From the Associated Press - a warning from Senator Sheldon Whitehouse that Republicans may be crossing the line in their opposition to Rhode Islander Jack McConnell's nomination as a federal judge:
Senate
Democrats said Thursday that Republicans were preventing votes on some of
President Barack Obama's U.S. district court nominees, a game-changing tactic
that would bring retaliation against a GOP president some day.
While some
of Obama's lower court nominees have been branded judicial activists by
Republicans, both parties have traditionally agreed they deserve a
filibuster-free confirmation vote that needs a simple majority.
A
filibuster is a blocking tactic that requires 60 votes in the 100-member Senate
before there can be an up-or-down confirmation vote.
The
strategy has been used by both parties to prevent votes on nominees to the
higher-level federal appellate courts. U.S. District judges have been spared
the tactic in deference to home state senators, who often work together to
recommend nominees.
The
political warning came from Democratic Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse and Patrick
Leahy at the weekly meeting of the Senate Judiciary Committee, where five
district court nominees were sent to the full Senate. Three had strong
Republican objections.
Republicans
assert they have every right to oppose nominees they consider liberal judicial
activists, but the party's future strategy is unclear. While 30 of Obama's
lower court nominees have been approved by the Senate, another 17 are waiting
for a vote _ including five approved in committee Thursday.
Whitehouse,
D-R.I., said, "We are on a track right now to destroy a tradition of
senatorial courtesy to the senators of the home state.
"Traditionally,
when two home state senators approved a nominee...they got a straight
up-or-down vote without procedural obstruction.
"Erecting
a blockade for a district court nominee is a new threshold we will cross. Once
that tiger is let out of a cage, it will never get back in."
He said if
Republicans continue on this course, a GOP president one day may experience the
same tactic.
Leahy,
chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said, "I feel very strongly about
what the senator is saying."
In late
July, Democratic senators asked for unanimous agreement to vote up-or-down on
all the court nominees then awaiting confirmation. Republicans objected,
leaving Majority Leader Harry Reid with the alternative of taking no action or
tying up the Senate by trying to round up 60 votes for each nominee to break a
filibuster. Reid chose not to tie up the Senate.
Sen. Tom
Coburn, R-Okla., responded to Whitehouse that he understood the warning but
added, "The fact is, this hasn't happened. To be lectured on something
that hasn't happened, I find it difficult to comprehend.
"I
have no intention of filibustering a district court nominee and don't know of
any other senator" planning the tactic.
Whitehouse
said, "A warning after the fact is no longer a warning. Once we cross the
threshold, we can't go back."
The top
Republican on the Judiciary Committee, Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, said that
while the views of home state senators should be considered, "I believe no
judge should be given a lifetime appointment based solely" on the home
state senators' support.
At the
outset of the Judiciary meeting, Sessions said, "There is no question that
the president, a former liberal law professor, intends to pack the courts with
as many activists who will promote his vision of what America should be as he
can.
"But
Republicans will not stand quietly by and allow the rule of law in America to
be historically altered by a federal judiciary that is agenda-oriented. If
anything, we have been far too generous with our consent."
The
nominees sent to the full Senate on Thursday with party splits are:
Edward
Chen, nominated for the Northern District of California and Louis Butler, Jr., for
the Western District of Wisconsin, both approved 12-7; and John McConnell Jr.
for the District of Rhode Island, approved 13-6.
Two others
were approved without opposition: Beryl Howell and Robert Wilkins, both to
serve in the District of Columbia.