Weekly Opinion Editorial
REMEMBER
ROBERT BORK!
by Steve Fair
For the next nine months, much will be said and written about
appointments to the Supreme Court.
Already, both political Parties have staked out their positions. President Obama says he has a constitutional
duty to appoint a Justice to replace Antonin Scalia. The Republicans in the U.S. Senate say they
will not approve any appointment or even have a hearing to vote on a nominee
until the next president is inaugurated.
Just hours after Scalia’s body was found, Senate majority leader Mitch
McConnell, (R- KY), said, “The American
people should have a voice in the selection of their next Supreme Court
Justice. Therefore, this vacancy should not be filled until we have a new
president.” In response, President Obama
said, "I am amused when I hear
people who claim to be strict interpreters of the Constitution suddenly reading
into it a whole series of provisions that are not there. I am going to present somebody who
indisputably is qualified for the seat and any fair minded person, even
somebody who disagreed with my politics would say would serve with honor and
integrity on the court."
Former Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton, said McConnell's move was "outrageous." "Elections have consequences," she said. "The president has a responsibility to
nominate a new justice and the Senate has
a responsibility to vote." Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman
Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), indicated he has no plans to start up the confirmation
process on his panel before next year. "This president, above all others, has
made no bones about his goal to use the courts to circumvent Congress and push
through his own agenda," Grassley said. "It only makes sense that we defer to the American people who will
elect a new president to select the next Supreme Court Justice.”
First, SCOTUS vacancies have gone longer than a year in the past. In 1970, Harry Blackmun replaced Abe Fortas
after just over a year. President Tyler
had the most difficult time getting appointments approved by the Senate. One vacancy was open for over two years. The Senate rejected a total of nine of Tyler’s appointments to
the high court. A Supreme Court vacancy
in the final year of a president’s term is pretty rare. Since 1900, it has happened only three
times. LBJ, in 1968 after he announced
he wasn’t running for re-election. Both
of Johnson’s nominations- one for Chief Justice and another for Associate
Justice- were rejected.
Second, elections do have consequences.
Secretary Clinton is absolutely right.
Republicans control the U.S. Senate and can block any nomination made by
President Obama. For years, there was an
unwritten rule that any ‘qualified’ candidate for the high court would be
confirmed. Their ideology and positions
on controversial issues would be secondary to their legal qualifications. But the Democrats changed that in 1987. Judge Robert Bork was an accomplished Circuit
Court judge when President Reagan nominated him to the SCOTUS. Within an hour of the announcement, then
Senator Ted Kennedy, (D- MA) went on television to accuse Bork of envisioning
an America “in which women would be
forced into back-alley abortions, blacks would sit at segregated lunch
counters, rogue police could break down citizens’ doors in midnight raids.” Commercials
were run by the Democrats featuring Gregory Peck as Atticus Finch from To Kill
a Mockingbird attacking Bork’s ideology.
Bork’s nomination was defeated in the Senate 58-42. The dictionary defines “to bork,” as: “to
defame or vilify (a person) systematically, esp. in the mass media, usually
with the aim of preventing his or her appointment to public office.
President Obama has the right to present a SCOTUS nominee to the Senate
and the Senate has the responsibility to the American public to put the process
on hold until after the next president is sworn in. This is not unchartered water. In our nation’s history, appointments to the
high court have been a source of great controversy. Elections do have consequences. When Republicans took control of the Senate
in November 2014, the American people were rejecting the liberal policies of
the Obama administration. Democrats
can’t have it both ways. McConnell and
Grassley are right to wait until the next president is in office to make the
appointment. That means this election
has more consequences than most.
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