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You keep dancing around this fact with the "everybody does it" stuff, Marcotte.Well of course I do, Jim. After all, the point I'm countering is Benjamin's claim that this is not precedented and not traditional.
But [Bush] never did it before a hearing was even scheduledAnd that's disgraceful. The spirit of the Recess Appointment is to install a person in an office when the Senate is unavailable to confirm him. The classic example is the country is on the brink of war, and our Ambassador falls ill and needs to be replaced, but the Senate is recessed for the summer. The President needs the power to put someone in place (temporarily) when the Senate doesn't have the chance to hold hearings. The recess appointment was not intended to be used when the Senate fails to confirm, or filibusters the confirmation of, a nominee.
and he certainly never did it when his own party controlled everythingYou're wrong. Warren Bell:
Warren Bell, of California, was nominated June 20, 2006, by President George W. Bush to be a Member of the Board of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting for the remainder of a six-year term expiring January 31, 2012. [1] Bells' nomination was sent June 26, 2006, to the U.S. Senate for confirmation. . . . Bell's confirmation got stopped in the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation by members of that committee. On December 20, 2006, Bush appointed Bell as a recess nominee, bypassing Senate confirmation proceedings until possibly late 2007.
Would he have been confirmed? We'll never know now, will we?Well, it's certainly possible that they could get the 41 votes need to at least filibuster him. But as I alluded to just above, using the recess appointment to bypass a filibuster is using one stupid rule to bypass another, more stupid, rule. And the Republicans made it clear that their primary goal was to use the hearings as "a way to attack the Affordable Care Act." My assessment of this situation is that Obama (and Rahm) made a calculated political move to deny the Republicans the chance to score political points, and so the Right is trying to get everyone up in arms about his political tactic.
So why not call the GOP's foolish bluff and use the hearings for Berwick as a way to help remind voters why they should be so thankful?Why take the risk that the GOP might score some points? Obama is smart enough to realize how good the Republicans are at shaping the story and staying on message. We would see 20 talking heads a night, all repeating the same talking points. As good a politician as he is (and I mean that in the nastiest way possible ;), Obama isn't quite equal to the Right in getting the Democrats to espouse a consistent story.
Comment by Rick Henderson on July 13, 2010 at 4:23pm
Comment by Rick Henderson on July 13, 2010 at 2:32pm
Comment by Rick Henderson on July 13, 2010 at 2:31pm
Comment by Rick Henderson on July 13, 2010 at 12:16pm © 2013 Created by Freedom Pub.
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