Supreme Court Justice Gorsuch

Ginsberg will have no choice, she'll have to bring her ventilator to court with her until Trump is defeated.

McConnell is proving to be the Senate's version of Gingrich. "It's my way or the highway, Fuck the Constitution! The only way Garland will get a vote is over my dead body."

Do you know why McConnell did not allow a vote on Garland? Guess.
 
that is funny.
Do you purposely get every law argument you make wrong?
Whcih part of the constitution did McConnell violate?

Good luck reading a time table into their duty into "by an with the Senate's Advice and Consent".

Garland did not have the Senate's consent.


Ginsberg will have no choice, she'll have to bring her ventilator to court with her until Trump is defeated.

McConnell is proving to be the Senate's version of Gingrich. "It's my way or the highway, Fuck the Constitution! The only way Garland will get a vote is over my dead body."

Do you know why McConnell did not allow a vote on Garland? Guess.
 
Ginsberg will have no choice, she'll have to bring her ventilator to court with her until Trump is defeated.

McConnell is proving to be the Senate's version of Gingrich. "It's my way or the highway, Fuck the Constitution! The only way Garland will get a vote is over my dead body."

Do you know why McConnell did not allow a vote on Garland? Guess.
You know even less about the constitution than you do about economic elasticity.
 
Obama wiped his ass with the Constitution for eight years and pissed all over congress, but he was shocked, shocked I tell ya, that they didn't confirm a lame duck Supreme Court nomination. It's called checks and balances.
 
Gorsuch filibuster will be the dumbest in US history
By Rich Lowry

April 3, 2017 |

Throughout its history, the US Senate has experienced disgraceful filibusters (Strom Thurmond against the 1957 Civil Rights Act), entertaining filibusters (Huey Long in 1935 reciting a fried oyster recipe) and symbolic filibusters (Rand Paul making a point about drone strikes in 2013). But the filibuster Chuck Schumer is about to undertake against Judge Neil Gorsuch’s Supreme Court nomination is perhaps the institution’s dumbest.

It won’t block Gorsuch, won’t establish any important jurisprudential principle and won’t advance Democratic strategic goals, indeed the opposite. A Gorsuch filibuster would be an act of a sheer partisan pique against the wrong target, with the wrong method, at the wrong time.

The effort to portray Gorsuch as out of the mainstream has fallen flat. He has the support of President Barack Obama’s former solicitor general, Neal Katyal. He got the American Bar Association’s highest rating. He’s been endorsed by USA Today. He will receive the votes of at least three Democratic senators. Some radical.

From the moment of his announcement by President Trump to the very last question at his confirmation hearings, Gorsuch has been an exemplary performer, whose deep knowledge has been matched by his winning temperament. The attack on him as an enemy of the little man is based on a few decisions where he clearly followed the law, even though it resulted in an unsympathetic outcome.

Much has been made of a case involving a driver for TransAm Trucking who had pulled over on the side of the road in freezing temperatures and, fearing for his safety, drove off in defiance of a direct order of a supervisor. Days later, he was fired.

The driver, Alfonse Maddin, claimed the company violated a whistleblower protection under federal law. In a dissent from the Tenth Circuit’s decision, Gorsuch carefully argued that the statue’s protections didn’t apply to the trucker, although he stipulated that “it might be fair to ask whether the decision was a wise or kind one.”

If Schumer upholds the filibuster against Gorsuch — and it looks like he has the votes — Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell will almost certainly exercise the so-called nuclear option eliminating the filibuster for Supreme Court nominations. Schumer portrays this as an act of procedural vandalism against the Senate, although he has no standing as vindicator of Senate tradition.

First, a partisan filibuster against a Supreme Court nominee is unprecedented (Lyndon Johnson’s nominee for chief justice, Abe Fortas, was successfully filibustered by a bipartisan coalition). Second, Democrats already nuked the filibuster for other nominations besides the Supreme Court back in 2013, with Schumer’s support. Finally, Democrats talked openly about how they’d use the nuclear option if Republicans filibustered a Supreme Court nomination from a prospective President Hillary Clinton.

In short, Democrats are departing from the Senate’s longtime practices and excoriating the GOP for responding with a tactic Democrats themselves pioneered. Process questions are always a festival for partisan hypocrisy. This is still a bit much.

Regardless, Ed Whelan of the Ethics and Public Policy Center notes that there isn’t much of a rationale for keeping the filibuster for Supreme Court nominees if it has already been eliminated for all other nominations.

Putting all this aside, a Gorsuch filibuster doesn’t even serve Schumer’s narrow interests, besides placating the left-wing #resistance to Trump demanding it. It would be shrewder for Schumer to keep his options open for a future nominee. If there’s another vacancy, perhaps Trump will nominate a lemon, or the Republicans won’t be so united, or the higher stakes of a conservative nominee replacing a liberal justice will create a different political environment.

In these circumstances, it’s possible to imagine Democrats filibustering and Republicans not managing to stick together to exercise the nuclear option.

Maybe, but now we may never know. Because Chuck Schumer is about to make Senate history — for astonishing short-sightedness.

http://nypost.com/2017/04/03/gorsuch-filibuster-will-be-the-dumbest-in-us-history/
 
Maybe, but now we may never know. Because Chuck Schumer is about to make Senate history — for astonishing short-sightedness.

For the long haul ending the filibuster is best for democrats,couldn't be prouder that they are doing it.Hoping they end the filibuster for legislation too under Trump since Harry Reid didn't have the balls to do it while Obama was President.
 
MORON ALERT: Sally Kohn Claims Democrats Never Used Nuclear Option. WRONG!
Photo by Michael Schwartz/Getty Images
gettyimages-543288564.jpg

BY:
ELLIOTT HAMILTON
APRIL 6, 2017

Senator Mitch McConnell's (R - KY) decision to kill the filibuster on Judge Neil Gorsuch's confirmation to the Supreme Court of the United States caused a severe case of cognitive dissonance amongst the Left. Various Democratic Senators from Ben Cardin (D - MD) and Jeff Merkley (D - OR) expressed remorse over the Republicans' use of the nuclear option while they had no complaints when former House Majority Leader Harry Reid pulled the same stunt in 2013.

However, that pales with what Sally "Hands Up Don't Shoot" Kohn tweeted earlier this afternoon.


Follow
Sally Kohn

✔@sallykohn

Are we really surprised that after Democrats DIDN'T use #NuclearOption, Republicans DID?

Perpetual high-road/low-road distinction.

9:30 AM - 6 Apr 2017


Talk about revisionist history of the highest order. Four years ago, Kohn praised the Democrats for going nuclear!


Follow
Sally Kohn

✔@sallykohn

On why I’m glad the Democrats went nuclear — my latest column for @CNN: http://cnn.it/1do0Ksn

5:39 AM - 22 Nov 2013


Here is an excerpt from her article in CNN:

The Democratic Party's vote Thursday for the "nuclear option" was a move to deprive the minority party in the Senate of a procedure it has abused to block President Barack Obama's judicial nominees and other appointees. Before, a single Republican could unilaterally and without any reason block a nominee from receiving a simple up-and-down vote on the Senate floor.

Either Sally Kohn is deliberately acting like a hack or she is such a moron that she cannot even remember her own words when the Democrats pulled the same stunt as the Republicans did. Neither of those possibilities are good for the same woman who perpetuated a false narrative about Mike Brown in Ferguson.

http://www.dailywire.com/news/15194...-claims-democrats-never-used-elliott-hamilton
 
Politico: Trump White House Is Getting Things Ready For A Second SCOTUS Vacancy

This morning Judge Neil Gorsuch was confirmed to the U.S. Supreme Court. For such a non-controversial figure, Gorsuch experienced the full might of the Democratic Party’s attack machine. Still sour at Senate Republicans blocking Merrick Garland, Obama’s first pick to fill the vacancy left by the late Antonin Scalia, through the Biden rule—the Left was determined to stop Gorsuch at all costs. Despite having broad support from across the spectrum in the legal scholar realm—Obama’s former solicitor general supported his nomination—and the highest rating from the American Bar Association, Democrats formed a united front to stop him. They had the votes to block Gorsuch through a procedural hurdle, denying Senate Republicans the 60 votes needed to invoke cloture and move to the final confirmation vote. As a result, Senate Republicans nuked the rules, allowing for Gorsuch to be confirmed by a simple majority. Not liking someone because a Republican president nominated him or her isn’t a good enough reason to block a judge. Democrats learned that the hard way.

Now, should a second vacancy occur, a) Republicans will not have as much trouble to confirm this person; and b) the composition of the Court could become more decidedly conservative. This is why it was probably best for the Democrats to keep their powder dry, but we’ve crossed that bridge. Even right now, the Trump White House is preparing to set the groundwork for that second vacancy and to fill as many as 100 vacancies in the federal court system. The rumor is that Justice Anthony Kennedy is set to retire shortly and that Gorsuch’s confirmation would be the signal that his seat would be in good hands. Apparently, both Trump and Kennedy’s children are creating this back channel of communication, as Don. Jr. and Kennedy’s son, Justin, know each other. Politico had more:

The White House has also closely monitored retirement chatter by tapping into the network of former Kennedy clerks, a group that includes Gorsuch himself. Some in the legal world viewed Gorsuch’s selection — he would be the first Supreme Court clerk to serve alongside a former boss — as an olive branch to Kennedy that, should he retire next, his seat would be in reliable presidential hands.
Those close to Trump’s judicial-selection process stress that they’re not pressuring Kennedy to hang up his robe, only seeking to put him at ease.
But as they wait for a decision they cannot control, White House officials have already set in motion plans to fill the more than 100 lower court vacancies, including more than 10 percent of the crucial seats on various U.S. Courts of Appeals, in a bid to tug America’s courts in a more conservative direction for decades to come.
The Trump playbook for those lower court picks is hidden in plain sight.
Trump took the unusual step on the campaign of producing a public list of 21 possible candidates for the Supreme Court. That pool of judicial talent — in particular, younger judges serving on state supreme courts — are now the front-runners to fill top federal court vacancies, according to three people involved in Trump’s judge-selection process.
[…]
While Democrats do not have the votes to block Trump nominees, they can withhold so-called “blue slips,” the century-old tradition of home-state senators approving judges representing their states. One Trump official said it’s possible that the White House could use holdover Obama appointees as bargaining chips for more speedily confirming Trump picks.
Republican and Democratic lawmakers alike are readying for the biggest fight if and when Kennedy retires.
[…]
One new name percolating at the highest levels of the Trump administration is Brett Kavanaugh, a 52-year-old who has already served a decade on the D.C. Court of Appeals.
That may not be an accident. He, too, is a former clerk of Justice Kennedy.
Democrats had their last tantrum over Gorsuch. There was simply no way that even moderates would allow for the Left to butcher the ascension of a qualified candidate, who is also respected by liberals, to be a victim of partisanship. While the margin for error for the 52-vote Senate Republican majority is slim, they also united to foil this unprecedented filibuster of Gorsuch. It wouldn’t shock me if Democrats bring up Garland again if that second vacancy opens up, but at least we have to votes to invoke cloture and get whoever it may be through the process. Conservatives might have a shot to alter the balance of the court towards a solid 5-4 (maybe 6-3) majority. The only annoying drawback is that the Left might rehash the tired line of The Federalist Society being some sort of secret society. But we’re not snowflakes. We’ll just bear and grin it since, well—we have the votes to ignore the Democrats' whining now.

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattv...gs-ready-for-a-second-scotus-vacancy-n2310065
 
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