Tag Archives: Party leaders of the United States Senate

When basic governance is deemed controversial

The Maddow Blog

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, widely seen as the nation’s second most important federal bench, has three vacancies. President Obama yesterday introduced three non-controversial nominees to fill those vacancies. And were it not for the breakdowns of the American political process, none of this would be especially interesting.

But here we are.

Senate Republicans have come up with lots of reasons for not wanting to advance President Barack Obama’s nominees to the powerful U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, whether it be false accusations of “court-packing” or claims that the court doesn’t need its three vacancies filled because it’s not busy enough.

On Tuesday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) argued there was another problem with moving Obama’s nominees: a “culture of intimidation” being fueled by Democrats.

Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) went further, responding to the nominees by telling reporters, “There is no basis for the president inventing these crises. It’s unpresidential. It’s embarrassing to me.”

Just so we’re clear, we’ve apparently reached the point at which a president nominating judges to fill existing vacancies is seen by Republicans as outrageous. They not only decry “court packing” — a phrase they use but clearly do not understand – they also feel “intimidated” and “embarrassed” by a basic governmental process outlined by the Constitution.

Indeed, according to Lamar Alexander, Obama is creating a “crisis.” Worse, it’s “unpresidential” for the president to exercise his presidential duties. I realize it’s a little unusual for the White House to introduce three judicial nominees at once, but this GOP freak-out is excessive by any sensible standard.

But, Mitch McConnell says, there’s no reason for Democrats to complain. “You know, we’ve confirmed an overwhelming number of judges for President Obama,” the Minority Leader told reporters yesterday. “So the president’s been treated very fairly on judicial [nominees].”

Is this true?

Continue reading this entry …

 

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Mitch McConnell Charges ‘Culture Of Intimidation’ On Obama Nominees

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell suggested Democrats are fueling a “culture of intimidation” when it comes to advancing President Obama’s nominees. (Photo credit: Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Who’s intimidating who here?

Mr. McConnell appears to display a classic case of projection in this instance.

The Huffington Post

Senate Republicans have come up with lots of reasons for not wanting to advance President Barack Obama’s nominees to the powerful U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, whether it be false accusations of “court-packing” or claims that the court doesn’t need its three vacancies filled because it’s not busy enough.

On Tuesday, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) argued there was another problem with moving Obama’s nominees: a “culture of intimidation” being fueled by Democrats.

“There’s a culture of intimidation throughout the executive branch of the federal government,” McConnell told reporters in response to a question about nominations and listed a number of agencies. “There’s also a culture of intimidation here in the Senate.”

McConnell accused Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) of planning to break a promise he made in January about not messing with Senate filibuster rules. Reid has been hinting for weeks that he may be ready for a filibuster fight this summer if Republicans don’t ease off their blocking of Obama’s nominees. Plenty of Democratssupport changing the rules so that nominees would require only a simple majority to be confirmed, versus the current 60-vote threshold.

It’s still not clear whether Reid will actually follow through with changing the rules, but McConnell hammered him for signaling that he may do so.

Continued…

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GOP Freaking Out About Obama’s Attempt To Fill Empty Court Seats

Mcconnell Grassley Lee

Former Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME) suggested that the Republican Party “ought to put a sign on the national committee doors that says ‘closed for repairs’ until New Year’s Day next year — and spend that time going over ideas and positive agendas.”

I’m in full agreement with Senator Snowe.

The president is doing nothing more than trying to fill four vacant seats on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals.

The Huffington Post

Republican senators are fuming about President Barack Obama’s attempt to fill empty seats on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, charging him with “court-packing” and alleging that his push to confirm nominees is all politics.

But not only is Obama not “court-packing” — a term describing an attempt to add judges to a court with the goal of shifting the balance, not filling existing vacancies — but Republicans’ efforts to prevent Obama from appointing judges amount to their own attempt to tip the scales in their favor. What’s more, some of the GOP senators trying to prevent his nominees from advancing previously voted to fill the court when there was a Republican in the White House.

As it stands, the powerful D.C. Circuit has 11 seats, three of which are vacant. Obama has signaled plans to put forward nominees for all three open slots as soon as this week. But Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) and other Republicans are pushing legislation that would eliminate those seats and keep the court where it is: with eight judges, four of whom were appointed by Democrats and four of whom were appointed by Republicans.

Grassley has argued that the court simply doesn’t need to have three more judges because it has a lighter workload than other circuit courts — a stance that Democrats say overlooks the fact that the court is second in stature only to the Supreme Court and takes on particularly complex cases. But Grassley has also suggested that Obama is trying to pack the court.

“I’m concerned about the caseload of this circuit and the efforts to pack it,” Grassley complained during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing last week, charging the administration — six times – with court-packing. Of course, Grassley was quickly corrected by a colleague, who said that court-packing isn’t about filling existing vacancies.

Still, Grassley isn’t alone in making these charges. During floor remarks last week, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) accused Democrats of plotting with the White House “to pack the D.C. Circuit with appointees,” and Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) worried aloud that Democrats may “decide to play politics and seek — without any legitimate justification — to pack the D.C. Circuit with unneeded judges simply in order to advance a partisan agenda.”

Continue reading here…

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Filed under United States Senate

Senator To Newtown Families: The Gun Debate Has Nothing To Do With You

I know, it appears to be Gun Control Lobby day at TFC.  I promise it’s not intentional but it is important.  Senator Inhofe, one of the gun lobby’s mouth pieces has no clue what the president feels.  The majority of pundits left, right and center don’t feel his speeches in Arizona and Connecticut were political.  They forget that the president is quoted as saying that Newtown was “the worst day of his presidency.”

The tragic incident and the POTUS’ talks with the parents of the Newtown children over the past four months have been sincere.  He is determined to make a change with the help of his party and the American people.  Inhofe is way off the base.  But he’s just one of  folks on the right who don’t know what empathy and caring means…

Think Progress

As the Senate prepares to take up a comprehensive gun safety bill on Thursday, Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK) told reporters that the coming debate will have nothing to do with the families of the victims from Newtown, Connecticut.

“See, I think it’s so unfair of the administration to hurt these families, to make them think this has something to do with them when, in fact, it doesn’t,” Inhofe said and suggested that Obama is manipulating and misinforming the families for political purposes.

Obama called on Congress to support gun safety legislation during a speech in Hartford, Connecticut on Monday. He then traveled with 12 families whose loved ones were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School back to D.C. on Air Force One to help him lobby lawmakers in favor of a Senate proposal that expands background checks to all purchases, cracks down on gun trafficking and invests in school safety.

Inhofe is part of a group of 14 senators who have pledged to block consideration of the bill, though their effort to filibuster reform appear to have fallen short. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) announced on Tuesday that he would file cloture on the measure.

The Oklahoma senator has an A+ rating from the NRA and Gun Owners of America. He has taken at least $19,800 from the former since 1998.

 

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Filed under President Barack Obama, Sen. James Inhofe

Rand Paul and Ted Cruz threaten filibuster on guns

Rand Paul (left) and Ted Cruz are pictured in this composite photo. | AP Photos

Is this really about the libertarian values of ‘smaller government‘ or is this the directive of the NRA via a couple of “campaign donations”?

Politico

Sens. Rand Paul, Ted Cruz and Mike Lee are threatening to filibuster gun-control legislation, according to a letter they plan to hand-deliver to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s office on Tuesday.

“We will oppose the motion to proceed to any legislation that will serve as a vehicle for any additional gun restrictions,” the three conservatives wrote in a copy of the signed letter obtained by POLITICO.

Reid plans to bring up a gun-control measure that focuses on broadening background checks and cracking down on interstate gun-trafficking after the current Senate recess.

Conservatives are concerned that once that bill reaches the floor, amendments could stiffen restrictions on gun control.

Moreover, they understand that Reid intends to allow liberal amendments that would limit clip capacity and ban certain assault weapons to be offered — even though they would be defeated — to give Democrats a chance to vote on them. For moderate Democrats in competitive states, that amounts to an opportunity to vote no and show allegiance to gun rights.

Though they don’t use the word “filibuster” in the letter, the conservatives are leaving no doubt that they would filibuster on an initial procedural question — the motion to proceed.

Lee staged a test vote on the issue during consideration of the Senate budget last week. He tried to amend a point of order against gun control legislation to the budget but fell short. It needed a three-fifths supermajority and failed 50-49, needing 60 votes to pass. But the final tally emboldened Lee, Paul and Cruz because they were so close to a majority and a filibuster takes just 41 votes to sustain.

 

 

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Filed under Gun Control Legislation, Gun Lobby

Gun control: Why the fight over universal background checks is the key

The Week

The controversial proposal to ban assault weapons has gone nowhere, and now there’s a new focus in the gun debate

After scrapping a proposed assault-weapons ban, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid declared this week that the gun-law reform package headed for a vote in early April will include background checks on all gun buyers. Current law requires checks only on sales by licensed gun dealers. Other elements in Washington’s collection of gun-related bills would step up school safety and tighten sanctions on the illegal transfer of firearms, among other things. Reid said he dropped bans on military-style semiautomatic weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines because he didn’t have enough votes to beat a filibuster by Republicans — and even some red-state Democrats. But he’s drawing a line in the sand over the paperwork on gun buyers. “I want to be clear,” Reid said. “In order to be effective, any bill that passes the Senate must include background checks.”

Gun-control advocates demanded a host of new measures to reduce gun violence after the December massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in which 20 children and six adults were gunned down by a single killer armed with an assault rifle. The ban on military-style weapons and ammo clips were the most headline-grabbing provisions in the bunch, and now that they appear doomed, “a background check requirement is, in the eyes of many, the most important provision left on the table,” says Sean Sullivan at The Washington Post. If Democrats can’t win on this one, they’ll come out of the 2013 gun debate defeated and demoralized.

The lack of traction the assault weapons ban has gotten has already been met with disappointment by some gun-control advocates. But imagine how much broader and deeper the discouragement will be if background checks aren’t passed. The perception that the White House and congressional Democrats failed to pass meaningful reform would be a likely consequence. [Washington Post]

[...]

The [universal background check] will require any citizen selling their gun to go through their local FFL [Federal Firearms Licensed] dealer. That means: you find someone who wants to purchase your firearm. Both of you go to a gun store and pay the gun store a processing fee to do the paperwork on the sale… and if everything turns out okay, the purchaser comes back 30 days later and picks up his gun. If everything does not turn out okay (e.g. if the purchaser has an unpaid parking ticket from 5 years ago) then the sale does NOT go through…

The worst part of UBC will be the check on the seller (that’s you and me). In the interest of getting illegal guns off the street, the left will want to throw in this little addition to the universal background check scheme: the seller must prove that they legally own the gun they are seeking to sell… If you attempt to sell an old shotgun your father left you years ago, to your neighbor you have known for 10 years, both of you must go to the FFL dealer and fill out the paperwork. When it turns out you don’t have a bill of sale for the shotgun IN YOUR NAME, you are now in possession of an illegal gun. The shotgun will be confiscated and the police will now have a reason to search your house for any other illegal weapons you might have in your possession. [American Thinker]

Advocates of the expanded background checks, however, say it would indisputably discourage gun violence. That might explain why the vast majority of the public — including most National Rifle Association members — support this measure, says Zack Beauchamp at Think Progress. “Universal background checks deter criminals from purchasing guns.”

This isn’t really a contestable point. 80 percent of crime guns are purchased through “private” sales, which means from unlicensed dealers at gun shows or other people currently exempted from having to run background checks under federal law. Forcing all sellers to run background checks both deters criminals from buying guns (if they fail the check they can be prosecuted) and prevents a check on sellers that might be inclined to sell to shady characters if they didn’t know they were committing a federal crime. [Think Progress]

 

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Filed under Gun Background Checks

Friday Blog Roundup – 3-22-2013

How to Handle a Heckler
President Obama smoothly dealt with a heckler at a speech in Israel today.

What was behind Reid’s sidestep? 
Depending on whom you ask, Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid’s decision to scuttle…

Did Global Warming Spark The Syrian War?
Maybe .

Paul Ryan Budget Passed By House Republicans
WASHINGTON — House Republicans have passed a budget plan that would bring the feder..

Immigrants detained again weeks after release
After months in an immigration detention facility, Hector Adame was so surprised when..

What The Media Need To Know About CPAC 2013
The Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) bills itself as an event co

Tuition Assistance no longer a sequestration victim
Getty Images We learned a week ago that sequestration cuts, in addition to all their..

Obama in West Bank: Palestinians ‘deserve a state of their own’
President Barack Obama spoke critically of Israeli settlement activity in Palestinian..

Video: New Colorado gun laws embolden assault weapon ban backers
Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut talks with Rachel Maddow about Senator Har..

Chris Christie undecided on therapy to “cure” gays through homoerotic ..
GOP NJ Governor, and presidential hopeful, Chris Christie is unsure if therapy to “cu..

 

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The costs of the GOP’s Chuck Hagel filibuster

Republican senators contend that blocking Hagel’s confirmation isn’t purely political.

Chuck Hagel will eventually be nominated.  After all, does the Republican Party want to show the world just how unreasonable they are during rising global crises on a daily basis?

The void between outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and the confirmation of Chuck Hagel is dangerous, considering the ongoing Afghanistan war and nuclear threats from Korea.

The Week

Republicans managed to make history, blocking a cabinet nominee with majority support. What’s the damage?

Well, they did it: Thursday evening, Senate Republicans staged what amounts to the first-ever successful filibuster of a presidential cabinet nominee, mustering enough votes to leave Defense Secretary-designate Chuck Hagel — himself a former Senate Republican — one aye short of confirmation. Four Republicans voted with all 55 members of the Democratic caucus to proceed to an up-or-down vote that Hagel is sure to win — Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) changed his vote to “no” at the end, a procedural move that will allow him to bring up the vote after the upcoming recess. But President Obama, Hagel, the Pentagon, and outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, now have to wait at least 10 days until Senate Democrats get another shot at ratifying a new defense chief.

David Weigel at Slate, who has been a tireless guide through the labyrinthine Hagelian drama,argues pretty persuasively that everybody (but Hagel himself) won something in Thursday night’s vote. The anti-Hagelian “troika of the Washington Free Beacon, Breitbart.com, and Jennifer Rubin,” for example, have gained at least 10 more days to dig up (or invent) a disqualifying skeleton in Hagel’s closet. But while Republicans successfully “humiliated the administration, yet again,” and “humbled” Hagel, whom most Republicans have grown to dislike, they’ve also become “villains on a vote they’ll eventually lose.” So, let’s count the costs — to the GOP, the nation, and the military — of the GOP’s filibuster of Chuck Hagel:

1. Republicans come out looking pretty shabby
“The impressive thing about the anti-Hagel effort is how politically tone-deaf it is,” says Daniel Larison at The American Conservative. Republicans in Washington “are desperate for a winning issue, but Senate Republicans seem to be missing the point that stalling Hagel’s confirmation (which will happen eventually) isn’t a winning issue for them.” Quite the opposite, in fact. “In the short-term, they will take a justified beating in the press for their ridiculous tactics,” but they’re also “making sure that all of the moderates, independents, and realists that they have alienated over the last 10 years will keep running away from them.” Laurence Vance at the libertarian LRC Blog seems to agree: “I am no fan of Hagel,” he says, but it’s clear that Republicans are throwing up roadblocks just “because Hagel is not seen as being as bloodthirsty and war-crazed as they are. The GOP cannot be reformed.”

2. They’ve set a dangerous precedent
Filibustering Hagel, simply put, “is just insane,” says Kevin Drum at Mother Jones. “If there’s one thing practically everyone agrees about, it’s that presidents should basically get to pick their own cabinets.” You only try to derail nominees in extreme circumstances, and that’s hardly the case here. Hagel is “a standard issue DC pol with no skeletons in his closet, no bizarre views, and no scandals in his background,” and normally his nomination wouldn’t even be controversial.

The “potentially serious short- and long-term consequences” of this filibuster “should worry both parties,” says Steve Kornacki at Salon. Once you “shatter tradition” by pulling this maneuver once, it very well “might lead to similar filibusters in the future — both for Obama’s nominees and for nominees of future presidents from both parties.” Yes, “future Republican Cabinet nominees for major posts are now much more likely treated in the same way,” says The American Conservative‘s Larison. “That won’t be good for future Republican administrations or the government as a whole.”

3. This could revive filibuster-neutering efforts
Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), who lost a fight to radically scale back the Senate filibuster last month, reminded his Democratic colleagues that they could have avoided this setback if they’d agreed to the stronger measures he proposed. “It is deeply disappointing that even when President Obama nominates a former conservative colleague of the GOP caucus, the minority is abusing the rules and the spirit of ‘advise and consent,’” he said. “If our step we took last month is to be successful, extraordinary stunts like today’s filibuster can’t happen.”

Well, “if this isn’t enough to get Reid to revive the threat of filibuster reform, nothing will be enough,” says Greg Sargent at The Washington Post. Agreed, says Ed Kilgore at Washington Monthly. Reid is an institutionalist who is loath to take away senators’ privileges, but “he needs to pick up the threat for real, shake it at Senate Republicans, and mean it.”

4. The military is stuck in limbo
Panetta didn’t have any plans to work past this week, and now he has to lead the U.S. military for at least another week and a half, including a trip to a big NATO summit he assumed Hagel would attend. Nobody knows “what foreign challenge will face this country perhaps within the next 10 days,” Reid warned his colleagues Thursday. “It would be nice if we had a secretary of defense.” The White House made a similar argument, noting pointedly that “we have 66,000 men and women deployed in Afghanistan, and we need our new secretary of defense to be a part of significant decisions about how we bring that war to a responsible end,” the focus of the NATO summit. “This waste of time is not without consequences.” But the sentiment wasn’t only from Democrats. With all the challenges the Pentagon faces, including looming budget cuts, “I just think it’s important to have a secretary of defense in place,” said Sen. Mike Johanns (R-Neb.), one of the two Republicans who’ve committed to voting for Hagel.

The damage from this standoff could be more far-reaching than the temporary water-treading at the Pentagon, though. The GOP filibuster and breakdown in longstanding comity on defense issues, especially in the Senate Armed Serviced Committee “is way over the line — disgraceful!” military expert and former SASC staffer Charles Stevenson tells The Atlantic‘s James Fallows. Republicans are poisoning the Senate but “also hurting the institution of the office of Secretary of Defense and thus undermining our system of civilian control.” This pitiful hounding of Hagel shows that “the Republican Party has abrogated its role — really, abandoned any interest — in shaping or seriously discussing American foreign policy,” says Fred Kaplan at Slate.

Why risk incurring those costs to probably just delay Hagel’s confirmation? That’s what Senate Democrats, and plenty of observers, want to know. “What more are you trying to get out of this?” asked a frustrated Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) on the Senate floor. Senate Republicans aren’t providing very good answers. Sens. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.) said they wouldn’t block Hagel’s confirmation if the White House answered their question about whether Obama spoke with Libyan officials on the night of the Sept. 11 attacks in Benghazi — the White House answered the question, McCain said he was satisfied with the response, then he and Graham voted to block the confirmation anyway.

But if Senate Republicans aren’t giving persuasive answers — Graham says he’ll “feel better about it” in 10 days, while McCain told Fox News that “there’s a lot of ill will towards Senator Hagel because when he was a Republican, he attacked President Bush mercilessly…. He was anti-his own party and people” — The Washington Post‘s Chris Cillizza got some straight talk from “a handful of smart Republican types — both inside and outside the Senate.” They collectively give three reasons for filibustering Hagel:

1. There’s no downside. While the fight over Hagel is consuming official Washington — and enraging the Democratic base — Republican strategists believe that not only are few regular people following all of this, but the former Nebraska senator isn’t someone with all that many allies outside of Washington….
2. The beefs with Hagel are legit. Several operatives rejected the notion that the Hagel blockade is largely about politics….
3. It’s a Republican rallying cry. Republicans thought they would be in the Senate majority right now. And they thought they might also have Mitt Romney in the White House. Neither of those things happened…. In short: The Senate GOP conference needs something to rally around and Hagel’s nomination serves as a useful exercise to do just that. [Washington Post]

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Filed under Filibuster, United States Senate

Mitch McConnell Filibusters His Own Bill

This serves as more proof on just how dysfunctional the GOP has become.

In their effort to undermine the Dems and specifically President Obama, who McConnell announced would be a one-term President through a concerted GOP effort, they have only shown their gross ineptitude and inability to govern under any circumstance.

In this case it was a debt reduction legislative plan that Sen. McConnell proposed…and then objected to.  The Senator filibustered his OWN proposal.

Democratic Underground

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) may have made United States senate history today when he beat his own legislative baloney, blocking a straight up-or-down vote on a proposal that he, himself, offered for a vote Thursday morning. The bill, which would have taken the debt ceiling gun away from the head of the U.S. economy by requiring a two-thirds majority to override a presidential increase to the debt ceiling, was McConnell’s idea, but when Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid agreed with McConnell’s request for a vote on the bill Thursday afternoon, McConnell objected.

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