Wednesday, February 16, 2005

Smackdown on Harry Reid

Texas Senator John Cornyn takes the opportunity to slap Harry Reid silly...

At his stakeout today, the Minority Leader, Harry Reid, made some interesting, if inaccurate comments about judicial nominations.

In particular, he said:

“Renomination is not the key. I think the question is, those judges that have already been turned down in the Senate. And unless there's something that is new that I'm not aware of with each of these men and women, we will vote the same way we did in the past.”

That charge, though, is inaccurate. NONE of President Bush’s judicial nominees have “been turned down in the Senate.” None. The nominees he referred to were denied a vote altogether—despite the fact that they all had (and have) bipartisan majority support. ALL would be confirmed if a partisan minority of the Senate would allow an up-or-down vote. It’s a little difficult to “turn down” a nominee if he or she never gets an up-or-down vote on the Senate floor.

Sen. Reid also mentioned what he characterized as Republican obstruction of Clinton nominees. In particular, he singled out Judge Richard Paez. But there’s just one problem: Richard Paez was confirmed by the Senate; he had an up-or-down vote and is now a sitting judge.

The 10 nominees filibustered by Sen. Reid and others during President Bush’s term, however, are still waiting to be treated as “poorly” as Judge Paez.

Sen. Reid also claimed that there has “always been” a 60-vote threshold for judicial nominations:

“It's always been a 60-vote for judges. There is --nothing change. Go back many, many, many years. Go back decades and it's always been that way.”

But we did “go back decades” and look. It hasn’t always been that way. Many nominees, including Paez, were confirmed with less than 60 votes. In fact the Senate has consistently confirmed judges who enjoyed majority but not 60-vote support — including Clinton appointees Paez, William Fletcher, and Susan Oki Mollway, and Carter appointees Abner Mikva and L. T. Senter.
Someone should tell Reid to quit embarrassing himself on the issue of judicial nominations. His comments about Clarence Thomas were crazy enough, but now he's making up history.

Actually, maybe he should keep trying that tack. He could try convincing people that Kerry won in November.

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