Dems trigger "Nuclear Option"

insid33

Member
Reid, Democrats trigger ‘nuclear’ option; eliminate most filibusters on nominees


Senate Democrats took the dramatic step Thursday of eliminating filibusters for most nominations by presidents, a power play they said was necessary to fix a broken system but one that Republicans said will only rupture it further.


Democrats used a rare parliamentary move to change the rules so that federal judicial nominees and executive-office appointments can advance to confirmation votes by a simple majority of senators, rather than the 60-vote supermajority that has been the standard for nearly four decades.

The immediate rationale for the move was to allow the confirmation of three picks by President Obama to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit — the most recent examples of what Democrats have long considered unreasonably partisan obstruction by Republicans.

It's amazing! Just friggin amazing!
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
good for them.

we need some of these vacancies filled, and obama is proposing reasonable candidates.

one of the nominees was blocked by republicans citing that she was some radical, neo-feminist crazy nut. turns out they mistook her quoting rehnquist and attributed it to her instead.

fucking rehnquist!

the republicans have gone off the fucking cliff, this will fill the vacancies we need to fill with reasonable people.
 

beenthere

New Member
good for them.

we need some of these vacancies filled, and obama is proposing reasonable candidates.

one of the nominees was blocked by republicans citing that she was some radical, neo-feminist crazy nut. turns out they mistook her quoting rehnquist and attributed it to her instead.

fucking rehnquist!

the republicans have gone off the fucking cliff, this will fill the vacancies we need to fill with reasonable people.
What vacancies?
 

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member


March 02, 2010 07:00 AM
[h=2]GOP Wins Filibuster Gold Medal[/h] By Jon Perr
The frequency of filibusters -- plus threats to use them -- are measured by the number of times the upper chamber votes on cloture. Such votes test the majority's ability to hold together 60 members to break a filibuster.

Last year, the first of the 111th Congress, there were a record 112 cloture votes. In the first two months of 2010, the number already exceeds 40.
That means, with 10 months left to run in the 111th Congress, Republicans have turned to the filibuster or threatened its use at a pace that will more than triple the old record.
 

beenthere

New Member
So was he lying then, or is he lying now?

[video=youtube;6F2UEB2bA7M]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6F2UEB2bA7M[/video]
 

ChesusRice

Well-Known Member
In addition to filibustering a nominee for Secretary of Defense for the first time in history, Senate Republicans also blocked a sitting member of Congress from an Administration position for the first time since 1843. As a senior member of the House Financial Services Committee, Congressman Mel Watt’s understanding of the mistakes that led to the housing crisis made him uniquely qualified to serve as administrator of the Federal Housing Finance Agency. Senate Republicans simply don’t like the consumer protections Congressman Watt was nominated to develop and implement. So they denied a fellow member of Congress and a graduate of Yale Law School even the courtesy of an up-or-down vote.
In the last three weeks alone, Republicans have blocked up-or-down votes on three highly qualified nominees to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, considered by many to be the second highest court in the land. Republicans have blocked four of President Obama’s five nominees to the D.C. Circuit, whereas Democrats approved four of President Bush’s six nominees to this important court. Today, 25 percent of the D.C. Circuit Court is vacant. There isn’t a single legitimate objection to the qualifications of any of these nominees. Yet Republicans refused to give them an up-or-down vote – a simple yes-or-no vote. Republicans simply don’t want President Obama to make any appointments at all to this vital court.
Further, only 23 district court nominees have been filibustered in the entire history of this country. Twenty of them were nominated by President Obama. With one out of every 10 federal judgeships vacant, millions of Americans who rely on courts that are overworked and understaffed are being denied the justice they rightly deserve. More than half the nation’s population lives in a part of the country that’s been declared a “judicial emergency.”
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/right-still-targeting-judicial-nominee-nina-pillards-support-women-s-equality

Georgetown law professor Cornelia “Nina” Pillard, one of President Obama’s three nominees to fill vacancies on the influential D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, is one of the country’s*most renowned women’s rights attorneys. She crafted the argument that convinced a nearly unanimous Supreme Court to open the Virginia Military Institute to women. She worked alongside Bush administration attorneys to successfully defend the Family and Medical Leave Act in the courts. She has opposed government policies that treat men and women differently based on outmoded stereotypes that harm both sexes.

So, of course, conservative activists and their Republican allies in Congress are*calling her a “radical feminist" and*threatening to filibuster her nomination.

In an*interview*with the Family Research Council’s Tony Perkins Friday, National Review columnist Ed Whelan called Pillard a “radical feminist law professor” and insisted that she would be “the most left-wing judge in the history of the republic.”

Phyllis Schlafly – who, of course, also opposed the opening of VMI to women and the Family and Medical Leave Act* – calls Pillard a “scary feminist.”

The Family Research Council has also gone after Pillard, skewing the meaning of her words and even citing her use of a phrase that was actually*written by the late Chief Justice William Rehnquist*as evidence of her “militant feminism.”
And just this weekend, right-wing activist*"Dr. Chaps" Gordon Klingenschmitt*sent out an email to his backers attacking Pillard's support for women's rights, specifically charging that Pillard “attacked and questioned the Virginia Military Institute” when she argued that VMI should admit women.*
Senate Republicans have picked up this line of attack. In Pillard’s hearing before the Senate Judiciary Committee, the committee’s Republicans (all men)*latched onto*the nominee’s support of reproductive rights. When fellow nominee Robert Wilkins appeared before the committee last week, Sen. Chuck Grassley tried, unsuccessfully, to*trick him into dissing Pillard’s writings.

So what exactly is it that makes Pillard such a “radical”/“militant”/“scary” feminist in the eyes of the Right?

In a series of columns last month, Whelan elaborated on what he meant. He*takes particular issue*with a 2007*law review article*in which Pillard argues that many public school abstinence-only sex-ed curricula impose a double standard on girls – hardly a radical observation. She also specifically wrote that she took no position on the abstinence message itself. Nevertheless, Whelan and others have distorted this into the idea that she would strike down all abstinence programs as unconstitutional, which is not at all what she has said.* In Pillard’s own words,
[The article] brings into focus those curricula's* persistent, official promulgation of retrogressive, anti-egalitarian sexual* ideologies-of male pleasure and female shame, male recreation and female responsibility, male agency and female passivity, and male personhood and female parenthood. I argue for a counter-stereotyping sex education that* affirms women's and men's desire, sexual agency, and responsibility.
She*explained her thoughts further*in her hearing before the judiciary committee:
Let me say first, I'm a mother. I have two teenage children — one boy and one girl. If my children are being taught in sex education, I want both my children to be taught to say 'no,' not just my daughter. I want my son to be taught that, too. The article was very explicit in saying I don't see any constitutional objection … to abstinence-only education that does not rely upon and promulgate sex stereotypes.
This argument – that many government-funded sex-ed curricula promote harmful and regressive stereotypes that cheat girls – is what has made right-wing activists go ballistic.

Pillard has also made it exceedingly clear that she knows the difference between testing out legal theories in law review articles and applying them as a judge. As shesaid*in her hearing, “Academics are paid to test the boundaries and look at the implications of things. As a judge, I would apply established law of the U.S. Supreme Court and the D.C. Circuit” – a sentiment that many Republican senators echoed when they were defending Bush nominees who had in the past*expressed opinions*not consistent with existing law.

To put it simply, what conservatives object to about Pillard is that she believes in women’s equality and that she’s really, really good at making the legal case for it. In 2013 in the Republican Party, that’s what it takes to qualify as a “scary,” “radical” and “militant” feminist.
 

El Tiberon

Active Member
This made news all over the world. I thought initially a bomb had been dropped until I read what the filibuster is. I do not blame them. US history records 186 filibusters for executive appointment since this began being used.

93 have happened since Obama took office.

They really do hate the brown man in the US.
 

londonfog

Well-Known Member
This made news all over the world. I thought initially a bomb had been dropped until I read what the filibuster is. I do not blame them. US history records 186 filibusters for executive appointment since this began being used.

93 have happened since Obama took office.

They really do hate the brown man in the US.
RIU can confirm the hatred
 

beenthere

New Member
This made news all over the world. I thought initially a bomb had been dropped until I read what the filibuster is. I do not blame them. US history records 186 filibusters for executive appointment since this began being used.

93 have happened since Obama took office.

They really do hate the brown man in the US.
Especially that Ted Cruz guy, huh!
 

echelon1k1

New Member
This made news all over the world. I thought initially a bomb had been dropped until I read what the filibuster is. I do not blame them. US history records 186 filibusters for executive appointment since this began being used.

93 have happened since Obama took office.

They really do hate the brown man in the US.*
Gotta love when cheesdick goes on a racial rampage...

*londonfog, UncleBuck and travisw like this.
 

insid33

Member
Some very valid and note-worthy points. I am a bit troubled in that this idea would of have been so detrimental to the country and constitution just a few years back when the proverbial shoe was on the other foot and shows just how hyprocritical some of. These people are. I dont need to point them out, they are the same folks in power now. And the republicans will certainly use this as well when power shifts next year. As wellcad changing the veto overide pf a president to 51%. Which in the end only hurts the american people. As well as the checkscandbalances of the federal goverment. Im not upset the dems did this, mainly due to my mind being numb from this same type of power grab over the last few years. Just my opinion and hey " just sayin"
 

UncleBuck

Well-Known Member
If the majority can change the rules anytime it wants, there are no rules...
i wonder how the "nuclear option" for judicial nominees was invoked.

do you suppose it was done by some type of rule unique to the senate, like a senate rule?
 
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