February 12, 2005
HE ALWAYS WAS GOOD AT FINDING MAGIC BULLETS...:
Senate's New Math May Aid Stalled Judicial Nominees (NEIL A. LEWIS, 2/13/05, NY Times)
[S]enator Arlen Specter, has been quietly building a strategy that could break the logjam over judicial nominations.Mr. Specter, the Pennsylvania Republican who became chairman over the objections of many conservatives, has been lobbying Democratic senators on behalf of some of the Bush nominees in order to obtain the needed 60 votes to foil a filibuster. He said in an interview that part of his approach was to begin with the nominees he believed had the best chance of attracting Democratic support first.
"I'm going to put up these nominees up in a particular order," he said.
He said the nominee he intended to bring up for a vote first, in a move he hoped would end the divisive partisan battle over judges, was William G. Myers III, a longtime lobbyist for mining and timber interests, nominated for a seat on the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, based in San Francisco. Next in line, he suggested, would be William H. Pryor Jr., the former Alabama attorney general who was put on the United States Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, in Atlanta, temporarily by Mr. Bush during a Congressional recess, after Democrats blocked his confirmation.
The politics of judicial confirmations has come down to simple math. In the last Congress, the Republicans had 51 votes, a slim majority. That allowed the Democrats, who said that many of Mr. Bush's choices were right-wing ideologues, to block confirmations by waging filibusters, the threat of tying up the Senate in endless debate.
The Republicans came close to getting the 60 votes needed to break a filibuster in the last Congress, but never quite had enough. The Senate now has 55 Republicans, meaning Republicans need only attract 5 Democrats to their side this time.
Mr. Specter said that he believed Mr. Myers had a strong chance of being confirmed because he would get 55 Republican votes along with the two to four votes of Democrats who sided with the Republicans on various nominees last term. He said that Senator Ken Salazar, the newly elected Democrat from Colorado, was expected to support Mr. Myers's nomination. "And that brings us pretty close," Mr. Specter said.
When he was Colorado's attorney general, Mr. Salazar signed a letter with others endorsing the Myers nomination the last time it was before the Senate. A spokesman for Mr. Salazar said Friday that the senator would, in his new role, review the nomination before taking a position.
One Democratic senator and several senior Democratic staff aides said in interviews they also believed the new math in the Senate could give the Republicans and the White House some confirmation victories. One aide noted that several Democrats voted to confirm Alberto R. Gonzales as attorney general despite an effort to maintain party unity against that nomination. The staff aides said they could not be quoted by name because it was politically unseemly for them to be acknowledging that their party might lose some confirmation battles.
It's now unseemly for Democrats to fail to be obstructionist? Posted by Orrin Judd at February 12, 2005 11:51 PM
Why am I not surprised that in the Augean swamp that is Washington DC the easiest judicial nominee to have confirmed will be a professional bagman(ahem! lobbyist)?
Posted by: Bart at February 13, 2005 8:13 AMIf he does get easily confirmed. My guess is Spector will eventually have to throw up his hands, say something like Scottish Law contains no provision for super-majorities on judicial nominiations, and go along with Frist on employing the nuclear option.
Posted by: John at February 13, 2005 9:09 AM