GrandAdmiral
Well-known member
Offline
Ugh... breaking news I DID NOT want to see.
ETA: Reported on CNN.
ETA: Reported on CNN.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Lagoa definitely has a better pedigree imo.
Not sure of any major cases Lagoa has written or decided, but it is hard to imagine her history is going to be more controversial than Barrett's.
Trump will pick who he thinks better helps him out. Barrett for the religious right vote, Lagoa to energize Cuban Americans and blunt some of the Democratic attack on the nominee (possibly).
Despite what I thought a few days ago, after looking at the dynamic of the NC race there is no doubt Tillis will push for Trump's nominee. I did not know that Tillis was having trouble with conservative voters.I imagine Tillis will publicly say he wants a vote, do you think he really does?
An interesting thing to think about:I think I saw that Trump and/or McConnell definitely plan to have a vote before the election. This tells me that they have zero confidence in Trump winning, and in keeping the Senate. If they thought it would help they would not make it a done deal before the election, IMO. The stronger political move is to use it as motivation for their base. Unless they know that their base is no longer enough and the election is likely to go badly for Republicans.
Power does what it wants. Everyone knows the justifications offered are hollow. I don't really doubt the Democrats would do the same thing if given the opportunity. It's the state of politics in 2020. There isn't much Obama could have done as even most liberal justices would have said nominations are a political question where the judiciary plays no role (in the selection and confirmation process). The real problem is the Framers could not have picture a modern world or political climate like anything that exists today. Conservatives exult them to demigod status despite the fact they were all flawed men in one way or another.
The U.S. Constitution is an outdated document and no sound argument for its self-perpetuation exists other than 'because it's really old and that's how it's always been done.' It will ultimately be this country's undoing.
I agree with all of this.Here's the real problem as I see it.
The Republicans held the Senate in 2016 when Scalia died - nearly a full year before the sitting president's term was out. Obama nominated Garland to fill the vacancy and the Senate refused to process it. They didn't put Garland up for vote and then decline, through democratic and parliamentary process. The majority leader simply used his power to refuse to even put the nominee through the process.
I think the whole rhetoric and rationale about "an election year" was an attempt to give their action a reason other than pure power politics by the Senate majority . . . there's no legal basis for it. And, in fact, we're seeing now that they didn't actually mean it. What they meant was that if the Senate majority doesn't want to put the nominee up for vote, they won't. By extension, this means that whenever the Senate is in opposition to the president, they could simply refuse to entertain any nomination. And at any time.
I question whether this stretches the advice and consent clause (and associated legislation) beyond its constitutional bounds. The calendar is arbitrary and no election is more important than another in its legal effect: the sitting president has been elected by the people for a period of four years, and if a vacancy occurs during that period, the president has already been chosen to fill it. So I don't see how it's any more persuasive to say "we're not going to put the nomination up because it's eight months to the next election" over saying it's 18 months. There's no basis for either.
This is where I wish Obama had been more aggressive in challenging the Senate action. I wrote in the PDB thread about it that there were possible ways Obama could bring the Senate action to judicial review (e.g. a recess appointment or some other action) so that the Court could opine on the scope of the Senate majority's control over the nomination and consent process.
I don't think the framers intended a process by which the Senate could utterly refuse to even go through the process. It would be no different, legally, if the Senate refused to entertain any nomination by a president in opposition - for any post. Imagine if Trump wins but the Democrats win the Senate. Why should they put any nominee up for consideration? Maybe a collapse in the advice and consent process would spawn a bi-partisan need to bolster it with legislation.
Ha! Who am I kidding.
I don't see how the Constitution will be this country's undoing. The Constitution allows for amendment and adjustment - and if the Constitution is ill-equipped for the current political climate, how can we possibly create an alternative? That sounds even worse, there's no way the United States could go through a reconstruction of its government, we would splinter into different nations or into full-scale civil war. So how is that the Constitution's problem and not more accurately an American people problem?
And speaking of reconstruction, it was crazy. I think our living memory is short and we had been a relatively civil period - but the reality is that the United States has been through highly contentious, destructive power-politics before. I really don't see how the features of the Constitution are the problem, it's how we are (currently) using those features. This Supreme Court issue is a perfect example: if you look at every Supreme Court vacancy during an election year since 1900 (there were eight of them), the president made a nomination and the Senate went through the process. Six of the eight were confirmed, including one by a Senate in opposition, one was a recess appointment so it technically doesn't count until the proper appointment was made the following year, and one was Abe Fortas who was just really problematic . . . but even his nomination was taken up by the Senate and then filibustered (because of the nominee, not party politics).
Is it the Constitution's fault that McConnell decided to short-circuit the advice and consent process? As far as I can tell, that had never been done.
What "precedent" of not confirming an opposing party's nominee is he talking about?
https://www.scotusblog.com/2016/02/...6udj2htQ2VHDTMbp5LILwzB1tqK0hU-rafL6gt8Y7xzCU
I think it has been done before. At least it has effectively been done before - by both parties.Is it the Constitution's fault that McConnell decided to short-circuit the advice and consent process? As far as I can tell, that had never been done.