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Politics : Moderate Forum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: xcr600 who wrote (16688)5/5/2005 7:57:09 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20773
 
This post was generated entirely by quotes by Senate
Democrats. The quotes have been picked from floor statements
& other & other sources.

Justice Delayed is Justice Denied


I find it simply baffling that a Senator would vote against even voting on a judicial nomination. in some cases they have been pending not for months but for years. For anyone to be held that long is just an extraordinary unfairness, not only to the nominees but to the system itself. It is true that some Senators have voiced concerns about these nominations. But that should not prevent a roll call vote which gives every Senator the opportunity to vote "yes" or "no." I think the Senate is entitled to a vote in this matter, and I think the president is entitled for the Senate to vote, and I think the country is entitled for the Senate to vote. The continuing delays are a gross perversion of the confirmation process that has served this country well for more than 200 years.

When the Founders wrote the Constitution and gave the Senate the power of advice and consent on Presidential nominations, they never intended the Senate to work against the President. Whoever wins the election appoints the judges. Delays can only be described as an abdication of the Senate’s constitutional responsibility to work with the President and ensure the integrity of our federal courts. This delay makes a mockery of the Constitution. We don’t have time for delays; the courts don’t have time for delays; America doesn’t have time for delays.

We had nominations that were filibustered. This was almost unheard of in our past. It is used ... as blackmail for one Senator to get his or her way on something that they could not rightfully win through the normal processes. if there is one subject that should remain immune from political games and pressure it is our Federal judicial system.

A nominee is entitled to a vote. The problem is, we have a few people who prevent them from having a vote, and this goes on month after month, year after year. The Senate is bottling up people who deserve to be voted on - up or down. If a Senator has a problem with particular nominees, he or she should vote against them. But a nominee should not be held up interminably by a handful of Senators. The Senate should not be playing politics with the Federal Judiciary. This is extremism run amok.

The ability of the judiciary to do its job is significantly diminished by the slow speed at which judicial vacancies are filled. If people have a legitimate objection to a particular nominee, they ought to voice that objection and vote against them and try to persuade their colleagues to vote against them. But this is crippling the courts. Everyone who is nominated is entitled to have a shot, to have a hearing and to have a shot to be heard on the floor and have a vote on the floor. We must ensure that the federal bench is at full strength so that our citizens will receive justice promptly and fairly. This is about justice, and justice delayed is justice denied.

We need these judges, both to prosecute and sentence violent criminals and to prevent more backlogs in civil cases. This is about justice – it shouldn’t be about politics.

Posted by Matt

blogsforbush.com



To: xcr600 who wrote (16688)5/5/2005 8:02:03 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20773
 
Barbara Boxer on Judicial Nominations

Blogs for Bush

This is Senator Barbara Boxer, as recorded by the Congressional Record on January 28, 1998:


<<<

“Mr. President, I am very glad that we are moving forward with judges today. We all hear, as we are growing up, that, ‘Justice delayed is justice denied,’ and we have, in many of our courts, vacancies that have gone on for a year, 2 years, and in many cases it is getting to the crisis level. So I am pleased that we will be voting. I think, whether the delays are on the Republican side or the Democratic side, let these names come up, let us have debate, let us vote.”
>>>

I guess justice delayed isn't justice denied when it's George W. Bush's nominees waiting to get voted on by the Senate
...

Posted by Matt

blogsforbush.com



To: xcr600 who wrote (16688)5/5/2005 8:07:55 PM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 20773
 
Break the Filibuster

Democrats are looking to the Constitution to preserve the
judicial filibuster; the Constitution isn't on their side.

by William Kristol
05/09/2005, Volume 010, Issue 32

SUDDENLY DEMOCRATS ARE WRAPPING THEMSELVES in the Constitution. Emphasizing his commitment to maintaining the filibuster as a way to stop President Bush's judicial nominees, Senate Democratic whip Richard Durbin said last week, "We believe it's a constitutional issue. . . . It's a matter of having faith in the Constitution." The trouble is, the filibuster is nowhere mentioned, or even implied, in the text of the Constitution.

Suddenly, too, European liberals are discovering the virtues of the Founding Fathers.
On the same day that Durbin was confessing his faith in the Constitution, the editors of the Financial Times were urging Bill Frist to "cease and desist" his efforts to break the filibuster, imploring him to "reread the wisdom of the Federalist Papers." The trouble is, the filibuster is nowhere mentioned, or even implied, in the Federalist Papers.

What's really going on here, of course, is this: President Bush, having been elected and reelected, and with a Republican Senate majority, wants to appoint federal judges of a generally conservative and constitutionalist disposition. The Democrats very much want to block any change in the character of the federal judiciary--a branch of government they have increasingly come to cherish, as they have lost control of the others. It's a political struggle, not unlike others in American history, with both sides appealing to high principle and historical precedent.

But it happens to be the case that Republicans have the better argument with respect to the filibustering of judicial nominees. The systematic denial of up or down votes on
judicial nominees is a new phenomenon. Republicans are right to say that it is the Democrats who have radically departed from customary practice.

More important, perhaps, the customary practice of not filibustering presidential nominees--whether for the judiciary or the executive branch--is not a mere matter of custom. It is rooted in the structure of the Constitution. While the filibuster of judges is not, in a judicially enforceable sense, unconstitutional, it is contrary to the logic of the constitutional separation of powers.


As David A. Crockett of Trinity University in San Antonio has explained, the legislative filibuster makes perfect sense. Article 1 of the Constitution gives each house of Congress the power to determine its own rules. Senate Rule XXII establishes the necessity of 60 votes to close off debate. With this rule, the Senate has chosen to allow 40-plus percent of its members to block legislative action, out of respect for the view that delaying, even preventing, hasty action, or action that has only the support of a narrow majority, can be a good thing. As Crockett puts it, "Congress is the active agent in lawmaking, and if it wants to make that process more difficult, it can." One might add that legislative filibusters can often be overcome by offering the minority compromises--revising the underlying legislation with amendments and the like.

There is no rationale for a filibuster, however, when the Senate is acting under Article 2 in advising and consenting to presidential nominations.
As Crockett points out, here the president is "the originator and prime mover. If he wants to make the process more burdensome, perhaps through lengthy interviews or extraordinary background checks, he can." The Senate's role is to accept or reject the president's nominees, just as the president has a responsibility to accept or reject a bill approved by both houses of Congress. There he does not have the option of delay. Nor should Congress have the option of delay in what is fundamentally an executive function of filling the nonelected positions in the federal government. In other words--to quote Crockett once more--"it is inappropriate for the Senate to employ a delaying tactic normally used in internal business--the construction of legislation--in a nonlegislative procedure that originates in a coequal branch of government."

This is why the filibuster has historically not been used on nominations.
This is the constitutional logic underlying 200-plus years of American political practice. This is why as recently as 14 years ago the possibility of filibustering Clarence Thomas, for example, was not entertained even by a hostile Democratic Senate that was able to muster 48 votes against him. The American people seem to grasp this logic. In one recent poll, 82 percent said the president's nominees deserve an up or down vote on the Senate floor.

They are right. History and the Constitution are on their side, and on majority leader Bill Frist's side. When the Senate returns from its recess, the majority leader should move to enact a rule change that will break the Democratic filibuster on judicial nominees, confident in doing so that he is acting--the claims of Senator Durbin and the Financial Times to the contrary notwithstanding--in accord with historical precedent and constitutional principle.


--William Kristol

weeklystandard.com



To: xcr600 who wrote (16688)5/6/2005 2:45:04 AM
From: Raymond Duray  Respond to of 20773
 
One famous patriot observed that "democracy must be more than two wolves and a sheep voting on what's for dinner."