Susan Collins and Joe Manchin felt misled by the Supreme Court's decision to overturn the abortion law.

Both Collins and Manchin voted to confirm the Supreme Court justices.

The justices assured the senators that they believed in the legality of abortion.

I trusted Justice Gorsuch and Justice Kavanaugh when they testified that they believed in the legality of the decision to allow abortion. Manchin said he was alarmed that they chose to reject the stability the ruling had provided.

Manchin, a self-proclaimed centrist, was one of three Democrats who voted to confirm Gorsuch and the only one who voted to confirm Kavanak in the same year. The vote was close.

Manchin supports legislation that would codify the rights of abortionists.

Collins was also disappointed with the justices.

Collins said that the decision was inconsistent with what the two justices said in their testimony and their meetings with her.

The New York Times reported that while persuading the senator to vote to confirm him, he told Collins that he was a "don't-rock-the-boat kind of judge."

Before his confirmation, Collins told CNN that he did not believe that the court would overturn the decision.

According to Rolling Stone, the Maine senator was mocked by Trump officials for agreeing to back the judge.

Collins told The New York Times that he felt deceived.

The justices were criticized for misleading the public during their confirmation hearings.

During his confirmation hearings, he said that the decision of the United States Supreme Court was a precedent. It has been maintained. It will be treated like any other precedent by a good judge.

During his confirmation hearing, he stated that the Supreme Court's precedent of abortion is an important one.

The Supreme Court left the legality of abortion up to the states.