Re: SCOTUS Watch
Posted: Thu Mar 23, 2017 11:48 am
I don't think the people who matter namely the Dem base will do anything but reward the behavior. The 2nd part will be what gets them.
That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons bring us some web forums whereupon we can gather
http://garbi.online/forum/
Just like they did in November of 2016?geezer wrote: This is pure obstructionism, and the public will react accordingly.
Smoove_B wrote:Just like they did in November of 2016?geezer wrote: This is pure obstructionism, and the public will react accordingly.
Mortoned.Defiant wrote:Smoove_B wrote:Just like they did in November of 2016?geezer wrote: This is pure obstructionism, and the public will react accordingly.
If the Democrats aren't willing to use the filibuster to flail helplessly against the outright theft of a supreme court nomination, what *would* they use it on?
The filibuster isn't any use if you're not willing to use it.
This seems to be the logic in the left and I think it is completely wrong. It is an empty threat. It is the worst one use item left in the arsenal.Defiant wrote:If the Democrats aren't willing to use the filibuster to prevent the outright theft of a supreme court nomination, than the filibuster is utterly useless. It isn't of any use if you aren't willing to use it.
Well, yeah. With a shrug and a few angry mutterings. My point isn't that the Ds will pay a political price for the obstructionism, but rather that by obstructing here they're going to get a big "whatever," and weaken their position for (what I believe to be) a far more critical fight later on if/when Ginsburg or Kennedy need to be replaced. With the filibuster gone, the Republicans can nominate a total whackjob and even if that person is someone that really IS way out of the mainstream, oh well - majority vote is all it takes.Smoove_B wrote:Just like they did in November of 2016?geezer wrote: This is pure obstructionism, and the public will react accordingly.
Right - but with a total nutjob there's a chance that, along with the stigma having to end the filibuster, the public might throw enough of a fuss to make that politically impossible, and the more moderate wing of the Rs might have enough cover to at least not go along willingly (edit - sort of like we're seeing with the ACHA mess now). Gorsuch isn't that nutjob, and once the filibuster is gone, neither the moderate Rs nor the public can enforce any sort of political penalty for anything.msteelers[b] wrote:But they are going to nominate a total nut job anyway, and will take away the filibuster if/when the dems put their foot in the sand. [/b]
No, not really. If not for the Garland issue, he'd have no problem being confirmed, IMO. He's not nearly the flamethrower that the Repubs could have nominated. He's certainly not more right than Alito or Scalia.msteelers wrote:Right now Gorsuch needs 60 votes, and he is too far to the right politically to get that.
I agree with all of your post (and the prior one) on this. I totally understand the Democratic frustrations and the feeling of being cheated. But this accomplishes nothing. The solution simply put, is win elections. Rebuild the party because it's fallen a long way at the state level which is impacting national elections. But that's hard work and a long term project, and those are as easy as launching a worthless filibuster.malchior wrote:TBH the argument is almost coming down to "do something!" - whether or not it is effective or smart. The timing and the subject are all wrong. Contrast that to the Turtle - he exploited timeliness/context (deeply divided electorate + election year!) and their established reputation for obstructionism. And then added in a much stronger hand in general to steal the seat. In contrast, the Dems have literally *nothing* - not even a particularly strong argument against Gorsuch. It is a pathetic mismatch in power and the timing and context are all wrong for a stand. No one remembers Garland! This is less the protester famously standing in front of the tank in Tienanmen Square; in this case, they'll still get run over and no one will remember it.
That's very much debatable.Grifman wrote:He's not nearly the flamethrower that the Repubs could have nominated. He's certainly not more right than Alito or Scalia.
Well, not a lot more to the right.Grifman wrote:No, not really. If not for the Garland issue, he'd have no problem being confirmed, IMO. He's not nearly the flamethrower that the Repubs could have nominated. He's certainly not more right than Alito or Scalia.msteelers wrote:Right now Gorsuch needs 60 votes, and he is too far to the right politically to get that.
Anything is debatablegilraen wrote:That's very much debatable.Grifman wrote:He's not nearly the flamethrower that the Repubs could have nominated. He's certainly not more right than Alito or Scalia.
I'm not sure one chart is the final word on the issueDefiant wrote:Well, not a lot more to the right.Grifman wrote:No, not really. If not for the Garland issue, he'd have no problem being confirmed, IMO. He's not nearly the flamethrower that the Repubs could have nominated. He's certainly not more right than Alito or Scalia.msteelers wrote:Right now Gorsuch needs 60 votes, and he is too far to the right politically to get that.
Pryor appears to fit well in Scalia’s ideological shoes, but what are the other dimensions of the Scalia mold? A team of attorneys and academics recently released a working paper titled “Searching for Justice Scalia” in which they attempt to measure the “Scalia-ness” of potential nominees. Of the shortlisted four, Gorsuch was by far the most likely to invoke originalism — the notion that the Constitution is not a “living” document and that its meaning was fixed when it was enacted — in his opinions, as Scalia had a habit of doing. Pryor, on the other hand, was the most likely to cite Scalia’s writing. But Kethledge was the most likely to write non-majority opinions, in Scalia’s fiery oppositional style. In the end, Gorsuch won the researchers’ Scalia lookalike contest by a nose. One wonders if Trump’s team has read the paper.
That is silly, using other people's ideologies to decide what yours is. Who comes up with this crap?use the ideologies of the nominating president and the judge’s home-state senators to triangulate a judge’s ideology
Lee Epstein, Andrew D. Martin, Jeffrey A. Segal and Chad Westerland. You should call them up and let them know where they went wrong.Rip wrote:The scoring method is utterly ridiculous.
That is silly, using other people's ideologies to decide what yours is. Who comes up with this crap?use the ideologies of the nominating president and the judge’s home-state senators to triangulate a judge’s ideology
Just as long as the final word isn't "certainly"Grifman wrote:I'm not sure one chart is the final word on the issueDefiant wrote:Well, not a lot more to the right.Grifman wrote:No, not really. If not for the Garland issue, he'd have no problem being confirmed, IMO. He's not nearly the flamethrower that the Repubs could have nominated. He's certainly not more right than Alito or Scalia.msteelers wrote:Right now Gorsuch needs 60 votes, and he is too far to the right politically to get that.
In summary: Continue to support party before country.Mitch McConnell told his leadership team in private this week what’s becoming increasingly obvious on Capitol Hill: Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch probably won’t get 60 votes to avoid a filibuster.
But the Senate majority leader had an equally pressing message: Republicans should have no compunction about pulling the trigger on the “nuclear option” — with Democrats resisting a high court nominee as well-pedigreed as Gorsuch.
...
McConnell’s attempt to buck up his GOP ranks, relayed by three sources in attendance, underscores the high stakes of the Gorsuch battle as the Senate barrels toward a likely nuclear showdown next week: His confirmation is, to put it mildly, a can’t-lose for Republicans.
That was true after Senate Republicans waged a yearlong blockade of Merrick Garland that positioned the GOP to pick someone else now. But the spectacular collapse of the Obamacare repeal effort last week makes Gorsuch all the more urgent for President Donald Trump and reeling Hill Republicans.
McConnell is so confident that Republicans will win the Gorsuch fight that the Kentucky Republican predicted he’ll be confirmed by a week from Friday.
What has the country done for them lately?Smoove_B wrote:In summary: Continue to support party before country.
McConnell is the avatar of pure partisan politics.Isgrimnur wrote:What has the country done for them lately?Smoove_B wrote:In summary: Continue to support party before country.
I disagree with the no lose. If Trump is indicted and Gorsuch is already confirmed he will carry the stink of Russia for the remainder of his tenure. If they waited they could probably keep Gorsuch when he's cleared away from the investigation. Seeing as although conservative he's pretty clean and qualified.Smoove_B wrote:Sounding like a Star Wars villain, McConnell says, "Feel no guilt.":
In summary: Continue to support party before country.Mitch McConnell told his leadership team in private this week what’s becoming increasingly obvious on Capitol Hill: Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch probably won’t get 60 votes to avoid a filibuster.
But the Senate majority leader had an equally pressing message: Republicans should have no compunction about pulling the trigger on the “nuclear option” — with Democrats resisting a high court nominee as well-pedigreed as Gorsuch.
...
McConnell’s attempt to buck up his GOP ranks, relayed by three sources in attendance, underscores the high stakes of the Gorsuch battle as the Senate barrels toward a likely nuclear showdown next week: His confirmation is, to put it mildly, a can’t-lose for Republicans.
That was true after Senate Republicans waged a yearlong blockade of Merrick Garland that positioned the GOP to pick someone else now. But the spectacular collapse of the Obamacare repeal effort last week makes Gorsuch all the more urgent for President Donald Trump and reeling Hill Republicans.
McConnell is so confident that Republicans will win the Gorsuch fight that the Kentucky Republican predicted he’ll be confirmed by a week from Friday.
eh, I don't think so. It'll be a footnote on his biography.Combustible Lemur wrote:I disagree with the no lose. If Trump is indicted and Gorsuch is already confirmed he will carry the stink of Russia for the remainder of his tenure. If they waited they could probably keep Gorsuch when he's cleared away from the investigation. Seeing as although conservative he's pretty clean and qualified.Smoove_B wrote:Sounding like a Star Wars villain, McConnell says, "Feel no guilt.":
In summary: Continue to support party before country.Mitch McConnell told his leadership team in private this week what’s becoming increasingly obvious on Capitol Hill: Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch probably won’t get 60 votes to avoid a filibuster.
But the Senate majority leader had an equally pressing message: Republicans should have no compunction about pulling the trigger on the “nuclear option” — with Democrats resisting a high court nominee as well-pedigreed as Gorsuch.
...
McConnell’s attempt to buck up his GOP ranks, relayed by three sources in attendance, underscores the high stakes of the Gorsuch battle as the Senate barrels toward a likely nuclear showdown next week: His confirmation is, to put it mildly, a can’t-lose for Republicans.
That was true after Senate Republicans waged a yearlong blockade of Merrick Garland that positioned the GOP to pick someone else now. But the spectacular collapse of the Obamacare repeal effort last week makes Gorsuch all the more urgent for President Donald Trump and reeling Hill Republicans.
McConnell is so confident that Republicans will win the Gorsuch fight that the Kentucky Republican predicted he’ll be confirmed by a week from Friday.
Yup - a meaningless asterisk. Which is what McConnell counted on.El Guapo wrote:eh, I don't think so. It'll be a footnote on his biography.
Former Vice President Joe Biden said as the Republicans were blocking President Barack Obama’s Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland, nine GOP senators told him they knew they were doing the wrong thing.
“I call 17 Republicans and say, ‘You know better,’” Biden said Thursday. “Nine of them said to me, ‘You’re right Joe, but I can’t do anything about it because if I do the Koch brothers or somebody is going to drop $5 million into my race and I’ll lose my primary.’”
...
“You want to change American politics tomorrow? Pass public financing of elections,” Biden said.
He really should have run in 2016 rather than letting the Democratic party try to anoint Hillary Clinton since it was "her turn".hepcat wrote:I feel like Biden is a reluctant hero who needs to be convinced to save us all. And I'm not being facetious when I write that.
The death of his son had a lot to do with that decision.pr0ner wrote:He really should have run in 2016 rather than letting the Democratic party try to anoint Hillary Clinton since it was "her turn".hepcat wrote:I feel like Biden is a reluctant hero who needs to be convinced to save us all. And I'm not being facetious when I write that.
“Did you ever think, what if?” Casey asked. “Any regrets that you didn't run?”
Biden breathed deeply and looked down before he answered the question.
He had openly desired the presidency since winning a U.S. Senate seat in 1972, The Washington Post reported. He had twice attempted to win the Democratic nomination before the 2016 race, which — he looked back up at Casey before answering the question — “I think I could have won.”
He said he thought himself more qualified than any other candidate.
“I had a lot of data,” Biden said. “I was fairly confident that if I was the Democratic Party nominee, I had a better-than-even chance of being president.”
“But, um.”
Biden looked at his hand, flexing it back and forth.
“I lost part of my soul, my, uh.” He cleared his throat. “Excuse me.”
He then recounted how the sudden illness and death of his son Beau Biden in the run-up to the Democratic primaries weighed on his decision to contest in the 2016 race.
“The press began to think I was playing a game, but I couldn't tell them about my boy,” Biden said. “He wanted me to run. … My son Hunter, my daughter Ashley, my wife, all thought I should.”
“I didn't,” he said. “At the end of the day, I just couldn't do it.”
This. 2020 is going to be too late.pr0ner wrote:He really should have run in 2016 rather than letting the Democratic party try to anoint Hillary Clinton since it was "her turn".hepcat wrote:I feel like Biden is a reluctant hero who needs to be convinced to save us all. And I'm not being facetious when I write that.
It's also possible it would have split the anti-Clinton vote, so it's possible it could have come at the expense of both of them. I do think that if Biden had won, he would have been able to heal the divide better than Clinton or Bernie would have been able to.malchior wrote:He is more likeble but he had issues in his past too. And that undermines the assumption that Biden would have won the nomination. The big winner from a Biden entry might have been Bernie since Biden/Clinton might have split the more traditional set. It would have potentially put more power in the Super Delegates hands. Considering the Clinton machine that could have been even uglier than it was with just Bernie.
FTFYRip wrote:BENGHAZI, EMAIL, bridge and water under it.
Defiant wrote:It's also possible it would have split the anti-Clinton vote, so it's possible it could have come at the expense of both of them. I do think that if Biden had won, he would have been able to heal the divide better than Clinton or Bernie would have been able to.
Well, they're the ones who voted in the Democratic primary, so yes.LordMortis wrote:Which divide? Divide mixed among democrats and independents? I think he could have.Defiant wrote:It's also possible it would have split the anti-Clinton vote, so it's possible it could have come at the expense of both of them. I do think that if Biden had won, he would have been able to heal the divide better than Clinton or Bernie would have been able to.
The chart could be wrong and I could certainly still be rightDefiant wrote:Just as long as the final word isn't "certainly"Grifman wrote:I'm not sure one chart is the final word on the issueDefiant wrote:Well, not a lot more to the right.Grifman wrote:No, not really. If not for the Garland issue, he'd have no problem being confirmed, IMO. He's not nearly the flamethrower that the Repubs could have nominated. He's certainly not more right than Alito or Scalia.msteelers wrote:Right now Gorsuch needs 60 votes, and he is too far to the right politically to get that.
I guess since you just said it, that must be exactly how this all unfolded. Stupid obstructionist Democrats will all their obstructions of Supreme Court Justices.Vice President Pence said Saturday that President Trump's Supreme Court nominee Neil Gorsuch will be confirmed by the Senate "one way or the other" ahead of a likely Senate showdown next week.
Pence's vow echoed remarks from other top Republicans who have signaled support for potentially invoking the so-called nuclear option, changing Senate rules to confirm Gorsuch with a simple majority vote.
"For the sake of our Supreme Court, for the sake of our country, for the sake of our Constitution, we will overcome the obstructionists and the United States Senate will confirm Judge Neil Gorsuch one way or the other," Pence said at a speech in Columbus, Ohio.