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Honest to goodness, the man is an idiot

tytlyf

Not Religious
Tell me specifically of all the times the Republicans refused to vote on a democrat supreme court nominee, other than Garland, when the Schumer principle was applied.
What principle is that? Post a link. Methinks you're just repeating RW gossip.
 

Thief

Rogue Theologian
I could describe the process of creation a stone axe from flint and how it differs from making obsidian blades.

I possess a considerable range of obscure and useless skills.
ya never know......

the old methods might return

as well as not knowing what ails you
or what to do about it
 

shmogie

Well-Known Member
False.

Brett Talley Middle District of Alabama Trump Unanimously not qualified Nomination withdrawn
Charles B. Goodwin Western District of Oklahoma Trump Majority not qualified Confirmed on August 28, 2018

Holly Lou Teeter District of Kansas Trump Substantial majority not qualified Confirmed on August 1, 2018

John O'Connor Northern, Eastern, and Western Districts of Oklahoma Trump Unanimously not qualified Nomination withdrawn

Jonathan Kobes Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals Trump Substantial majority not qualified Confirmed on December 11, 2018

Justin Walker Western District of Kentucky Trump Substantial majority not qualified Confirmed on October 24, 2019

L. Steven Grasz Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals Trump Unanimously not qualified Confirmed on December 12, 2017

Lawrence VanDkye Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Trump Substantial majority not qualified Confirmed on December 11, 2019

Sarah Pitlyk Eastern District of Missouri Trump Unanimously not qualified Confirmed on December 4, 2019


Notice only one was withdrawn and the others were confirmed, including two that were *unanimously* voted to be unqualified.
Not qualified according to whom?
The American bar association?
 

Evangelicalhumanist

"Truth" isn't a thing...
Premium Member
=
Wow, if that is true, I find it astonishing...a Republican majority senate voting to confirm to the court individuals whom they American Bar Association deemed, by a substantial majority or unanimously, to be unqualified for that office? Somebody really ought to find that at least frightening, and probably plain frickin' dumb, as well.
 

shmogie

Well-Known Member
What principle is that? Post a link. Methinks you're just repeating RW gossip.

54





abc_logo.svg

LIVE EVENT
WH Coronavirus Task Force testifies

https://abcstlouis.com/news/nation-world/fauci-warns-of-suffering-and-death-if-us-reopens-too-soon
Whose Rule Is It Anyway? Battle Over SCOTUS Nomination Centers Around Election Year
by Brian Mattix, ABC 30 News

Thursday, June 28th 2018
ba96935a-e3e4-4c94-ada2-f315a0d1c3eb-large16x9_Biden_McConnell.jpg

With Supreme Court Justice Kennedy's retirement, President Trump gets another pick to place on the nation's highest court, but will he have to wait until after the mid-term elections? And what's this 'Biden Rule'? (AP Composite)

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Within hours of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announcing his retirement, speculation about who will replace him and when President Trump's pick should be made has kicked into high gear in the U.S. Senate.

Republican Senate leaders said they are ready to move forward now, and get President Trump's next pick for the nation's highest court through the nomination this Fall.

Democrats in the Senate, however, say they are going back on what they said in 2016, when Conservative Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia died during President Barack Obama's final term.

Now, a fight over who really started the idea that one party should prevent a sitting president from nominating someone for an open seat on the Supreme Court during an election year has sprung up.

Was it then Senator Joe Biden in 1992? Was it Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in 2016? What about Senator Strom Thurmond and LBJ in 1968? Whose 'rule started this fight?

There are plenty of questions about all of this, so let's take a look back through 50 years of U.S. political history and see if we can figure out whose 'rule' might be responsible.

Is the 'McConnell Rule' responsible?

Conservative Justice Antonin Scalia passed away in February of 2016, Obama's final year in office. Obama nominated Judge Merrick Garland, who most experts say is a moderate/liberal. The political experts say it was a safe pick by Obama at the time to get enough Senate Republicans on board to get him confirmed.

However, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell successfully managed to keep Garland's confirmation from ever happening, keeping any vote to confirm Obama's pick for the high court from happening through the end of the Congressional year on January 3, 2017.




Cory Booker

✔@CoryBooker

https://twitter.com/CoryBooker/status/1012345530310119425

In Judiciary Hearing.

I will argue, among other things, that we should wait until after the election (McConnell rule) to hear and vote on a Supreme Court nominee.



12.6K

8:42 AM - Jun 28, 2018
Twitter Ads info and privacy

2,554 people are talking about this





McConnell made the case to fellow Republicans in the Senate and the public that since it was the final year of Obama's presidency, the voters should decide who picks the next Supreme Court justice. McConnell's gambit survived political and public pressure, warnings from legal experts, and even a court challenge. In the end, it paid off handsomely for conservatives.

Trump won the election, and within two weeks of his inauguration he selected Conservative Judge Neal Gorsuch, who sailed through his confirmation, and now sits on the high court.

With Kennedy's retirement, Trump is now set to select someone conservative enough to hold a majority on the Supreme Court for decades.

So what about the 'Biden Rule'?

Now that Justice Kennedy has officially announced his retirement, Democrats say that what happened in 2016 should happen again with the 2018 mid-term elections nearly four months away. Hoping to win control of the Senate in November, the Democrats also want control of confirming Trump's pick.

Wednesday afternoon, on the Senate floor shortly after Kennedy made his announcement, Democratic Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said, “Our Republican colleagues in the Senate should follow the rule they set in 2016: Not to consider a Supreme Court justice in an election year.”

Is this the same situation? Republicans and Conservatives emphatically say no. They say that this is not the same kind of election, and there is no 'lame duck' president about to leave office. They also say there is no 'McConnell Rule' at all, that he followed the 'Biden Rule'.

When McConnell started to make his case that Garland should not be confirmed, he was careful to always say that there should be no new Supreme Court nomination during a Presidential election year. He was also careful to say, "we're following the Biden rule," whenever possible to establish some kind of precedent established by the words that came straight from the mouth of the man who was Obama's Vice-President at the time, Joe Biden.

So what exactly is the 'Biden Rule'?

That would be a speech then-Senator Joe Biden made in the U.S. Senate in 1992, when he was the Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee (which decides if the nominee is suitable for a confirmation vote by the full Senate).

Biden argued that since a Presidential Election was coming, and a vacancy should occur on the Supreme Court by that Summer, then-President George H.W. Bush should wait until after the election to appoint a replacement or appoint a moderate the Democratically-controlled Senate at the time would approve.

The "rule" was never actually applied since no opening ever happened, but McConnell made sure those words came back to haunt the Democrats, and he successfully kept Garland off of the Supreme Court.

Has this ever happened before? AKA does the 'Thurmond Rule' exist or not?

During the fight over Garland's nomination, there was also reference to something called the 'Thurmond Rule'.

In March of 1968, President Lyndon Johnson announced he would not run for re-election that November. That summer, with about 5 months until the election, Johnson nominated sitting Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas to replace Earl Warren as Chief Justice.

Republican Senator Strom Thurmond successfully blocked the nomination, creating the 'Thurmond Rule', but since there were other problems tied to Justice Fortas at the time, the rule never became a fully recognized precedent. It has been invoked a number of times by both parties to try and stop judicial nominees of outgoing presidents, but many legal associations have said it simply does not exist.

The 'Thurmond Rule' may or may not be a myth, but it appears to be what politicians in the Senate have used to justify holding off judicial nominees submitted by presidents several months before a presidential election. Democratic Senator Diane Feinstein attempted to use it against President George W. Bush, and many Republicans also used it during the Garland nomination fight in 2016.

Do any of these 'rules' matter?

When it comes down to it, President Trump simply has just enough votes to get his pick confirmed, but with at least two moderate Republicans, he will have to be careful who he nominates.

Incidentally, Senator McConnell also has another Democratic Senate leader to thank for making that happen. Until 2013, it took 60 votes in the U.S. Senate to end debate and vote on a presidential nominee. Since McConnell and the Republicans were successfully blocking President Obama's pick, then-Majority Leader Senator Harry Reid invoked the 'nuclear option', which allowed a simple majority of 51 votes. That's how many Republicans make up the majority in the Senate today.

Video of Senator McConnell warning Reid and Senate Democrats against 'going nuclear' circulated Wednesday afternoon, haunting Democrats with McConnell's prophetic words: “You’ll regret this, and you may regret this a lot sooner than you think."

Getting those 51 votes will not be a cakewalk, though. With Arizona Senator John McCain dealing with health issues, he may not be available for possible votes, and he also has a very contentious relationship with President Trump. Also, at least two more moderate Republican senators could balk at voting for anyone too controversial or conservative that could hurt them politically. However, there's always Vice-President Mike Pence, who can step in and cast tie-breaking votes.

So when the next Supreme Court Justice is confirmed and sworn into office, Conservatives will likely have a 5-4 majority for at least two decades, but Liberals will likely take some comfort that the new justice probably won't be the vote to overturn landmark decisions like Roe vs. Wade.
 

shmogie

Well-Known Member

54





abc_logo.svg

LIVE EVENT
WH Coronavirus Task Force testifies

Whose Rule Is It Anyway? Battle Over SCOTUS Nomination Centers Around Election Year
by Brian Mattix, ABC 30 News

Thursday, June 28th 2018
ba96935a-e3e4-4c94-ada2-f315a0d1c3eb-large16x9_Biden_McConnell.jpg

With Supreme Court Justice Kennedy's retirement, President Trump gets another pick to place on the nation's highest court, but will he have to wait until after the mid-term elections? And what's this 'Biden Rule'? (AP Composite)
email.svg

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Within hours of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announcing his retirement, speculation about who will replace him and when President Trump's pick should be made has kicked into high gear in the U.S. Senate.

Republican Senate leaders said they are ready to move forward now, and get President Trump's next pick for the nation's highest court through the nomination this Fall.

Democrats in the Senate, however, say they are going back on what they said in 2016, when Conservative Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia died during President Barack Obama's final term.

Now, a fight over who really started the idea that one party should prevent a sitting president from nominating someone for an open seat on the Supreme Court during an election year has sprung up.

Was it then Senator Joe Biden in 1992? Was it Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell in 2016? What about Senator Strom Thurmond and LBJ in 1968? Whose 'rule started this fight?

There are plenty of questions about all of this, so let's take a look back through 50 years of U.S. political history and see if we can figure out whose 'rule' might be responsible.

Is the 'McConnell Rule' responsible?

Conservative Justice Antonin Scalia passed away in February of 2016, Obama's final year in office. Obama nominated Judge Merrick Garland, who most experts say is a moderate/liberal. The political experts say it was a safe pick by Obama at the time to get enough Senate Republicans on board to get him confirmed.

However, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell successfully managed to keep Garland's confirmation from ever happening, keeping any vote to confirm Obama's pick for the high court from happening through the end of the Congressional year on January 3, 2017.




Cory Booker

✔@CoryBooker


In Judiciary Hearing.

I will argue, among other things, that we should wait until after the election (McConnell rule) to hear and vote on a Supreme Court nominee.



12.6K

8:42 AM - Jun 28, 2018
Twitter Ads info and privacy

2,554 people are talking about this





McConnell made the case to fellow Republicans in the Senate and the public that since it was the final year of Obama's presidency, the voters should decide who picks the next Supreme Court justice. McConnell's gambit survived political and public pressure, warnings from legal experts, and even a court challenge. In the end, it paid off handsomely for conservatives.

Trump won the election, and within two weeks of his inauguration he selected Conservative Judge Neal Gorsuch, who sailed through his confirmation, and now sits on the high court.

With Kennedy's retirement, Trump is now set to select someone conservative enough to hold a majority on the Supreme Court for decades.

So what about the 'Biden Rule'?

Now that Justice Kennedy has officially announced his retirement, Democrats say that what happened in 2016 should happen again with the 2018 mid-term elections nearly four months away. Hoping to win control of the Senate in November, the Democrats also want control of confirming Trump's pick.

Wednesday afternoon, on the Senate floor shortly after Kennedy made his announcement, Democratic Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said, “Our Republican colleagues in the Senate should follow the rule they set in 2016: Not to consider a Supreme Court justice in an election year.”

Is this the same situation? Republicans and Conservatives emphatically say no. They say that this is not the same kind of election, and there is no 'lame duck' president about to leave office. They also say there is no 'McConnell Rule' at all, that he followed the 'Biden Rule'.

When McConnell started to make his case that Garland should not be confirmed, he was careful to always say that there should be no new Supreme Court nomination during a Presidential election year. He was also careful to say, "we're following the Biden rule," whenever possible to establish some kind of precedent established by the words that came straight from the mouth of the man who was Obama's Vice-President at the time, Joe Biden.

So what exactly is the 'Biden Rule'?

That would be a speech then-Senator Joe Biden made in the U.S. Senate in 1992, when he was the Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee (which decides if the nominee is suitable for a confirmation vote by the full Senate).

Biden argued that since a Presidential Election was coming, and a vacancy should occur on the Supreme Court by that Summer, then-President George H.W. Bush should wait until after the election to appoint a replacement or appoint a moderate the Democratically-controlled Senate at the time would approve.

The "rule" was never actually applied since no opening ever happened, but McConnell made sure those words came back to haunt the Democrats, and he successfully kept Garland off of the Supreme Court.

Has this ever happened before? AKA does the 'Thurmond Rule' exist or not?

During the fight over Garland's nomination, there was also reference to something called the 'Thurmond Rule'.

In March of 1968, President Lyndon Johnson announced he would not run for re-election that November. That summer, with about 5 months until the election, Johnson nominated sitting Supreme Court Justice Abe Fortas to replace Earl Warren as Chief Justice.

Republican Senator Strom Thurmond successfully blocked the nomination, creating the 'Thurmond Rule', but since there were other problems tied to Justice Fortas at the time, the rule never became a fully recognized precedent. It has been invoked a number of times by both parties to try and stop judicial nominees of outgoing presidents, but many legal associations have said it simply does not exist.

The 'Thurmond Rule' may or may not be a myth, but it appears to be what politicians in the Senate have used to justify holding off judicial nominees submitted by presidents several months before a presidential election. Democratic Senator Diane Feinstein attempted to use it against President George W. Bush, and many Republicans also used it during the Garland nomination fight in 2016.

Do any of these 'rules' matter?

When it comes down to it, President Trump simply has just enough votes to get his pick confirmed, but with at least two moderate Republicans, he will have to be careful who he nominates.

Incidentally, Senator McConnell also has another Democratic Senate leader to thank for making that happen. Until 2013, it took 60 votes in the U.S. Senate to end debate and vote on a presidential nominee. Since McConnell and the Republicans were successfully blocking President Obama's pick, then-Majority Leader Senator Harry Reid invoked the 'nuclear option', which allowed a simple majority of 51 votes. That's how many Republicans make up the majority in the Senate today.

Video of Senator McConnell warning Reid and Senate Democrats against 'going nuclear' circulated Wednesday afternoon, haunting Democrats with McConnell's prophetic words: “You’ll regret this, and you may regret this a lot sooner than you think."

Getting those 51 votes will not be a cakewalk, though. With Arizona Senator John McCain dealing with health issues, he may not be available for possible votes, and he also has a very contentious relationship with President Trump. Also, at least two more moderate Republican senators could balk at voting for anyone too controversial or conservative that could hurt them politically. However, there's always Vice-President Mike Pence, who can step in and cast tie-breaking votes.

So when the next Supreme Court Justice is confirmed and sworn into office, Conservatives will likely have a 5-4 majority for at least two decades, but Liberals will likely take some comfort that the new justice probably won't be the vote to overturn landmark decisions like Roe vs. Wade.
Pay particular attention to democrat statements pre Trump.
 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
=

Wow, if that is true, I find it astonishing...a Republican majority senate voting to confirm to the court individuals whom they American Bar Association deemed, by a substantial majority or unanimously, to be unqualified for that office? Somebody really ought to find that at least frightening, and probably plain frickin' dumb, as well.

Agreed. But that seems to be politics today. ANYONE they can get in is good.
 

tytlyf

Not Religious
WASHINGTON, D.C. — Within hours of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announcing his retirement, speculation about who will replace him and when President Trump's pick should be made has kicked into high gear in the U.S. Senate.
Still waiting for the "Schumer principle"
 

ecco

Veteran Member
Oh I see. The race card is being used.

It's clear who the buffoon is. It's the sensationalistic media twisting Trump's arrogance into something that it clearly isn't.

Should Trump have answered the questions? Yes. I think he should have. Trump was wrong in that regard.

Should the media have used the race card? No. What a bunch of whiny crab *** people but thats CNN for you. Racist, racist, race card, race card, racist!!

That's one of the dumbest videos by the sensationalistic media rag of CNN ever.


If you watched the clip, you would have seen that the Chinese reporter who asked Trump the question, thought he was being racist.
 

pearl

Well-Known Member
This is a man who will not find the courage to participate in the next Presidential debates when the time comes.

Of course he will, he thrives on it. And worse, he actually believes what he says. He is a product of the power of positive thinking, his guru, Norman Vincent Steele.

I cannot understand, not with the best will in the world, how any American with an IQ that is at least as large as their neck size, can think that this POTUS is a fully functional, almost intelligent human being.

For some with a like 'IQ' they found someone who expressed their own concerns, one who did not talk 'over' them or down to them, but for them, but spoke in simple words they could understand. Others who knew better found, finally, one who would carry their agenda forward. And add to all the greatest culprit of all, voter apathy!
 

shmogie

Well-Known Member
Still waiting for the "Schumer principle"
You didn't see it? Too bad.

Schumer pronounced his support for the the "Thurmond rule", when he thought it was advantageous to democrats. He stated it as a principle.

Does that help?

Chuckie was for it before he was against it. Keep up.
 

shmogie

Well-Known Member
Is the ABA website a good enough source?

https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/uncategorized/GAO/Web rating Chart Trump 115.pdf

https://www.americanbar.org/content.../webratingchart-trump116.pdf?logActivity=true

Do you want me to just give the ones that were classified as NQ (not qualified)?

This really wasn't a difficult search to do.
No, it wasn't a difficult search, I am sure. However, I have been criticized for not citing sources when the correspondent could easily find the material.

Thank you for the material. I am in the process of reading the details of each NQ rating. I am comparing these ratings with the academic qualifications and experience and past evaluations.
 

shmogie

Well-Known Member
Is that the "Christian" speaking? People who have different political sensibilities are suitable objects of a Christian's hatred and desire that they suffer?

Apparently, I didn't read the Bible carefully enough...
It is VERY OBVIOUS that you didn't.

I am most amused by those who are the least qualified to judge a Christian assume the mantle of high spiritual judge.

There are words, then there are actions. Since you have decided to invoke the Bible to judge me, use it to judge yourself and your actions.

American politics is not a no contact sport. It isn't bean bags. I despise the progressive agenda and most concepts.

Progressives in pursuing their political goals fight with knives in both hands. Those who seek to counter them must do the same.

Hate of ideas isn't hate of a person. And I certainly do, in the political vein, enjoy hearing liberal progressives whimper about a political point.,
 
Top