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Politics : WHO IS RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT IN 2004 -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: calgal who wrote (6537)11/15/2003 4:17:35 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 10965
 
Falsities on the Senate Floor
Marathon reveals Democratic prioritization of partisanship over justice.

By Senator John Cornyn

Throughout last night's historic round-the-clock session of the U.S. Senate, a partisan minority of senators defended their filibusters against the president's judicial nominees by making two basic arguments. Both were false.











First, they claim that the Senate's record of "168-4" — 168 judges confirmed, 4 filibustered (so far) — somehow proves that the current filibuster crisis is mere politics as usual.

But, as I explained in an op-ed yesterday, this is not politics as usual; it is politics at its worst.

After all, it is wrong for a partisan minority of senators to treat good people like statistics; wrong to mistreat distinguished jurists with unprecedented filibusters and unconscionable character attacks; wrong to hijack the Constitution and seize control of the judicial-confirmation process from the president and a bipartisan majority of the Senate; wrong to deny up-or-down votes to judicial nominees simply because a partisan minority of senators cannot persuade the bipartisan majority to vote against a nominee; and wrong not to play fair, follow tradition, and allow a vote. Once is bad enough, and four unconstitutional filibusters is four too many.

Second, they argue that the current filibusters are justified on the basis of precedent. But, in fact, the current filibusters are both unconstitutional and unprecedented. Senate Democrats themselves have admitted as much.

The Constitution expressly establishes supermajority voting requirements for authorizing treaties, proposing constitutional amendments, and other specific actions. To confirm judicial nominees, by contrast, the Constitution requires only a majority vote — as the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously held in United States v. Ballin (1892).

No wonder, then, that filibusters have been roundly condemned as unconstitutional — by Democratic senators and leaders as well as by prominent Democrats on the bench and in the legal academy.

The current filibusters of judicial nominations are also unprecedented. 168-4? Try 0-4. Until now, every judicial nominee throughout the history of the Senate and of the United States of America, who has received the support of a majority of senators, has been confirmed. Until now, no judicial nominee who has enjoyed the support of a majority of senators has ever been denied an up-or-down vote. Indeed, until now, Democrat and Republican senators alike have long condemned even the idea of defeating judicial nominees by filibuster.

During Wednesday night's historic session, however, a partisan minority of senators claimed precedent for their filibusters. Embarrassed by public exposure of their destructive acts, this partisan minority would very much like to find support for their actions, no matter how implausible.

But Senate Democrats have already admitted — at least amongst themselves — that their current obstruction is unprecedented. In a November 3 fundraising e-mail to potential donors, my colleague, Jon Corzine, the chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, acknowledged — actually, he boasted — that the current blockade of judicial nominees is "unprecedented."

It is dishonest for Senate Democrats to tell their donors one thing, and the American people another thing. My colleague from New Jersey is right that the current filibusters are unprecedented. And the alleged precedents now cited by Senate Democrats for the current filibusters are all false.

For example, some say that the current filibusters are justified because of the previous treatment of Stephen Breyer, Rosemary Barkett, H. Lee Sarokin, Richard Paez, and Marsha Berzon.

That is a rather bizarre argument to make. Breyer, Barkett, Sarokin, Paez, and Berzon were all confirmed by the U.S. Senate: Breyer became a judge on the First Circuit until he was elevated to the Supreme Court; Barkett now sits on the Eleventh Circuit; Paez and Berzon are now judges on the Ninth Circuit; Sarokin served as a judge on the Third Circuit until he retired.

Indeed, Paez was confirmed only because Republican senators refused to filibuster his nomination. Fewer than 60 senators ultimately voted to confirm Paez. But although his opponents could have filibustered him, Paez got a vote — and his judgeship — because Republican senators understood it is wrong to filibuster judicial nominees.

I would love to see Pryor, Owen, Pickering, and Estrada "mistreated" the same way Breyer, Barkett, Sarokin, Paez, and Berzon were treated. If you take the Democrats' argument seriously, then Pryor, Owen, Pickering, and Estrada must be confirmed.

Some argued overnight that the current filibusters are justified because of the failed 1968 nomination of then-Justice Abe Fortas to be chief justice.

This claim is also unfounded. The Congressional Record makes clear that a confirmation vote would have likely failed by a vote of 46-49. Moreover, Fortas's opponents explained repeatedly that they were not filibustering — they just wanted adequate time to debate and expose serious problems with his nomination. So Fortas wasn't denied confirmation due to a filibuster; he was denied confirmation due to the opposition of a bipartisan majority of senators. (Indeed, shortly thereafter, Fortas resigned from the Court altogether, under threat of impeachment.)

Finally, some say that the current filibusters are justified because some of President Clinton's nominees were held in committee.

But there is nothing new — or relevant — about a judicial nominee who is not confirmed due to lack of support from a Senate majority. At the end of the first Bush Administration, there were 54 judicial nominees who had not mustered majority support and thus were not confirmed. At the end of the Clinton administration, there were 41 such nominees. If a majority of senators chooses to defer to a committee's decision not to bring someone to a vote, that is the majority's right under our constitutional system for confirming judges.

The current situation is precisely the opposite. Today, an enthusiastic bipartisan majority wants to confirm judicial nominees, yet for the first time in our nation's history, a minority is stopping them.

That's why Georgetown Law Professor Mark Tushnet — no shill for President Bush's judicial nominees — has written that filibusters are clearly different from the holds and committee delays used against nominees from the earlier Bush and Clinton administrations. He has written that "[t]here's a difference between the use of the filibuster to derail a nomination and the use of other Senate rules — on scheduling, on not having a floor vote without prior committee action, etc. — to do so. All those other rules . . . can be overridden by a majority vote of the Senate . . . whereas the filibuster rule can't be overridden that way. A majority of the Senate could ride herd on a rogue Judiciary Committee chair who refused to hold a hearing on some nominee; it can't do so with respect to a filibuster." He has also written that "[t]he Democrats' filibuster is . . . a repudiation of a settled pre-constitutional understanding."

The arguments being peddled in defense of the filibusters resemble the arguments against the nominees themselves. They are baseless and outcome-oriented. They have been rejected by a bipartisan majority of senators. And they are offensive to basic principles of democracy, including majority rule and the right to vote.

Senator Zell Miller, a long-time Democrat from the state of Georgia, recently published a book about the demise of his party, entitled A National Party No More. Perhaps that is because the Democratic party is a democratic party no more.

— John Cornyn is a Republican senator from Texas and chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights and Property Rights.



To: calgal who wrote (6537)11/15/2003 4:17:49 AM
From: calgal  Respond to of 10965
 
NOV. 14, 2003: LONDON CALLING
NR Readers Write

A number of readers offered a very astute response to my forebodings of yesterday. They said, to summarize: “The analogy you’re looking for, David, isn’t Chicago 1968 – it’s Caracas 1958. When a Venezuelan mob attacked Nixon’s car and nearly killed him, Americans saw his courage and cool. Nixon returned to receive a standing ovation from both houses of Congress.”

It’s an interesting point. Although the optics of the president’s UK visit will be ugly for him, on further thought they may well turn out in the end to be more dangerous for the Democratic front-runner, Howard Dean. If next week’s visit to London goes as I fear it will, the Democratic candidates for president will have to decide what, if anything, to say about it. In 1958, Senator John F. Kennedy condemned the Caracas rioters and joined the ovation for Nixon. I doubt that any of this year’s crop will have the wisdom and discipline to do that. They will be tempted either to keep silent – or else possibly to blame Bush for the rampaging of left-wing and Islamic extremist mobs. Satisfying as that will be to them, it will also tend to identify them with those mobs.

In 1952, Dwight Eisenhower skillfully condemned the Truman administration’s conduct of the Korean war without ever flirting in any way with isolationism or (as goes without saying) the anti-American hard left. The antiwar Democrats of the 1960s and 1970s lacked Eisenhower’s skill – and discredited their party for a generation. The antiwar Democrats of the 00s are repeating the mistakes of their youth. It won’t be just the American flag that the London protesters will burn – it will also be the last remaining vestiges of the antiwar movement’s image. After next week, Americans will see that movement for what it is – and will almost certainly come closer to seeing those national Democrats who have lent aid and comfort to that movement for what they are.

On to London

The Daily Telegraph has invited me to London to cover the president’s visit. I will be blogging from the United Kingdom all next week. My Telegraph articles will be available at www. Telegraph.co.uk – an essential conservative site if there ever was one.

Shedding Surplus Pounds

After years of monopolizing most of my house’s storage space, I have reluctantly been persuaded by wife and family that the time has come to part with my extra copies of my old books. So, question: would any NR readers be interested in purchasing signed copies?

I have surplus copies of

(a) Dead Right, my 1994 critique of the post-Reagan Republican party (both hardcover and paperback);
(b) What’s Right, a 1996 collection of essays (the larger Canadian edition is available in both hardcover and paperback; the U.S. edition in hardcover only);
(c) How We Got Here: The 70s – the Decade That Brought You Modern Life, hardcover and paperback.

Hardcovers are available for $27 (or $34 in Canadian funds); paperbacks for $16 (or $20 Canadian). We pay shipping. Please send checks or money orders to

David Frum
The American Enterprise Institute
1150 Seventeenth Street NW
Washington DC 20036.

Specify which editions you would like. Please be sure to include your return mailing address and a phone number or email address in case we have questions about your order. As for The Right Man, it remains available at Amazon.com(see link just to the right), BN.com, Chapters.ca, and bookstores almost everywhere. The paperback edition of The Right Man will be released on December 30, as will the hardcover edition of An End to Evil: How to Win the War on Terror.

08:21 AM

nationalreview.com