the same, which is this is a constitutional duty that should be done now.
And the consequences of not doing that will be felt for decades.
I know I keep asking you if you were surprised,
but were you surprised when Mitt Romney signed on?
I think many people expected him to, as a frequent dissenter from the president,
perhaps join with Senator Susan Collins, Senator Lisa Murkowski,
in being skeptical of this timeline.
Yes, I'm completely surprised when especially senators all line up Senator Susan Collins, Senator Lisa Murkowski, in being skeptical of this timeline?
Yes. I'm completely surprised when especially senators all line up and make the same decision.
I'm totally shocked when there is unity because Romney is a very independent person. Grassley is a very independent person. So yes, I am blown away with unity at a moment where it needs to happen.
I'm blown away with unity at a moment where it needs to happen.
I'm also very cognizant that it can be scattered.
So that's why we remain very vigilant.
Do you believe, Marjorie, that you are responsible in any way for what happened,
whether that's a matter of having gotten President Trump where he is with your support in the first place, putting him in a position for this to happen or the work you've done in the past few days? I mean, am I right in thinking that somewhere over the past 72,
96 hours, you and folks in your organization are on the phone with these senators, with their staff?
I think, yeah, I think I, my team and our grassroots have a lot of influence. I think I and my team and our grassroots have a lot of influence.
I think we can look at it and say we're very much a part of it.
I would never presume to say that we're the reason because that just wouldn't be true.
It would acknowledge the efforts of other people.
But yes, I think very much we are helping drive the center of this movement to a reclamation and a restoration of the court when it comes to Roe v. Wade.
We'll be right back.
So, Marjorie, the remaining questions now seem to only be some logistics, it feels like, around the vote and who the nominee for this vacancy will be from a pretty short list.
Is there only one path forward in your mind on this issue? I mean, does it have to be like when to hold the vote? When it comes to who should get this nod, does it have to be
Amy Coney Barrett in your mind? No, it doesn't. She's my favorite. She's our favorite. She's the
movement's favorite because the movement knows her. And she's been completely vetted. We know
who she is, what she's about.
And that is a real leg up when you're trying to move this fast.
But the list I was very much a part of.
So I feel like I own it in some ways.
So I'm very confident that no matter who he chooses, we'll continue in exactly the direction
we are.
So you're open to several possible judges on that list?
Yes, yeah.
So I want to turn to public opinion on the question of abortion and the path that you
seem to be setting for the president and for the Senate in this moment, which is a decision
that may ultimately be at odds with
where the majority of Americans are. And I'm mindful of something that Justice Ginsburg
said about Roe v. Wade. She had a critique of it, which is that she felt that in being so decisive
and striking down so many state laws on abortion, that Roe had kind of raced ahead of where the country was.
And she believed that the country was moving
in the direction of Roe on its own
and that the ruling risked a backlash from Americans
by doing this work from the bench.
And it was a controversial critique,
but I'm curious if you worry about the same thing happening
but now in the other direction because your goal is to get Roe overturned. And I ask that because the statistics on how Americans view abortion are very consistent at this moment in the country's history.
of Americans support legalized abortion and do not support overturning Roe v. Wade. And I could recite a bunch of polls. I don't think you need me to do that. So is this something you worry
about doing and creating a backlash towards? I'll acknowledge that the country is worried,
but the country is worried largely because the contradictions and inopinion. In other words,
yes, I know that poll to be true, that the majority supports Roe
versus Wade, but then also they support bans after the first trimester, which is completely
inconsistent. And what will happen when Roe is overturned or eroded to the extent that it's
not as applicable will be that states will start to pass laws that reflect the laws of those states.
That's the immediate effect of Roe. And only laws that will pass will be the laws that can
be sustained by the majorities in those states. And I think that people will then see, okay,
it wasn't this tsunami that we thought. It's actually just the bearing out of democracy on
an issue of deep moral conviction where people's
opinions get to make their way into the law rather than the Supreme Court telling them.
I just want to summarize what you have been saying. You're not worried, it sounds like,
about a backlash or going against the will of the people because in your mind, if this issue returns
to the state level, which is what would happen if Roe is overturned,
and the people support abortion, then abortion will still be legal.
Right.
And that will be the will of the people. Is that what you're saying?
That is. The only laws that will go into effect are laws that can be sustained by
majorities of the people in the states in which they live.
Some people will say that that may be a hard thing to measure.
There are many states where legislatures may be solidly Republican and out of sync with
the views of the majority of their residents.
And so restrictions might emerge that would then be reducing the availability of abortion.
That might be out of sync.
I suppose you would argue that maybe an election would determine that then a few years later. But is there not a real risk
that very suddenly state legislatures that have been gerrymandered, that have been made Republican
in ways that don't reflect the views of the majority of voters in that state would suddenly
restrict abortion in ways that would not be in sync with the democratic principles you're talking
about?
Well, look, I think democracy is the only institution that we have. There isn't a better one to gauge the will of the people and have that reflected in the law.
I don't know a better one.
So to get to some consensus in our nation that stranglehold on our ability to pass laws
that reflect our deeply held convictions about
the life and death of human beings has to let up. And if it doesn't let up, it will be exactly the
way it is now, the never-ending battle that people are sick of, but it's only occurring
because it's a matter of life and death. And we're on the verge of getting to a place where we can say we're victorious.
To go back to the polling for just a minute, I think you agreed that those surveys show that the majority of Americans support Roe v. Wade, support access to legalized abortion. understand from your viewpoint how this process may play out and what the political repercussions
may be, in some cases, even for allies of yours, people who you have supported and who have
supported you. And I assume that's something that you've been thinking a lot about.
Yeah, I think what matters is what people really think.
We're looking at the polls and we're seeing contradictions.
So what do we make of that?
There's only backlash if it really is going further
than the consensus will allow.
And if it goes further than consensus will allow,
the democratic process picks up again and adjusts.
So I think for people who are naturally afraid
and risk averse, yeah, they won't like it
that states are starting to enact laws
that reflect the will of their states
because they'll be afraid perhaps,
but that doesn't hold me up.
So I wonder if you would just indulge me for a moment.
And I want to ask you to imagine a future.
It's November 4th. A handful of Republican
senators perhaps have lost their seats in part because of this process. And perhaps Republicans
lose control of the Senate. Would it have been worth it? I'm not going there because I'm in
those places. I mean, we are literally in those Senate battles right now.
We have people going door to door in all of those Senate battles.
I've talked to Senator Daines, for instance, today, who says this confirmation, if it's
done before the election, he does not believe it'll hurt his chances.
I believe that they all think that.
They don't think that that's going to be the case.
And I think they're absolutely right.
think that. They don't think that that's going to be the case. And I think they're absolutely right.
So yes, there is a hierarchy of goals, but because of the way this is rolling out,
that's a false choice that I'm not willing to make. We're not just leaving things to fall where they will. I do not think that this hurts the president's chances of winning. And I don't
think it hurts senators' chances of winning, the ones on the pro-life side.
So it sounds like you're having these conversations, and I know you don't want
to imagine that future, but if that were to happen, if you were to wake up and find that
the Senate had been lost, and maybe a bunch of senators even candidly say,
we got that third Trump conservative justice on the Supreme Court, but it cost us the Senate.
I want to ask you to grapple with that for just a minute. Will it have been worth it?
I don't think I'm making that decision, and so I'm not willing to make that call. I think that,
look, changing the court for
decades and saving millions and millions of lives is the most important thing that I do,
and politics is the root to that. So, in this particular case, I do not feel that it's a choice
that has to be made. I think we're doing both at the same time.
But you see the hierarchy of goods.
The first most important thing is who sits on the Supreme Court.
When you didn't want to engage the question of whether this confirmation battle might cost Republicans control of the Senate,
it occurred to me that you would not want to imagine that future for the president either.
But I have to ask, what if in the end the president loses re-election?
The autopsies and the retrospectives look back and say that it was in part because of an energized opposition,
because he rushed to get a third justice appointed to the Supreme Court, one who openly opposed abortion,
and that was at odds with where the electorate was. If you end up losing this historic ally of yours in this battle, will that
be okay? And will it have been worth it? It's not going to be okay to lose the presidency,
and it's not going to be okay to lose the Senate. The first priority is the Supreme Court without question. And I'm going to work for all three.
I'm not willing to cede any of it. I'm not. But I am saying the most important thing is
the Supreme Court. And I think all those people I just mentioned agree.
You're saying you think President Trump would agree that it would have been worth
losing re-election to change the composition of the Supreme Court?
No, I think he—I'm just saying the order of goods. In the order of goods, the lasting value of the Supreme Court is a legacy for the Senate and for the president. And I can't presume to speak for him or the senators, but I'm just saying I'm fighting for them all. Like, I'm not going to—I'm not going to cede any of it.
I'm fighting for them all.
Like, I'm not going to cede any of it.
Right.
This phrase that you used when thinking about your partnership with President Trump, there was a practicality to it.
That's right.
It will all have been worth it.
Yeah.
So I think this entire battle, all in sum, every single thing we've done for the last decade, everything we've done since 2016, everything we will do for this election, if we have one more Supreme Court justice that looks like Amy Barrett or one of the others,
it will all have been worth it. We're at a point of a major shift in this nation,
and I'm very happy to be in the place that I am.
Well, I really appreciate your time.
I appreciate yours too, Michael.
Thank you, Marjorie.
Thank you so much.
President Trump is expected to announce his nominee for the Supreme Court at 5 p.m. Eastern on Saturday night.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
On Tuesday, the Times reported that the death toll from the coronavirus had surpassed 200,000 Americans.
On average in September, about 850 Americans are dying from the virus every day, and around 40,000 Americans a day are being infected.
are being infected.
Despite those alarming numbers,
the nation's fourth-largest school system,
Miami-Dade County in Florida,
said on Tuesday that it would allow students to return to the classroom five days a week,
starting next month.
Miami-Dade reported nearly 3,000 new infections
over the past week.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.