FirePjax wrote:JohnStarksTheDunk wrote:FirePjax wrote: i was merely giving my opinion on why merrick garland was nominated.
Garland was nominated primarily as a f*ck you to the Republican Congress. He was basically saying "See? I nominated someone non-controversial, whose qualifications cannot be questioned, and you still won't consider it." The irony is that they may end up trying to confirm him anyway, knowing that Obama could withdraw the nomination so Hillary can choose someone more left-leaning.FirePjax wrote:Congress didnt vote on him because scallia died during election season while obama was a lame duck and congress felt the voters should have a say in the matter. That and obama already got two justices confirmed. I lean right, but i certainly dont want a conservate activist judge. Give me a constitutionalist all day every day.
These are the reasons they gave, but we all know that's not why. First of all, "lame duck" generally refers to a politician whose successor has already been chosen. Obama nominated Garland in March, which is 8 months before the election and 10 months before he will leave office. The fact that he already chose two justices is meaningless. It's his job as president, and voters DID have a say in the matter, when they elected him to office -- TWICE.
I think you're parsing the term lame duck. The fact of the matter is obama is on way out and theres no mandate for congress to vote on whomever he nominates in any sort of timely fashion. And 8 months before the election is election season. Obama has gotten most of the major legislation he wannted as president passed, saying that congress has obstructed his entire agenda is simply a false narrative.
I wasn't intending to make a larger point about his entire agenda being obstructed. I was merely stating that on this issue, the "lame duck" and "voters should have a say" arguments are just excuses, and poor ones at that. There's no point in having a 4-year term if the final year of that term somehow doesn't count. By a similar rationale, Obama was a lame duck as soon as he was re-elected, since he can't run for a third term. The man was chosen, by voters, to be our president and carry out the duties of office. Among those duties is nominating justices when there is a vacancy and there is no quota on the number of appointments he is allowed to make. If all justices die in some freak accident, it's his job to make 9 nominations. If no vacancies are open during his term, he makes none.
Again, these are just excuses for what you yourself hinted at in your post -- they wanted to wait. We know why they wanted to wait, and it has nothing to do with whether or not Obama has the right to nominate anyone. They were hoping that a Republican would win in November and then be able to choose a conservative judge. If Obama withdraws Garland's nomination and Hillary wins, they are going to wish they had voted on Garland.














