The Constitution and Roland Burris
Breaking News – OUR LONG NATIONAL NIGHTMARE IS OVER:
USA Today relates that Harry Reid and the Senate Democrats have, predictably, caved:
Senate Democrats will allow Roland Burris to take the seat vacated by President-elect Barack Obama, the Associated Press reports.
this has been an Emptywheel Breaking News Update. Now back to your previously scheduled programming, er post, which describes exactly why Reid, Obama and the Senate Dems have engaged in one of the worst opening acts for an incoming US Congress ever. Fools on the Hill they are.
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Roland Burris went to the hill in Washington DC Tuesday to claim the Senate seat he has been appointed to; but, as Jane Hamsher reports:
The Secretary of the Senate turned Burris away.
Chris Cilizza is on my teevee saying "everything in the Senate is like high school."
No kidding. The optics of this are just awful.
Harry Reid and Senate Democrats, not to mention Barack Obama, have indeed ginned up an extremely ugly mess with their anti-Burris, at all cost, stance; but, as I have been pointing out from the start (see here and here), their little passion play is also unconstitutional. Preeminent Constitutional scholars Bruce Fein and Erwin Chemerinsky agree.
Many people have argued that the Constitution, specifically Article I Section 5, gives Reid, Obama and the Senate Dems the leeway they need to exclude Burris. Not so fast says Fein:
In Powell v. McCormack (1969), the United States Supreme Court held that under Article 1, section 5, "in judging the qualifications of its members, Congress is limited to the standing qualifications [age, citizenship and residency] prescribed in the Constitution." The court made no distinction between representatives and senators, or between elected or appointed members of Congress. Speaking for the court, Chief Justice Earl Warren (whom President-elect Barack Obama admires) amplified that James Madison, father of the Constitution, and Alexander Hamilton in the Federalist Papers, were emphatic that Congress could not erect qualifications beyond the constitutional floor. Madison argued at the Constitutional Convention that it would be "an improper and dangerous power in the Legislature. The qualifications of electors and elected were fundamental articles in a Republican Gov’t and ought to be fixed by the Constitution. If the Legislature could regulate those of either, it can by degrees subvert the Constitution." Hamilton echoed: "The qualifications of the persons who may choose or be chosen … are defined and fixed in the Constitution, and are unalterable by the legislature."
I know nothing of Roland Burris, in fact had never heard of him prior to this affair. I wish the vacancy of Illinois’ junior Senate seat could have been resolved much more cleanly, but Fein, and the authorities he cites, are dead on correct.
Oh, and Bruce has a bit to say about Harry Reid’s charade Tuesday morning wherein he had the Secretary of the Senate deny Burris’ credentials:
Democrats plan to exclude Mr. Burris by enforcing a rule requiring that credentials presented by incoming senators be countersigned by both a state’s governor and secretary of state. The rule, however, is unconstitutional as applied to senators from states that do not require countersignatures. The Illinois secretary, Jesse White, has asserted that he will not sign Mr. Burris’ documents, but it is unclear whether Illinois law requires that endorsement or whether it may be arbitrarily withheld – questions currently before the Illinois Supreme Court.
If the countersignature strategy fails, Democrats plan to raise an objection to Mr. Burris’ swearing in on the Senate floor and have his qualifications referred to the Rules Committee for up to 90 days. Democrats hope Mr. Blagojevich would have then been replaced by Mr. Quinn, who would be expected to revoke Mr. Burris’ appointment.
Neither of these maneuvers to block Mr. Burris’ appointment enjoys a crumb of legal constitutional standing.
Professor Erwin Chemerinsky, dean of the University of California Irvine Law School, concurs in every aspect of Fein’s analysis (as well as mine) and states:
The problem here is that Burris unquestionably was lawfully selected. According to the 17th Amendment, "When vacancies happen in the representation of any state in the Senate, the executive authority of such state shall issue writs of election to fill such vacancies." Illinois law gives this power to the state governor, and that is Blagojevich until he is impeached and found guilty.
Allowing the Senate to exclude Burris on any except the narrowest of grounds would create a dangerous precedent. It could open the door to the Senate or the House overturning the will of the people and excluding representatives under one or another pretext. If Burris — whose appointment meets the legal test, no matter what you think of Blagojevich — is not seated, other properly elected (or appointed) representatives also are at risk.
The Supreme Court’s conclusion could not be clearer or more on point: "In short, both the intention of the framers, to the extent that it can be determined, and an examination of basic principles of our democratic system persuade us that the Constitution does not vest in the Congress a discretionary power to deny membership by a majority vote."
Again, it may be uncomfortable, but this is exactly right. Has the irrefutable logic of the full panoply of legal authorities started to sink in to the high and mighty Democratic Senators who have feigned such outrage (shock I tell you, shock) at the thought of kindly 71 year old Roland Burris actually sitting with them in the august trappings of the ultimate club? At first blush, it appears that it may have. From the New York Times:
Mr. Burris, who was rebuffed by the Senate clerk earlier in the day, gained the support of Senator Dianne Feinstein of California, the chairman of the Rules Committee, who broke with many of her Democratic colleagues and said that Mr. Burris should be seated despite having been appointed by Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich, who is facing corruption charges.
Regardless of the charges against him, the governor still has the right to fill the Senate vacancy, Ms. Feinstein said, and keeping Mr. Burris from taking his seat could have implications for appointments by other governors.
Now, of course, it is pretty good odds that Dianne Feinstein’s sudden conversion to the Burris point of view (she was one of the fifty original signatories on Reid’s initial anti-Roland Burris letter) is just catty payback to Obama for snubbing her on the Leon Panetta CIA Director appointment heads up, but it is what it is. In a hilarious sidelight, the Times gave an indelible example of the perils of stripping down your reporting and research staff to cut costs when they reported:
Ms. Feinstein’s support is important because her committee has a say in whether Mr. Burris is qualified to serve.
Ahem, crack NYT reporters Carl Hulse and David Stout might want to take a look at the new configuration for the Senate for the 111th Congress that has Senator Feinstein as chair of the Senate Select Intelligence Committee, not the Rules Committee, her former post and which would have been critically involved in potential Burris fights carried on by Harry Reid. The Intel Committee, not so much. Nice angle while it lasted I guess, eh boys?
Back to the point, however, it is not just Constitutional scholars backing up the legitimacy of Burris’ appointment from the outside, he has one inside, on his legal team, too. Former Baltimore Mayor, Rhodes Scholar and current Provost and Dean of Howard University Law School Kurt Schmoke. Kurt is one tenacious and brilliant advocate, and is representing Roland Burris. Schmoke and Burris’ other lead attorney, Tim Wright, appeared Tuesday on MSNBC’s Hardball and made it quite clear that Burris will not back down and will not be intimidated by Harry Reid, Obama and the rest of the politically self serving Democratic Senators. The Burris team knows they have the legal and Constitutional arguments in their favor and they appear ready to back up their claims.
Irrespective of what one thinks of Mr. Burris, the more important principle by far is adherence to the letter and intent of the Constitution, as well as deference to the individual states’, in this case Illinois, right to determine their own succession. As Fein notes:
The Senate leadership – both Majority Leader Harry Reid, Nevada Democrat, and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, Kentucky Republican – are committed to flouting their constitutional obligation to seat Sen.-designate Burris. President-elect Obama, a former professor of constitutional law at the University of Chicago, concurs in their lawlessness. Political expediency is their common North Star.
…
Neither of these maneuvers to block Mr. Burris’ appointment enjoys a crumb of legal constitutional standing. That Mr. Blagojevich was under a dark criminal and impeachment cloud when he elevated Mr. Burris is beside the point. President William Jefferson Clinton did not forfeit his power to appoint, sign legislation or negotiate treaties during his impeachment ordeal. And Democrats are not questioning Mr. Blagojevich’s general authority to discharge his gubernatorial responsibilities until or unless he is impeached, convicted and removed from office. Mr. Burris’ appointment has been made a lone exception for partisan political reasons, simpliciter. (emphasis added)
The extra-constitutional stance of Reid, Obama and the Senate Dems, out of sheer political expediency, sets a horrible standard, ripe for future abuse and mischief. Erwin Chemerinsky explains why:
Allowing the Senate to exclude Burris on any except the narrowest of grounds would create a dangerous precedent. It could open the door to the Senate or the House overturning the will of the people and excluding representatives under one or another pretext. If Burris — whose appointment meets the legal test, no matter what you think of Blagojevich — is not seated, other properly elected (or appointed) representatives also are at risk.
…
But the taint of Blagojevich’s alleged crimes does not justify ignoring the Constitution. For the last eight years, the Bush administration has ignored or twisted the Constitution to serve what it believed were higher ends. It would be an enormous mistake, as a new administration prepares to take charge, for Democrats to send the Senate down that same path. (emphasis added)
Once again, as painful as it may be, the Constitutional experts have hit the nail on the head here: Roland Burris and his esteemed legal team are correct; Burris is entitled to his seat in the United States Senate. On a positive note, with Inhofe, Cornyn and Kyl still around, Roland Burris will be far from the worse the Senate has to offer; and, unlike his new friend Dianne Feinstein, he hasn’t personally underwritten the evisceration of the Fourth Amendment and establishment of a US torture regime. So he’s got that going for him.
BREAKING UPDATE – JESSE WHITE CONFIRMS SCHOLARS, SAYS HAS BEEN USED BY REID
From WGN in Chicago Breaking News Desk:
Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White said this morning he has been made "the fall guy" by the U.S. Senate, which he said is using him as an excuse not to seat Roland Burris.
"They could have seated him without my signature; my signature is not required," he told WGN-720AM’s John Williams.
The Senate barrred Burris Tuesday, saying he lacked proper credentials in that his appointment was not signed by White.But White said today that "my signature is mostly ceremonial, rather than a point of law."
"They played a little bit of a game with him [Burris] yesterday," he added.
Asked by Williams if he had been made "the fall guy," White responded: "You’re absolutely correct."
(For the full interview (audio), click here.)
White said he had pledged, shortly after Gov. Rod Blagojevich was accused of trying to make a deal for his appointment to the Senate seat, not to sign off on anyone selected by Blagojevich. And he said he will continue to honor that pledge unless ordered otherwise by a court.
Yet at the same time he said he thought Burris should be admitted to the Senate and said he had the highest possible regard for him. He predicted Burris eventually will be seated.
If that is not about the last nail in the coffin of political opportunist shame for Harry Reid, the self important elitist Senate Democrats and, maybe worst of all, supposed Constitutional authority President-Elect Barack Obama, it is hard to imagine what would be. Real men of political genius.
I long for the day when I can be proud of the Democratic leadership of Congress. Now, not so much. In fact, not so much for at least 2 years.
Bob in HI
Reid is, simply, a loon.
Why he would ever decide to make this stand, and fight this fight, is entirely beyond me. But today, the optics were terrible. And by optics, I mean this: the televised-for-all-America sight of an African-American turned away under the direction of an all-white Senate and its Majority Leader, a convert to a religion that would not have admitted Mr Burris to its membership in our lifetimes.
Horrible.
Harry Reid may be many things, but one thing I am sure he is not: working for the betterment of the Democratic party. No one will ever convince me of that after today. Never.
Reid’s Meet The Press appearance this past Sunday makes the grade for “criminally contemptuous of cogent discourse.”
Astonishing.
This is just a soap opera ginned up to keep the heat off Obama about appointments and the transition. This fluff gives them some breathing room.
Good post bmaz.
I saw on local Chicago TV today a report that Harry Reid might be open to negotiating to seat Roland Burris if he pledges not to run in 2010. My first thought was either Burris is entitled to be seated or not, there’s nothing to negotiate. Harry Reid is really covering himself with the opposite of glory here. It’s as pathetic as it is wrong.
they’re on crack? (nice catch b)
A couple observations…
a) those 2 events conflate very different underlying circumstances: Blogo & corruption, Bill & cigar-abuse
b) the law can be manipulated to entirely ignore underlying intent/principle: in Fein’s example Blogo up to his ass in corruption, Bill’s “impeachment” involved none… rather an entirely politically motivated circus act. By law there’s parallels, in reality not some much (IMO).
c) Oh boy!!!… we’re talking about Monica again.
I sure agree w/point b). I also cringe @ BO being contextualized by a)… it’s demoralizing.
…
Slightly OT: I have close friends who took positions in Diane Denish’s (eg: Bill Richardson’s successor, until Sunday, as NM gov) transition team & admin, a couple who left good jobs & now left in the lurch. Everything they tell me says Richardson’s problems are serious. They’re also saying Richardson was less than forthcoming about all this… there is some real friction both here (Santa Fe, NM capital) & w/BO.
All of which reinforces my own sentiment… eg. Obama’s change that morphed into deja-vu is going to kick his ass, both in recurring circumstances like Richardson and as retro dems re-implement recycled policy to current world realities that are vastly different than even 8 yrs ago.
BO’s utterly abdicated his opportunity to define policy, as response to circumstances, in a laser beam focused fashion. Instead, mostly a lot of warm fuzzy PR. It’s produces some nice numbers now, but it’s a damn unsteady foundation that can go up in smoke in blink of an eye.
I abhor repubs/MSM who will go full throttle to dismember Obama, as they’ve demonstrated going back to Newt’s speakership that is their fundamental skill. In fact w/knee-capping as their primary endeavor & used as smokescreen to obscure their massive malfeasance, it is a reasonably accurate picture of mechanisms that’s led US to brink of ruin.
Yet given optimal environment to really change things… to discredit what deserves to be discredited in a stake-in-the-heart fashion for the good of everybody, the head of our new progressive beast in knee deep in quicksand… almost like they instinctively walked right into it.
I think BO has put himself in position making him vulnerable to just this stuff (as Kerry did in ‘04 in so many ways). More & more, dem vs. repub game making it harder to pick sides. There’s too much that’s too broken, and capable mechanics seem unavailable.
To me, BO looking more & more like classic case of new wine in old wine skins… kind’a like the papal model. I’m sure willing to be surprised, but right now I’m expecting a lot of benedictions and sacraments, but not so much enlightened change.
Just a lot of Holy Water.
i respectfully disagree, jd.
oh, on the richardson appointment, that was a faux pas, and shame on obama for trusting him.
but as for obama’s ‘failure’ to come through for progressives in this “optimal environment for change,” what planet are you living on?
sure, the voters have spoken (and believe me, the numbers we’ve seen only tell half the story; the election was as rigged as ever, just to keep the mandate under control), but have you not noticed that this no longer drives politics – or power – in this country?
there remain the formidable media powers to contend with, which – in case you haven’t noticed this, either – remain under strong rightwing control. and this is not limited to the MSM; never underestimate the power of the drudgerushsavagecoulterborehannitybeckoreilly faction (who are just tools of the rightwing power core).
oh, sure, msnbc now allows olbermann and maddow to rant a couple hours a weeknight, but notice that nbc was forced to back down on coulter’s cancellation. and that woman is as purely evil as anything going, and we’re still subjected to her bile?
11/4 was not a magic moment when everything changed, nor was it a moment that placed obama automatically in a position where he could just magically change everything. do forgive me, but to promote that fantasy is as damaging as all the crap the rightwingnuts spew, mainly because it’s so damn false and misleading and misses the important point that the mess we’re in is very seriously DEEP and we need to move very very carefully.
i give obama a lot of credit for this piece of things. he is not stupid and he’s not a fool. he has remarkable scope and capacity for keeping the very big picture in view at all times. he’s extremely skilled at knowing how to pick his battles, and just as skilled at recognizing when it’s best to drop a battle in order to keep your eye on the war.
obama has been stunning in his ability to keep his controversial ideas to himself in order to move forward by gathering absolutely as many numbers toward him in the early romance in order to make the most complete and successful seduction. he seems to know that he’ll be far better able to do what’s necessary if he has more of the country on board; he does not want to win by fighting, as he made abundantly clear in both the primary and campaign seasons. he has no apparent interest in moving into ‘power’ and just wielding it like a ‘lesson’ in constitutional law. there’s a part of me that would find some comfort in that, but it’s the part of me that is lazy and would like a paternal king to take care of things the way “I” want them to be done. and pass the bonbons. trouble is, that’s a monarchy and not a democracy.
obama knows that he’ll be most successful in moving the country toward progressive solutions by simply setting up the scenario as “we’re all in this together, so let’s get to work” instead of dictating from on high. sure, you and i know what’s “right” and so on, but in case you haven’t noticed, there are sizable numbers out there who don’t agree. and way too many of them have a voice in the media.
I didn’t use term “progressives”.
I’ve said my piece elsewhere on this, but briefly:
* by “optimal environment for change” I mean he was elected in an environment where large majorities reject foreign policy, especially econ, and just about everything else BushCo has mustered. Yet, the nuts and bolts of how we got from W’s 1st inauguration in an environment of plenty to cusp of econ ruin are largely misunderstood by general public.
Just ask a bunch of ‘em if they now what a CDO is… CDS? Ask ‘em % of US GDP in financials now as opposed to 8 yrs ago, and what this means for economy? Or 2nd’ary ed… what’s rate of graduates now as opposed to then? And how does that compare to rest of emerged world?
Ask ‘em what economic drivers we have… or health of $USD. Or balance of payments. Or difference in functioning of US institutions now as opposed to then.
Or maybe my favorite, ask em to explain functioning of “free market” during the Bush years…
The reason for “optimal environment for change” is most US citizens understand none of this… none of it. All they know is their jobs/earning is disappearing, as is their savings.
As it is now, MSM/conservative media and generally viewed pundocracy has allready filled in the void w/bullshit. We’re on crusp of economic ruin… WS, the essence of conservatives “free market” religion has chewed up and disappeared everything. Literally, everything. They’ve taken all our savings, investment, work product… and turned it into junk.
Yet conservative dominated commentary is warning about “socialism”, and worried about “nationalizing banks”.
All this, substantial iconic metaphors re-seeded in public, and entirely vapid. Yet all of it constructed to effectually barrier real change… barriers that BO will have to contend with. And barriers that needn’t be there had he layed things out… cause and affect, to a very eager public.
And I haven’t even touched on mid-east policy yet… which given current GAZA mess, looks to me like exactly the same thing: entire mass of US pundocracy in waiting to crucify him for slightest criticism of Israel.
And in just these 2 domains, people he’s chosen have shown no proclivity for anything I’d consider change, rather mostly folks who’ve contributed to current breakdowns.
So anyway, I’ve sure been living on this planet… I can tell you that. My own opinion is most of US public has their heads filled w/illusory crap fed ‘em for years, with very little cognizance (if any) of dire circumstances we are in.
Well, I really do hope you’re right… I really do. From what I’ve seen to date, however, my own eyes tell me otherwise. And my eyes have been pretty damn right on for a while now.
We’ll see.
The precedent could bite them very quickly, indeed. With the elections board certification of Franken, Pawlenty now is refusing to sign the certification. While Coleman’s contest is wending its way through the courts, that is legally justified. But what if Pawlenty still won’t sign even after the courts throw out the challenge? At that point, Reid would be forced not to seat Franken for the very reasons he wouldn’t seat Burris. Don’t think for a moment that the Republicans won’t try this.
Teddy @2: I think Reid (and the other Democrats) is operating true to his form–out of fear of what those nasty Republicans will call him. He probably is thinking that if he seated Burris, then the Republicans would blame him as part of the overall mess of corruption surrounding Blago. Of course, as pointed out by bmaz and the other Constitutional scholars, Reid is instead creating his own cloud of corruption entirely separate from Blago’s. Just brilliant.
bmaz, thanks for this. it puts all the constitutional ducks in a row. it seems pretty clear that reid’s miscalled this one, i suspect because he’s got his eye on the electability issues as much if not more than any offenses to obama. too many complex issues to be juggling when the job should be so much more straightforward.
i still do not blame reid his outrage, given that it is unequivocally clear that, no matter blago’s legal rights, he is manipulating the very system you’re defending in order to stick it to obama and the dems. this is NOT the “intent” of that law, and flies in the face of what should be considered constitutional. still, reid could and should have simply stated these points, however firmly and assertively as he wanted, and moved forward with things.
Good grief (apologies to Charlie Brown), are you still trying to defend Reid? Did you listen to his delivery of his speech yesterday on CSPAN? Some decent words, but incredibly week delivery. Peter’s Principle arrived for him the day he was sworn in in the Senate.
“weak” vice “week”. Too bad Spell check can’t catch all the idiosyncrasies of the English language and it’s sometimes less than perfect practitioners.
Funny to read a thread that includes both “crack” and “Kurt Schmoke.” I worked for Schmoke when I was in grad school. He really was brilliant, but made one of the fatal mistakes in American politics: he suggested that we should talk about decriminalization of drug use. Buh bye.
THE FOLLOWING HAS JUST BEEN ADDED TO THE MAIN POST AS AN UPDATE:
BREAKING UPDATE – JESSE WHITE CONFIRMS SCHOLARS, SAYS HAS BEEN USED BY REID
From WGN in Chicago Breaking News Desk:
If that is not about the last nail in the coffin of political opportunist shame for Harry Reid, the self important elitist Senate Democrats and, maybe worst of all, supposed Constitutional authority President-Elect Barack Obama, it is hard to imagine what would be. Real men of political genius.
all-white Senate
Inouye isn’t, and Akaka isn’t. Admittedly this took me 24 hours to remember the last time this phrase came up. Menendez may also be nonwhite.
The phrases relied on in the post have to do with election and not appointment. If the Senate had said, “We are going to kick this to Rules and see what comes out in the Blagojevich process for the next 90 days so that it is pellucid that this can, or cannot, be considered an honest appointment,” they would look more grave and serious. The issue in the Powell case became assuming a new qualification because the House did not look into the circumstances of the election, so it had to be assumed to be a fair election. The House did not assume its responsibility to be the judge of the election. I would probably be better off actually reading the opinion.
OK, then why don’t you.
I don’t know what kicking the can down the road 90 days accomplishes. You can’t unring a bell and Blago already appointed Burris. If Burris’s appointment is proper today, wouldn’t it still be legal after Blago is impeached? I don’t get why everybody (Reid, Obama) came out against seating Burris when it seems like a really bad precedent and is a shaky legal position to boot. Blago called their bluff and now they lose. Next time boys, play better poker.
Great post bmaz thanks. I agree with you and the Constitutional scholars on this. However I do have one small, largely beside the point comment to make, and that is your application of the term “kindly” to Burris. Just because a guy is 71, he doesn’t suddenly become kindly. He knowingly pressed for the prosecution and execution of an innocent man while he was AG in the hopes of bolstering his run for governor (per ProPublica). Burris may be many things, but kindly is not one.
i don’t know about this constitutional issue and the senate,
but i do know there are still 14 days left for senators to sing several more refrains of “We Don’t Need No Constitution” –
as several OFD’s (”old-fart-democrat”) have done for the past eight years, at times singing as loudly as any republican.
what i do know is that senator reid is helping roland burris build name recognition by the hour back home in illinois.
i have a feeling reid better get used to burris; gubernatorial scoundrels like blogojavitch aren’t always unloved by voters*.
*ref. governor edwin edwards.
Ahhh. Looks like someone threw Sen. Feinstein a bone on Burris.
Nice post bmaz. To be as fair as I can be, Tribe has come out with a fainthearted attempt to advocate for Obama and Reid but his piece really brings to mind that farside strip, where in the series of complex equations someone sticks in “then a miracle happens” and continues with the equations.
The 17th amendment is just as much a part of the Constitution as Article I, Section 5 and it pretty much rests the determinative powers for how to handle a vacancy in the States and IL’s legislature, following in Reid’s and Pelosi’s footsteps with Bush, chose to “not act” even though they had time to act before he made the appointment.
And IL is entitled to be represented by two Senators as well.
Nothing in the 17th speaks to a requirement of a chaste Gov or a Secretary of State’s certification and Powell pretty much disabuses the Senate of the notion that it can go around adding requirments that are not in the Constitution.
No one has indicated that Burris bought his appointment – on that front, it’s good that he’s been subpoenaed by the State legislature, bad that they didn’t call him in before these days of theatre.
There is also nothing that allows the Senate to delegate to its Secretary the Senatorial duty to judge the returns.
Chaste… perfect…
I like Durbin, a lot. How will he come out of this mess?
None of these guys is perfect, but I think Durbin would be a major upgrade. At least the man can talk.
A pro-Burris CQ columnist
Kicking the can down the road 90 days lets Blagojevich be impeached! Burris may then sue for “his” seat vs. the new candidate, or Quinn can reappoint him. This takes the responsibility away from the Senate somewhat.
Naah, people in IL already knew who Burris was. He had statewide office for 10 years.
Re: Feinstein, she is an unfailing, unflagging disappointment, but IMO she must have some of the best staff around. While she bounces back and forth between seeming disinterest, clueless or just in bed with the boys like Hayden; when she’s reading off the questions her staff prepares they are almost always some damn good questions, albeit that she then does nothing with the answers.
So I think she’s probably had a decent briefing on Burris from her crew. Yeah, it is a chance to take a shot back at Obama and Reid and yeah, just like she should have kept the Panetta stuff to herself and rained down lava on Obama and Biden in PRIVATE and made them squirm and make it up to her in PRIVATE, she probably should have kept it to herself on Burris (and she looks ridiculous, having signed off on the letter and now making that statement), but both those yeahs aside, on Burris I think she’s right.
AND YET ANOTHER BREAKING NEWS UPDATE:
Breaking News – OUR LONG NATIONAL NIGHTMARE IS OVER:
USA Today relates that Harry Reid and the Senate Democrats have, predictably, caved:
this has been an Emptywheel Breaking News Update. Now back to your previously scheduled programming, er post, which describes exactly why Reid, Obama and the Senate Dems have engaged in one of the worst opening acts for an incoming US Congress ever. Fools on the Hill they are.
Ooh! I predict a post with that title and the appropriate Youtube musical accompaniment…
Besides the Shock and Awe of Reid’s incompetence and his seeming inability to communicate…anything, is his infuriating disregard for the Constituion. These guys view the constitution as a quaint museum-piece. They’ve shown this time and time again (FISA, Torture, Habeas). Outraged and Disgusted.
It gets better bmaz.
TPM is reporting that Reid’s spokesperson is saying that the reports are wrong and there is no deal.
jeemuhnee
Arrrgh. These are the dumbest fucking bunnies in the rabbit hole. I am speechless. Harry Reid and his similarly mentally diminutive sidekick Durbin are still sticking with their precious little”Senate Rule” BS. They are scrambling so hard to save face that it is a wonder they can breathe at the same time
This is fucking pathetic.
I really do believe Durbin deserves some slack?
There isn’t a deep bench in the Senate Caucus to replace Reid either. I was looking at seniority and who might have a snowball’s chance of being Majority Leader other than the present leadership and came up with Carl Levin, Kent Conrad, and Claire McCaskill (way too junior but maybe she could stitch together all the junior Sens + some old-time women Sens).
Schumer would suck worse than Reid. The movie line “too busy keeping the job to do the job” comes to mind.
So what was this Bush-like petulant display of ignorance and disdain for the law meant to achieve. A distancing of Obama from the Chicago-style politics he’s maneuvered so successfully? Distancing him from an apparently widely flawed governor, from which there is a wide variety to choose from, starting with Mississippi’s Haley Barbour, who makes Illinois’ Blagojevich look like a piker? Or was it so that the senate Dems could pretend that they are successfully re-establishing ethics [sic] and the fool of law [sic] in Washington?
Sadly for all those who oppose the Bush administration’s riotous incompetence and their stealing of everything not nailed down in Washington, Reid and his cohort look more like comic relief. Their more well-informed staffs must be loosening tight collars and stretching their sweaty armpits, hoping this isn’t the start of something big – and far more stupid. Like a policy of unthinking “bipartisanship” in which only the Dems compromise on what they want and the country so badly needs.
Why is it so difficult for a Senator to figure out the rules when a bunch of DFH bloggers had it pegged within 48 hours of Burris being appointed?
Oh, and Harry: You still have to deal with the GOP using your tactics to avoid seating Frankin. Enjoy!
Boxturtle (Wonders if Harry’s family laughs at him when hes this stupid)
Meanwhile, Reid is trying to make people stop picking on Stevens and says he’s suffered enough.
Also, a Bagram detainee case is going to be heard:
http://washingtonindependent.c…..-detainees
Gov is arguing that no one can look at the detainees they have at Bagram, bc unlike GITMO it is near a battlefield, therefor, ipso facto, abracadabra, and hokey pokey – all detainees are proper battlefield detainees and can be held forever.
The detainee in question (as are a great many of the detainees at Bagram) was actually kidnapped from another country far away from the Afghan war and then shipped by the US to Bagram.
32 – Here’s all I can figure. They may want to have him appear before the legislature, answer their questions, then see what, if anything, the legislture does. If it doesn’t pass a resolution to bar or doesn’t make any findings of impropriety in the investigation to be appointed, then maybe they think they can collect some tatters and say that they needed to wait to let the IL legislture question Burris, which it has, and since the legislature is not taking any action to block the appointment, they will recognize it.
That does kind of spread the blame around a bit and also give an opportunity for some under oath or penalty questioning of Burris to flesh out a record on whether or not he made improper deals (as if he would admit to them, even under oath, but still…) to get the slot.
They are just stringing it out to try to make themselves look justified in having staked their claim on the Secty of State bullshit. My guess is they reached an agreement with Burris that he was going to be seated, likely even get normal committee assignments etc. if he goes along with this little sideshow with only perfunctory opposition. I think Burris may already have joined the club and this is all for show to help Reid, Durbin and the Senate Dems save face. But it is over.
May be the most pathetic opening act to an inauguration ever.
If it’s heading to the Illinois Supremos, will we have another
Bush v Gore decision, or is it Burris v Blago v Reid v Fitzy?
I like Dick Durbin – he seems smart and very nice. He just never seems to have recovered any political nerve after he got attacked on his statements about GITMO prisoners treatment and being blocked from discussing why he voted against the AUMF for Iraq bc of the Bush/Cheney classification misuses.
He’s made bad political calls here, though. The one I don’t get is Obama. He was teaching Con law??
OT – a very good Oxdown diary here
http://oxdown.firedoglake.com/diary/2840
that ties in the Mayfield case (I missed that Sept ruling for him) with Walker’s cases.
Hey Mary, you will probably like this. Just came out by our fellow torture issue friend Valtin under his real name, Jeff kaye, at AlterNet.
How the U.S. Army’s Field Manual Codified Torture — and Still Does
Did you just “out” a covert operative?
No, Jeff is the one who sent this to me. If you read the article, which is very, very good, you will find this at the end:
Thanks for the link re: Army Field Manual. This subject has my stomach in a roil today. Reading the article I kept seeing in my mind the vision of that lying snake from South Carolina, probably at the Senate hearings that led to the Military Commissions Act. I vividly recall seeing his sneaky eyes darting around as he intoned about how a return to the old Army Field Manual had the best advice on how to treat prisoners humanely in the future, and managing to insert a reference to the new revisions to the Old… Dante must have a ring for people like Lindsey, McCain and the other one that sponsored the law, (and someone in this crowd will no doubt point out which ring).
Is this Reid caving to Blagojevich a bit of theater, hiding an implied understanding to STFU about ALL the calls he got from Washington about who should replace Obama, in exchange for leniency from Pat Fitzgerald’s replacement as USA? If so, Reid’s a bigger fool than he seems. Blagojevich seems too stupid to keep his side of any bargain and, as Jane says, Reid is such a bad poker player everyone at the table knows his hand better than he does.
Reid is one big reason I could never get excited over the prospect of a 60-vote majority–it would be squandered by Reid.
Seriously–this guy could fuck up an ice-cube tray.
Thanks for mention of
Powell. I still miss him. He did so much for so many and finally got railroaded by Congressional colleagues [dems.]and MSM. Good example of destroying a great man for some imperfections.For a good education, goto Adam Clayton Powell [e.g.Wikipedia]
That’s Powell
At 12:02 I received the following form email from the office of Sn. Harry Reid, no doubt because I made some calls to Reps yesterday about the Berman/Hoyer Military Affairs non-binding [Israel Support/No ceasefire] Resolution and laughed with a few staffers about the Sen. circus:
Dear PALLI,
Yesterday was a terrific day to be a Democrat. We swore in 7 new senators, a true testament to all the hard work you put in to ensure a Democratic victory last November.
We still face huge challenges – a slumping economy, the ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and a looming climate crisis. But looking out over the Senate chamber yesterday, I feel more confident than ever that our new senators – backed by your tireless grassroots support – will be a huge part of turning this country around.
I, for one, am eager to turn the page on the last eight years.
As we welcome these new and vibrant leaders into the Senate, I am reminded of how crucial a role your support for the DSCC played in our stunning victories. Because we could rely on your committed support from the beginning, we were able to recruit terrific candidates like Kay Hagan in North Carolina and Mark Warner in Virginia. Your tireless support for our ongoing field and media campaigns helped us win close races for Mark Begich in Alaska and Jeff Merkley in Oregon.
The DSCC, under the skillful new leadership of Sen. Bob Menendez is already laying the foundation for even more victories in 2010. I know that bringing the change this country needs will take every one of the 59 Democratic seats you have already helped us win, and that if we can win even more in 2 years time, we can help President-elect Obama achieve greater and greater goals.
Thank you once again for everything you have already done to support the DSCC and for everything you will continue to do. We truly owe all of our success to your steadfast dedication.
Sincerely,
Harry Reid
Jeebus fucking crackers on a stick!!
omfgtheunbelievablestupidburns
42 – makes sense
43 – Thanks. Valtin/JK has been tenacious and tough.