Donald Trump

Kirk to GOP Leaders: “Man Up and Cast a Vote” on SCOTUS Nominee

The Illinois Senator broke with fellow Republicans Friday, pushing for a confirmation hearing for Obama's Supreme Court nominee

During an appearance on WLS-AM 890 Friday, Sen. Mark Kirk broke with Republicans and asked for a vote on President Barack Obama's Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland.

He said Republican lawmakers should "man up and cast a vote."

"We should go through the process the Constitution has already laid out," Kirk said. "The president has already laid out a nominee who is from Chicagoland and for me, I'm open to see him, to talk to him, and ask him his views on the Constitution."

Obama nominated Illinois native Garland in a White House Rose Garden ceremony Wednesday. Garland currently serves as the Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and is considered a centrist.

"Many of us believe that the Republicans should, in fact, do the job that they were elected to do and at least offer a vote up on Garland," Kirk added.

During Obama's nomination Wednesday, he urged Republican leaders to move forward with the process to confirm Garland to the Supreme Court.

Nonetheless, Republican lawmakers are pushing to block Obama's Supreme Court nomination until a new president is elected next year. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell called Garland Wednesday to inform him that the Senate would not move forward with the confirmation process.

Kirk also released an online ad Friday slamming Rep. Tammy Duckworth, the Democratic nominee for his U.S. Senate seat, over “false claims of being bipartisan.”

The ad loops a clip of Duckworth saying “You know, I already have been very bipartisan in my work in the House of Representatives.”

The ad is interspersed with critiques of Duckworth’s Congressional career.

“Tammy Duckworth voted with her party 94 percent of the time,” the ad says. The statistic is attributed to Cq.com

The ad also claims Duckworth was “one of the least effective members of Congress,” according to Inside Gov.

Aside from this, the ad aims to tie Duckworth to imprisoned former Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich.

“Tammy Duckworth endorsed Blagojevich … while he was under investigation," the ad says, citing the Chicago Daily Herald.

Kirk’s campaign manager, Kevin Artl, expounded on the allegations in a press release supplied to Ward Room.

"Now more than ever, Illinois voters want a Senator willing to rise above the rancor and partisanship in Washington,” Artl said. “Unfortunately, Rep. Duckworth refuses to challenge her own party -- even when they are wrong -- like when she endorsed Rod Blagojevich while he was under federal investigation.”

Duckworth’s team responded in a statement, faulting Kirk for potentially supporting Donald Trump’s presidential campaign and for not pushing McConnell to move forward with Supreme Court confirmation hearings.

“One week ago, Mark Kirk said he ‘certainly would’ support Donald Trump if he’s the Republican nominee — an outcome that is becoming increasingly likely,” Duckworth campaign spokesman Matt McGrath told Ward Room. “Kirk is also refusing to call on Mitch McConnell to hold hearings and have an up-or-down vote on the nomination of Merrick Garland, an Illinois native with impeccable credentials. In other words, Kirk’s video is as hypocritical as it is amateurish.”

Incumbent Kirk defeated Oswego businessman James Marter to win the Republican nomination.  

Duckworth beat out Urban League CEO and President Andrea Zopp as well as state Sen. Napoleon Harris to win the Democratic nomination for Kirk’s U.S. Senate seat.

Kirk and Duckworth will face-off in the Nov. 8 general election. 

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