My post did not state that he would be confirmed. It was, however, a sarcastic prediction about the circus that we are referring to as the "confirmation hearings."
Maybe he should have recused himself from the Vanguard case, maybe not. I took a quick look at a
Boston Globe article about it, and it does not indicate that the value of Alito's Vanguard assets (or the value of anyone's Vanguard assets) could have been affected by his decision in the case. In any event, Alito's decision was vacated and assigned to a different judge, who apparently ruled the same way that Alito had ruled. Did Alito make a mistake by not recusing himself from the case? Maybe, maybe not. But making a mistake does not automatically mean that Alito is a liar.
Everyone is entitled to prefer a liberal or a conservative Justice, or a Justice who is pro/anti-second amendment, pro/anti-abortion, pro/anti-anything. I have no problem with that. And a conservative President is certainly entitled to nominate a conservative nominee (or a liberal President to nominate a liberal nominee).
However, my main point is that the confirmation hearings are turning into a laughable circus, and seem to have little to do with whether Alito is qualified for the position (possesses enough experience for the position, is smart enough for the position, etc.). Instead, the confirmation hearings are becoming a dirt-digging search and destroy exercise. We don't like the nominee because he or she is too conservative or too liberal, so we'll look for dirt in the closet. Heck, we'll even make up inaccurate or untrue dirt and sling it at the nominee to see if it sticks, therby derailing the nomination. He is a racist. He hates women. He sexually harassed me years ago. He is a liar who only cares about his Vanguard investments.
I'll speculate that many lawyers who would have made outstanding Justices have declined a nomination to the Supreme Court because they simply aren't willing to tolerate the dirt slinging game. And that is a shame.