The worst of the Republicans’ bad arguments

I’m on board with the entire Dem strategy when it comes to judicial nominees. I agree with the filibusters, the strategy in dealing with the nuclear option, the attempts at negotiations that aren’t going anywhere, the whole shebang. I do, however, realize that there are semi-legitimate arguments on the other side. I think the Republicans are completely wrong, but I recognize that their case is not straight out of a Twilight Zone episode, like so many GOP arguments these days.

But with fairly justifiable arguments available, it’s sadly predictable that conservatives would cling to a line of reasoning that doesn’t make any sense.

For example, the right-wing Progress for America is planning to spend $1.5 million on television commercials over the next two weeks to help bolster support for the nuclear option. Their principal case: the “crisis” of judicial vacancies.

“Senate Democats have abused the rules and refused to even allow a vote,” says the television ad produced for Progress for America. “So courtrooms sit empty, while thousands of Americans have their cases delayed.”

Apparently, it’s the new line of the day on the right.

“I firmly believe that these tactics have damaged the judicial nomination process to an unacceptable degree, and now it must be corrected,” Sen. Wayne Allard (R-Colo.) said. “It is shameful that the action of a handful of Senators has created a vacancy crisis that threatens the service of the very justice upon which our great nation depends.”

Of all the arguments the right has to offer, this is the dumbest. Indeed, it was a legitimate argument in the late 1990s — when Democrats were using it.

If the right wants to complain about over-use of the filibuster, fine. If they want to note how historically unusual this is, no problem. If they insist the blocked nominees are qualified, I’m appalled, but it’s open for discussion. But to argue that the Senate needs to do away with the filibuster because of court vacancies simply doesn’t reflect reality.

There are 179 seats in the federal appellate court system. Right now, 163 of them are filled. Those 16 empty seats are the lowest number of vacancies in nearly two decades. There is no “vacancy crisis.” Federal appeals courts do not “sit empty.” Maybe Republican focus groups liked this line of reasoning, but it’s just wrong.

As luck would have it, this new GOP argument has everything backwards. When Republican senators were blocking Clinton judicial nominees from receiving up-or-down votes, the vacancy rate was nearing all-time highs. No less than Chief Justice William Rehnquist — hardly a lefty — described the problem as a “crisis” in 1996 and 1997. At the time, Republicans couldn’t care less about Americans having their cases delayed or overburdening other judges. And to borrow Allard’s phrase, they certainly didn’t care that these vacancies might “threaten the service of the very justice upon which our great nation depends.”

Indeed, their plan worked. Clinton’s nominees were blocked, Bush took office, and the Senate began confirming judges right and further right. Empty seats were filled, the vacancy rate shrank, and the crisis ended.

Is it too much to ask that conservatives use their good arguments instead of their dumb ones? Apparently.

The “good arguments” are useless to Republicans because they do not contain words like “crisis”. They have concluded that it is easier to get the results they crave by making rationally unsound but viscerally appealing arguments, further evidence (if it were needed) that Republicans are contemptuous of Americans in general and their own favored constituencies in particular.

  • And our “Liberal” press just can’t seem to find this stuff! This seems like obvious background information when reporting the latest piece of crap the Republicans are spewing. Most of us REMEMBER when they were blocking Clinton’s nominations. I seem to remember that they changed the number of committee members needed to blackball a candidate from two to one in the 90’s. Where is that little beauty hiding out now?

    This isn’t just shading the truth, this is plain bald-faced lying. And nobody besides the left hemisphere of the blogsphere (the logical side), and perhaps the Daily Show, says boo about it. This is like living in a zero star movie on the Sci Fi channel. It’s hard to feel proud of a country that has sunk this low.

    … OK, I feel better. I think I can manage on my own now.

  • When the Clinton nominees were blocked by Republicans, the Republicans were in the majority (in both houses of Congress no less) and thus just nixed them in committee. The Democrats are in the minority and are using the filibuster to block judicial nominees, even though this is an Article 2 matter (a President’s appointive power) and not an Article 1 matter (legislation), and despite the fact that using the filibuster for such purposes is entirely new. Wake up and tell all the facts, not just dopey stuff about how there are only 16 vacancies, blah, blah, blah. Is this all you got?

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