Top 5 democratic leaders hypocrites SCOTUS PROCESS

The five highest-ranking Democrats in the nation once staunchly defended the Senate’s constitutional role in the Supreme Court confirmation process.

Or at least they did, until now.

Now, President Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, Senate Democratic Conference Vice Chairman Chuck Schumer, and Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Patrick Leahy are suddenly ignoring the constitutional role that the Senate is mandated in the Supreme Court confirmation process.

President Obama is demanding a rushed confirmation of his eventual nominee. He along with Vice President Biden, and Senators Reid, Schumer, and Leahy are not only ignoring the Constitution but also historic precedent that since at least 1880 stands firmly on the side to giving the American people a voice in choosing who the next Supreme Court justice will be when a vacancy arises in a Presidential election year.

But let’s look at what each of these men did and said when they were in the Senate faced with confirming Supreme Court nominees (not in an election year, where historic precedent favors delaying confirmation until the next officeholder, but in the middle of a President’s term in office).

President Obama:

Then-Senator Obama actually voted against Justice Alito’s confirmation to the Supreme Court, taking a leading role in an attempted filibuster against his nomination, something the White House now mysteriously says he “regrets.”

Regret was hardly the word to describe his position at the time. He eloquently described his view of the significant role played by the Senate in the Supreme Court confirmation process:

"There are some who believe that the president, having won the election, should have complete authority to appoint his nominee and the Senate should only examine whether or not the justice is intellectually capable, and an allaround good guy. That once you get beyond intellect, and personal character, there should be no further question as to whether the judge should be confirmed. I disagree with this view. I believe firmly that the Constitution calls for the Senate to advise AND consent. I believe that it calls for meaningful advice and consent that includes an examination of a judge’s philosophy, ideology, and record."

It would appear that President Obama is one of the “some who believe that the president, having won the election, should have complete authority to appoint his nominee” and that the Senate’s role is merely a rubber stamp. Though his position has changed, I don’t believe the words of the Constitution have.

Vice President Joe Biden:

When then-Senator Biden chaired the Senate Judiciary Committee, he nearly invented the filibuster of Supreme Court nominees. It was he who created the concept of “Borking” a nominee as he prevented President Reagan’s pick of Judge Robert Bork from being confirmed to the bench. Then-Senator Biden proclaimed:

"The framers clearly intended the Senate to serve as a check on the president and guarantee the independence of the judiciary," Mr. Biden said in August 1987 in defense of his newfound opposition to Judge Bork. "The Senate has an undisputed right to consider judicial philosophy."

As The Wall Street Journal chronicled a several years ago:

Under Mr. Biden's leadership, holding up nominations to the nation's appeals courts also became a routine exercise. In 1988, the Senate Judiciary Committee delayed 17 months before refusing to confirm law professor and scholar Bernard Siegan to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals because of his libertarian positions on economic issues. . . . By 1992, 64 judicial nominees were stuck in the senatorial muck waiting for the Judiciary Committee to give them a yea or nay.

A once judicial obstructionist of legend is now mostly forgotten by today’s mainstream media.

In 2005, Senator Biden explained his philosophy at length:

"At its core, the filibuster is not about stopping a nominee or a bill, it's about compromise and moderation. The nuclear option extinguishes the power of independents and moderates in the Senate. That's it, they're done. Moderates are important if you need to get to 60 votes to satisfy cloture; they are much less so if you only need 50 votes. Let's set the historical record straight. Never has the Senate provided for a certainty that 51 votes could put someone on the bench or pass legislation."

A year later, Senator Biden quipped, "I think a filibuster makes sense when you have a prospect of actually succeeding." When Justice Alito’s nomination came before his committee, he declared, "If he really believes that reapportionment is a questionable decision . . . then clearly, clearly, you'll find a lot of people, including me, willing to do whatever they can to keep him off the court . . . . That would include a filibuster, if need be."

Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid:

As Senate Majority Leader, Reid slashed much of the Senate’s historic role in confirming judges by invoking the “nuclear option” – removing the filibuster from the confirmation process of many judgeships, but notably not the Supreme Court.

Of course Senator Reid has been the leader of political partisanship, flip-flopping on the judicial confirmation process more than anyone else in the Senate. After leading the filibuster against President Bush’s nominee to a circuit court judgeship, Miguel Estrada, and vehemently opposing the “nuclear option,” he then invoked the “nuclear option” to remove the filibuster when his party took the Senate and the White House.

But one thing Senator Reid has said stands out. Judicial nominations are so important that the Senate’s constitutional role is “at best, we move slowly” in the confirmation process. And in regard to its constitutionally prescribed “advice and consent” on Supreme Court nominations, he chided, “The Senate will enact its will.”

Senate Democrat Conference Vice Chairman Chuck Schumer

Senator Schumer has been one of the most outspoken promoters of the Senate’s power in the nomination process, taking that position to the extreme.

In 2007, he declared that the Senate “should not confirm a [Bush] Supreme Court nominee EXCEPT in extraordinary circumstances.” He continued: "We should reverse the presumption of confirmation. The Supreme Court is dangerously out of balance. We cannot afford to see Justice Stevens replaced by another Roberts; or Justice Ginsburg by another Alito."

Of course, he too quickly abandoned this position this week.

Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Patrick Leahy:

Senator Leahy is probably the clearest supporter of the historic precedent against Supreme Court justices being confirmed in an election year.

The Washington Post highlights Senator Leahy’s consistent statements through the years:

December 2006: "The Thurmond Rule, in memory of Strom Thurmond – he put this in when the Republicans were in the minority, which said that in a presidential election year, after spring, no judges would go through except by the consent of both the Republican and Democratic [leaders]. I want to be bipartisan. We will institute the Thurmond Rule, yes.”

November 2004: "Whether [Republicans] acknowledge it as the Thurmond Rule or something else, it is a well-established practice that in presidential election years, there comes a point when judicial confirmation hearings are not continued without agreement."

July 2004: "At this point in a presidential election year, in accordance with the Thurmond Rule, only consensus nominees being taken up with the approval of the majority and minority leaders and the chairman and ranking members of the Judiciary Committee should be considered."

DOES THIS REALLY SURPRISE ANYONE?

Guess Who Staunchly Defended Senate’s Constitutional Role in Supreme Court Confirmation…Until Now | American Center for Law and Justice

Your OP contains a misstatement of fact. I won't say YOU lied, but redstate lies. Kennedy was confirmed unanimously by maj dem senate in Reagan's final year.

The Milwaukee Journal - Google News Archive Search
Was just about to note that -- you beat me to it.

:)
 
Even the 1st paragraph is a mess...

"The five highest-ranking Democrats in the nation once staunchly defended the Senate’s constitutional role in the Supreme Court confirmation process.

Or at least they did, until now."

Yeah, that's not true.
 
So we have McConnell saying in 2008 that judges should be appointed in the last year of a Presidency, and that there is no "rule" prohibiting it.

We have Democrats in 2008 saying judges should not be appointed in the last year of a Presidency.

This is why I have said a zillion times you rubes should be careful about the benchmarks you set because they ALWAYS come back to snap your face.


We have a Constitution. There are some nattering nabobs around here who claim they love the Constitution and that they are strict textualists.

Okay then. What does the Constitution say?

It says the President's term is four years, not three. It says the President is the one who appoints Supreme Court justices.

Elections have consequences. This is one of them.


It's easy to utter so many words about what a lover of the Constitution one is. It is quite another to walk the walk when things aren't going your way. That's when you find out who is a spineless weasel and who is true to their beliefs.

Time to prove your faith and love in the Constitution, boys and girls.

When McConnell announced that he would not even entertain the idea of the Senate being allowed to vote on a nominee, he demonstrated he HATES the Constitution. And anyone backing this Establishment turtle-faced fuckhead is the worst kind of hypocrite.

It's funny how the rubes go on and on about how much they hate the "Establishment" GOP, and even single out McConnell for their vitriol, but suddenly decide he's oh so lovely today.

You people have a lot of nerve pointing out the hypocrisy of others.
 
The Democrats mentioned opposed specific candidates and offered the reason for their objection

Republicans are opposing the right of a sitting President to make an appointment and are vowing to block anyone Obama appoints

Not the same
 
Fuck what ANY democrat says. Just block it until Obama is gone. If Americans don't like it they can vote their displeasure in November

What would be your response if a Republican becomes President and Dems take the Senate and block any recommendation for four years?
 
The five highest-ranking Democrats in the nation once staunchly defended the Senate’s constitutional role in the Supreme Court confirmation process.

Or at least they did, until now.


proceeding with the nomination pronto, includes the constitutional role of the senate in the confirmation process...
 
The five highest-ranking Democrats in the nation once staunchly defended the Senate’s constitutional role in the Supreme Court confirmation process.

Or at least they did, until now.


proceeding with the nomination pronto, includes the constitutional role of the senate in the confirmation process...
and that allows for the denying of a nomination as well as a no vote if so desired by the santé majority leader.
 
The five highest-ranking Democrats in the nation once staunchly defended the Senate’s constitutional role in the Supreme Court confirmation process.

Or at least they did, until now.


proceeding with the nomination pronto, includes the constitutional role of the senate in the confirmation process...
and that allows for the denying of a nomination as well as a no vote if so desired by the santé majority leader.


so let's get going and see what happens then, shall we..?
 
The Democrats mentioned opposed specific candidates and offered the reason for their objection

Republicans are opposing the right of a sitting President to make an appointment and are vowing to block anyone Obama appoints

Not the same
not this guy. You know the one...the guy that considers himself one of the most prominent members of the democratic party...and many of the party agree.....

 
Another hater of the Constitution:
Fuck what ANY democrat says. Just block it until Obama is gone. If Americans don't like it they can vote their displeasure in November
Cry more leftist
You are a raging hypocrite. And you should be aware you are shooting yourself in the mouth when you accuse someone with integrity of being a leftist.
You, integrity?

Lol
 
The five highest-ranking Democrats in the nation once staunchly defended the Senate’s constitutional role in the Supreme Court confirmation process.

Or at least they did, until now.


proceeding with the nomination pronto, includes the constitutional role of the senate in the confirmation process...
and that allows for the denying of a nomination as well as a no vote if so desired by the santé majority leader.


so let's get going and see what happens then, shall we..?
I have said numerous times that President Obama would be ignoring his constitutional responsibility if he did NOT put up a nominee.

However, if he puts up a very far left nominee, the Senate would be remiss in confirming that person seeing as the people spoke when they voted in a republic body of legislators....and the truth is, if the people want a left leaning judge, they will vote in a democratic president.
 
The people driving this have said it outright -- it's not about any specific appointment pick -- it's about Obama and further attempts to delegitimatize him.

The real objection is to Obama. Period.

Unconstitutional ****nuts who should expect to pay dearly for not even considering a hearing for an appointee.
 

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