Sen. Harry Reid

  • May 15, 2012

    by Jeremy Leaming

    Obstructionism in Congress, as Thomas E. Mann and Norman J. Ornstein argue in their new book, is largely, if not solely, born by Republicans. The obstructionism, which has, among other things, kept the number of vacancies on the federal bench consistently high, is finally prompting Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to rethink his opposition to reforming the filibuster, which has been the primary tool for Republican obstructionism in the Senate.

    The public interest group, Common Cause, has also gotten into the act by lodging a federal lawsuit against that the filibuster, which conservatives in the Senate have used in an unprecedented manner, helping to create a Congress where not much is accomplished. (The Tea Party and the nation’s super wealthy, of course, like it this way. Economic policy continues to exacerbate economic inequality and brain-addled Tea Party leaders believe the Constitution established a weak central government, though in reality they just long for the Articles of Confederation, which really did establish a weak central power.)

    Writing about the lawsuit for the Common Cause blog, Common Blog, Bob Edgar, the group’s president and CEO, who served 12 years in Congress, claims “ideological purists” in both parties have learned how to wield the filibuster to “pretty much shut the place down.” The filibuster he maintains is supposed to extend debate, not stop it.

    “Here’s how the obstructionists work,” he writes. “To begin debate on a bill, senators must first adopt a ‘motion to proceed.’ But debate on that motion, as on most everything else that comes before the Senate is unlimited unless at least 60 senators vote to end it. That means a minority of as few as 41 can block any action simply by refusing to permit a vote on the motion to proceed.”

    The group, representing members of Congress and children of undocumented immigrants who would have benefited from enactment of the DREAM Act, says the Constitution intends for the filibuster’s use in specific circumstances.

    Attorney Emmet J. Boundurant and Common Cause Staff Counsel Stephen Spaulding prepared and lodged the lawsuit. The Washington Post’s Ezra Klein in a blog post about the constitutionality of the filibuster cites a 2011 article in which Boundurant explains his constitutional case against the filibuster. Klein also provides historical context for the filibuster, calling it a mistake. Klein cites Federalist Papers by Alexander Hamilton and James Madison containing arguments against the use of a supermajority.  

  • April 6, 2012

    by Jonathan Arogeti

    “President Obama’s judges have shattered barriers across the country,” writes Senior Counsel to the President Christopher Kang.

    In a post titled, “Federal Judges That Resemble the Nation They Serve,” Kang notes that the president has doubled the number of Asian American and Pacific Islander federal judges over the past three years.

    The Senate recently confirmed Miranda Du to the U.S. District Court for the District of Nevada, albeit after dragging the process out for 239 days. Judge Du (pictured with Sen. Reid) is the 16th Asian American and Pacific Islander judge in the country. But despite support by Nevada Republican Sen. Dean Heller, Republican Governor Brian Sandoval, Republican Lieutenant Governor Brian Krolicki and Republican Mayor of Reno Robert Cashell -- in addition to support of Obama and Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) -- only five Republican senators joined Sens. Reid and Heller in her confirmation vote.

    President Obama’s commitment to diversifying the federal bench was explored in a report issued earlier this year by the Brookings Institution. Russell Wheeler, the report’s author, highlights that only 38 percent of the president’s nominees are white males. That figure contrasts with a 66 percent rate under President George W. Bush and a 53 percent rate under President Bill Clinton.

  • March 13, 2012

    by Jeremy Leaming

    Utah Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah) can’t stop obsessing over President Obama’s recess appointments of a leader for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and three members of the National Labor Relations Board.

    Despite the fact that Republicans had obstructed the president’s nominations to those agencies – they have long opposed the CFPB, and tar the NLRB as a tool of unions – Lee, a Tea Party favorite, has used the recess appointments as a primary excuse for trying to scuttle the president’s judicial nominees.

    But it’s not like Lee (pictured) needed an excuse. His Party has been obstructing the judicial nominations process for years now. Indeed that’s why Majority Leader harry Reid took to the Senate floor yesterday to force action on 17 of the president’s district court nominees. (Typically district court nominees have little trouble being confirmed; not so for Obama, who has seen 19 of his district court nominees filibustered by Senate Republicans.)

    Yesterday before moving to force Senate action on the district court nominees, Reid (D-Nev.) said, “Republicans have refused to allow us to vote – won’t even allow us to vote – on these qualified nominees. What else can we do?”

    Reid also noted the consistently high federal court vacancy rate, saying that 160 million people live in places where judicial emergencies have been created. There are more than 80 vacancies on the federal bench, and a new report from the United States Courts shows that the workload for districts courts is on the rise. As noted on ACSblog, Caroline Fredrickson, ACS president, lambasted the obstruction of judicial selections, saying litigants “whose safety, security and livelihoods are on the line wait years for a resolution in court.”

    Sen. Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), in a press statement applauding Reid’s move, also noted that “millions of Americans seeking justice in their courts should no longer be stalled by judicial vacancies that would otherwise be filled if only the Senate would fulfill its constitutional role.”

  • February 16, 2012

    by Nicole Flatow

    This morning, The New York Times’ Gail Collins adds to the commentary on Adalberto Jose Jordán’s long and obstruction-filled road to confirmation in a facetious column describing her “shock” at Congress’ deep unpopularity. And she means deep unpopularity. As in, “Unpopular like the Ebola virus, or zombies. Held in near-universal contempt, like TV shows about hoarders with dead cats in their kitchens.”

    Jordan’s nomination, she writes, is the latest example of Congress’ so-called “bipartisan cooperation.” She explains:

    This week, the Senate confirmed Judge Adalberto Jose Jordan to a seat on the federal Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in Atlanta. A visitor from another country might not have appreciated the proportions of this achievement, given the fact that Jordan, who was born in Cuba and who once clerked for Sandra Day O’Connor, had no discernible opposition.

    But Americans ought to have a better grasp of how the Senate works. The nomination’s progress had long been thwarted by Mike Lee, a freshman Republican from Utah, who has decided to hold up every single White House appointment to anything out of pique over ... well, it doesn’t really matter. When you’re a senator, you get to do that kind of thing.

    This forced the majority leader, Harry Reid, to get 60 votes to move Judge Jordan forward, which is never all that easy. Then there was further delay thanks to Rand Paul, a freshman from Kentucky, who stopped action for as long as possible because he was disturbed about foreign aid to Egypt.

    All that is forgotten now. The nomination was approved, 94 to 5, only 125 days after it was unanimously O.K.’d by the Judiciary Committee. Whiners in the White House pointed out that when George W. Bush was president, circuit court nominations got to a floor vote in an average of 28 days.

    No matter. Good work, Senate! Only 17 more long-pending judicial nominations to go!

    In an effort to move another one of those long-pending nominations, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid filed a motion yesterday to force a vote on federal prosecutor Jesse Furman, nominated to a trial court seat in the Southern District of New York.

    Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy had this to say about a week spent overcoming filibusters of judicial nominees:

  • October 14, 2011

    by Jeremy Leaming

    The Senate’s confirmation of ten judicial nominees during the span of two weeks is welcome progress, but federal court vacancies remain high and a continued effort to move judicial nominations is needed, American Bar Association President Wm. T. (Bill) Robinson III says in letters to congressional leaders.

    In Oct. 13 letters to Sens. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and Mitch McConnell (R-K.Y.), Robinson writes, “Nothing less than a sustained, concerted, and cooperative effort will be sufficient to make discernible progress in reducing the longstanding and dangerously high vacancy rate on the federal courts. And, as important, nothing less will assure litigants – businesses and aggrieved individuals alike – that our federal courts have sufficient judges to hear their cases in a timely and thorough fashion.”

    In his letter to McConnell, Robinson (pictured) notes, “Despite the recent confirmation of ten judges, there are 92 vacancies on the bench today because of recent retirements and a death. Regrettably, this outcome is not an aberration or product of selective statistical reporting; even though the Senate has confirmed from one to seven judges every month this Congress, the vacancy rate continues to hover around 10 percent – right where it has been for the past 24 months.”

    Concluding his letter to Reid, Robinson calls for more “agreements to schedule multiple nominees for votes on the same day at regular intervals throughout the remainder of this session.”

    For more information on judicial vacancies and the status of nominations, see JudicialNominations.org