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Kyl Reverses Himself On Evaluating Judicial Appointments

Jon Kyl (R-AZ) announced his opposition to the confirmation of Judge Sonia Sotmayor for the Supreme Court. Certainly his right to do so. I have argued that the Senate owes the President no deference on judicial appointees. And this is not the first time Kyl blocked a Latino nominated by a Democratic President. Kyl was a part of the GOP cabal that blocked the confirmation of Clinton nominated appeals court judge Richard Paez (Paez was eventually confirmed.) But it is a reversal from Kyl's stated views on the deference due to a President's choice for the Supreme Court. When it was Judge Alito, Kyl was outraged that Democrats would vote no:

Democrat[s] have [engaged in] unprecedented filibusters of qualified nominees to the lower courts and the adoption of a results-oriented confirmation standard for the Supreme Court.

I say to my Democrat colleagues--is this really the path you want to put us on? You have already dramatically increased the chance of future filibusters. Do we really want Senators to vote against any nominee who will not prejudge cases and guarantee results? I know that the most ideological activists on both sides of the spectrum would prefer that path, but do you? Does the Senate? Does the Nation?

As I said, for now this is a Democrat problem. But it is naive to think that, someday, Republicans won't decide that what is good for the goose is good for the gander. And while your ``no'' votes on Judge Alito will not keep him from the Supreme Court, I say to my Democratic friends--what if President Bush had lost the 2004 election but there were 55 Republicans in the Senate? If Republicans today were applying your results-oriented, litmus-test-based standard to a Democrat President's nominees, would it be possible to confirm anybody even vaguely as liberal as Ginsburg or Breyer. If we followed your path, the answer would clearly be ``no.'' This is a terribly dangerous road to travel.

(Emphasis supplied.) Today, Kyl re-takes that road. I hope this signals once and for all the end of Senatorial deference to Presidential judicial appointments.

Speaking for me only

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    Indeed (none / 0) (#1)
    by andgarden on Wed Jul 22, 2009 at 08:56:21 AM EST
    Though I really do wonder what's going to happen the next time there's split control. Obviously, the Democrats would fold immediately were the in the majority, but Republicans might be content to preserve the vacancy forever.

    Graham (none / 0) (#2)
    by lilburro on Wed Jul 22, 2009 at 12:59:56 PM EST
    on the other hand, will vote to confirm.