Republicans seek to obstruct Obama
executive, judicial nominees
Nan Aron |
President,
Alliance for Justice
With battles ahead over President Obama’s choices for Secretary of Labor, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Director and the National Labor Relations Board, and fights over the nation’s second most important court likely to follow, democracy itself is on trial in the United States Senate.
If Republicans persist in preventing yes-or-no votes on President Obama’s executive and judicial nominees, the only recourse will be for the majority to revisit Senate rules reform and put an end once and for all to Republican efforts to subvert the Senate’s constitutional obligation to provide advice and consent.
Richard Cordray |
Republicans have been equally obstinate about the president’s nominees for the National Labor Relations Board, the independent agency charged with protecting the rights of workers – and a hearing on those nominees just last week showed no thaw in that obstinacy. That’s why Cordray and some of the current NLRB members had to be named through recess appointments.
But three Republican-appointed judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, breaking with decades of precedent, decided that the President doesn’t have the power to make such recess appointments. The decision is part of a pattern in which the D.C. Circuit consistently sides with corporate interests over workers and consumers – blocking Wall Street reforms, undermining labor rights, and rolling back environmental protections.
So it’s no wonder that Republicans also are trying to prevent the president from restoring balance to the D.C. Circuit, which is currently dominated by Republican appointees. The latest underhanded tactic from Republican Senators amounts to a ‘pre-emptive filibuster’ – an effort to eliminate three of the four vacant judgeships on the court in order to prevent President Obama from filling those seats.
Tom Perez |
Unfortunately, these two outstanding nominees’ ordeals may be far from over. All of the Republicans on both committees voted no. As AFJ has pointed out before, to Senate Republicans, one of the only things as bad as a Labor Secretary who will protect working people is an Environmental Protection Agency administrator who will protect the environment.
A solid majority of voters twice has made clear that they support the approach to government taken by Barack Obama. In response, the Republican strategy boils down to rule-or-ruin. They have shown themselves prepared to paralyze government, no matter what the cost to the American people. In the days ahead, we will see if the Senate is ready to break free of this paralysis.
2 comments:
The cowardice and outright prevention of government by refusing to even allow a vote on these nominations is a disgrace! The mutation of the GOP since the days of Goldwater and those few who cared about our country has turned our democracy into a farce.
These republican obstructionists care not one iota for this country or where we stand compared to the rest of the civilized world. Our growth and achievements as a world leader have been stunted by these greedy politicians who care only about themselves and the power they can accumulate. They ought to be ashamed and embarrassed - but they're not and that's not good for this country, not one bit!
We have to keep pushing for him to act, not just talk. And the action has to cover filibusters on legislation, not just appointments. If Reid really wanted this to happen, it would. Sign here to pledge to keep the pressure on Reid.
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What if we hurt people with our spending choices? We do that every time we make a purchase. We always pick one competitor over another. It would be great if we all had the liquidity to create full employment, but we don't. So we have to choose between creating jobs in NV versus creating jobs in CA or NY. So for now, let's pick somewhere else. All of these places could benefit just as much from our tourism dollars.
And I really don't think this will ever come down to really hurting Nevada. If we get enough support on this to make a measurable difference to the NV economy, Reid will act.
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