Bush Revives Candidacies for 20 Federal Judgeships



 Science > Abortion > Bush Revives Candidacies for 20 Federal Judgeships

LINK TO THIS PAGE  


rating :  0   |  0


  Page 1 of 1
Topic: Science > Abortion
User: "james g. keegan jr."
Date: 16 Feb 2005 06:32:48 PM
Object: Bush Revives Candidacies for 20 Federal Judgeships
Bush Revives Candidacies for 20 Federal Judgeships
By Henry Weinstein
The Los Angeles Times
Tuesday 15 February 2005
Democrats, advocacy groups say some of the judges are extremists.
But plans to block their approval will meet a stronger Senate GOP.
President Bush on Monday renominated 20 candidates for federal
judgeships, including several whose nominations had been blocked during
the last term of Congress by Senate Democrats who branded them as
right-wing ideologues.
The president's action, which made good on a promise announced by
the White House in December to renominate those who had been blocked by
filibusters or whose nominations had not been brought to the floor for
a vote, precipitated a flurry of truculent responses from Democratic
senators, as well as from environmental and civil liberties groups.
"The President is at it again with extremist judges," said Senate
Minority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.). "Last year, the Senate worked to
confirm 204 of the president's judicial nominees and rejected only the
10 most extreme."
C. Boyden Gray, a prominent Republican lawyer who chairs the
Committee for Justice, a group seeking to help Bush's judicial
nominees, countered, "there is nothing extreme" about any of the
renominated judges.
But Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), a member of the Judiciary
Committee, said the judges who were filibustered last year and have
been renominated "are out of the mainstream and will not be confirmed
by the Senate, unless they have drastically modified their views and
ideologies."
Sen. Arlen Specter (R-Pa.), chairman of the Judiciary Committee,
said last week that he thought Schumer might be amenable to one of the
first nominees Specter planned to ask the committee to vote on -
William G. Myers III. Myers, the top lawyer in the Interior Department
during the first two years of the Bush administration, was nominated
for the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, based in Nevada.
Last year, Schumer said Myers, a lobbyist for mining and cattle
interests, had a record that "screams 'passionate activist' and doesn't
so much as whisper 'impartial judge.' "
Schumer's remarks Monday made it clear he had no intention of
changing his mind.
Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa)., however, said Monday that he hoped all
the nominees would get a vote from the full Senate. Senate Democrats
"obstructed the process during the 108th Congress" by using filibusters
to deny "highly qualified judicial nominees a fair up-or-down vote."
Specter issued no statement Monday, but Senate sources said it was
possible that he might call for a committee vote on two nominees -
Myers and William H. Pryor Jr., former Alabama attorney general - as
early as Thursday, when the panel holds its next meeting. After Pryor
was filibustered, Bush named him to the Atlanta-based 11th Circuit
bench as a recess appointment, but that term ended in December.
If Specter seeks a committee vote without further hearings, as he
indicated he might, that could set off the first of what are likely to
be a number of clashes on the nominations. Senate Democrats maintain
that such hearings should be held as part of normal Senate procedure.
Because the Republicans now have 55 of the Senate's 100 members,
their hand is stronger in attempts to break a filibuster. It takes 60
votes in the Senate to cut off debate. Senate Majority leader Bill
Frist (R-Tenn.) has indicated that if Democrats again attempt
filibusters, he might seek a ruling from the Senate that 51 votes, not
60, would be needed to stop a filibuster on a judicial nomination.
Frist was unavailable for comment Monday. In an interview on "Fox
News Sunday," he said he might make such a move because it would
restore a Senate "tradition of 200 years" of "giving advice and
consent" and allowing a vote.
On Monday, Schumer countered that if Frist took such action it
would represent a "nuclear option ... because it will blow up the
Senate. We don't know if Sen. Frist has 51 yes votes, but it would be a
tragedy for the Senate and for the country if he does."
In addition to the Democratic senators, the Alliance for Justice,
People for the American Way, the Human Rights Campaign, the Leadership
Conference on Civil Rights and several environmental and Native
American organizations criticized the renominations.
In addition to Myers and Pryor, other previously filibustered
nominees targeted by critics Monday were California Supreme Court
Justice Janice Rogers Brown, nominated for the District of Columbia
Circuit; Texas Supreme Court Justice Priscilla Richman Owen, nominated
for the New Orleans-based 5th Circuit; and three from Michigan
nominated to the Cincinnati-based 6th Circuit: Richard A. Griffin and
Henry W. Saad, who are state appeals court judges, and U.S. District
Judge David W. McKeague.
Other nominees assailed by critics Monday were former White House
lawyer Brett M. Kavanaugh and Utah attorney Thomas B. Griffith, both
nominated for the District of Columbia Circuit; Defense Department
lawyer William J. Haynes II and U.S. District Judge Terrence W. Boyle,
both nominated for the Richmond, Va.-based 4th Circuit; and Susan B.
Neilson, a Michigan court trial judge tapped for the 6th Circuit.
Haynes has been the subject of considerable criticism for the role
he played as the Pentagon's chief lawyer in formulating administration
policies for detainees after the Sept. 11 attacks. He also oversaw a
group of administration lawyers who prepared a memo on the eve of the
war with Iraq that asserted that the president might not be bound by
anti-torture laws.
The groups criticizing the appeals court nominees did not raise
objections to the eight nominees for federal trial judgeships.
http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/021605Z.shtml
.


  Page 1 of 1


Related Articles
Senate's vote revives overseas abortion issue
Bush is right, Federal Government needs to define marriage
Chief federal judge appointed by Bush too drunk to remember night at strip club
Alan Keyes on Federal Copyright Policy
ROY MOORE IS A SODOMITE FEDERAL AGENT!!!
‘Conservative’ Republicans Add 2.5 Million People To Federal Payroll
2nd Federal Judge: Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act Unconstitutional.
Blacks violated Voting Rights Act, federal judge rules
A new federal move to limit teen abortions
While Federal Judges Approve Cutting The Heads Off Children By Abortion, Congress Considers Ban On What Children Can Eat
Live-Abortion Horrors Lead to Federal Protection of Newborns
Federal tax dollars being used in efforts to prove homosexual gene
Re: Roe Appeal to be Heard by Federal Court
Federal Appeals Court Rejects Demand of "Transsexuals" for Special Rights
What should the federal government spend money on?
 

NEWER

pg.716     pg.544     pg.412     pg.311     pg.234     pg.175     pg.130     pg.96     pg.70     pg.50     pg.35     pg.24     pg.16     pg.10     pg.6     pg.3     pg.1

OLDER