Mitch McConnell is blocking dozens of President Obama’s judicial appointments in an attempt to rig the courts.
According to Politico:
The republican-misled Senate is on track this year
to confirm the fewest judges since 1969, a dramatic escalation of the
long-running partisan feud over the ideological makeup of federal
courts.
The standoff, if it continues through the 2016
elections as expected, could diminish the stamp that President Barack
Obama leaves on the judiciary — a less conspicuous but critical part of
his legacy. Practically, the makeup of lower-level courts could directly
affect a number of Obama’s policies expected to face legal challenges
from conservatives.
Republicans appear willing to absorb
criticism that they’re interfering with the prerogative of a president
to pick his nominees in the hopes that the republican cabal can get its own judges
installed in 2017, with one of their own in the White House. In the
meantime, federal courts could be left with dozens of unfilled
vacancies. More than two dozen federal courts have declared “judicial
emergencies” because of excessive caseloads caused by vacancies.
It isn’t a coincidence that Republicans are
challenging nearly everything that President Obama does via executive
action in court while blocking his judicial nominees.
Mitch McConnell and Senate Republicans are abusing
their confirmation power to rig the courts. Their scheme hinges on the
increasingly far-fetched idea that Republicans will take back the White
House in 2016.
What will McConnell do if the Democratic nominee
wins the presidential election? Will they continue to block judicial
appointments for the next four to eight years? As usual, Republicans
have not thought their plan through.
If Democrats take back the Senate majority in 2016,
McConnell and the Republican cabal will regret their plan because Democrats aren’t
going to forget, and payback will be severe.
Senate
Republicans are proving that they have no interest in governing. Their
only concern is preventing President Obama from getting anything done.
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