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  1. piggit

    piggit A Fine Wine of a Woman

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    Can you cite this claim, please? I'd really like to see it because I was unable to corroborate that number. Thanks in advance.
     
    • Like Like x 1
    #41
  2. M4MPetCock

    M4MPetCock Porn Star Banned!

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    Well, I had the number right, but my terminology was off a bit. I had said, "Executive orders". The rulings actually covered various scenarios, including executive orders, but also where cases were filed against, and some where the Obama administration filed. But basically, they were "Obama losses" where the decisions were 9-0 against.

    Here's the story on the "unanimous rulings".

    Supreme Court Rules Unanimously Against Obama for 12th and 13th Time Since 2012

    by John Fund June 26, 2014 11:50 AM
     
    • Like Like x 1
    #42
  3. Deleted User kekw

    Deleted User kekw Porn Star Banned!

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    Quality writing at its finest.
     
    1. shootersa
      You can always tell when the peanut realizes he's loosing the argument. He starts insulting people and showing his arrogance.
      Sad, really
       
      shootersa, Mar 20, 2016
    2. Deleted User kekw
      Actually, I'm not insulting anyone except for the writer. I'm not disputing the claims at all, but you have to admit that writing is particularly awful. I'm making an observation.

      You need to back off.
       
      Deleted User kekw, Mar 21, 2016
    3. shootersa
      Back off you say?
      [​IMG]
       
      shootersa, Mar 22, 2016
    4. Deleted User kekw
      You have been on my case recently for no reason. You keep insulting me, but you're awful at it. Give up already.
       
      Deleted User kekw, Mar 22, 2016
    #43
  4. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    I see you are of the opinion that POTUS has all the power, that would be true if this nation was a tyrannical democracy, however, this nation is a Constitutional Republic.

    This nation has a form of government that has checks and balances, and a Constitution, nothing in the Constitution requires the Senate to take up a vote for any of Obama's nominees.
     
    #44
  5. piggit

    piggit A Fine Wine of a Woman

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    Curious ... Factcheck.org had this to say about that. I can't claim to know which is correct, but i would place more faith in Factcheck than the article you shared. I apologize ... I don't know how to make it a hyperlink.


    Presidential Authority Rebuked?

    Goodlatte made the claim that the Supreme Court’s “9-0 decision last week was the 13th time the Supreme Court has voted 9-0 that the president has exceeded his constitutional authority.” That’s a stretch, at best.

    The only decision among the 13 in which the High Court clearly found Obama “had exceeded his constitutional authority” was the case Goodlatte said occurred “last week.” The late June decision in NLRB v. Noel Canning found that Obama had overstepped his authority in making three appointments to the National Labor Relations Board without Senate approval.

    Richard Lempert, a nonresident senior fellow with the Brookings Institution and an emeritus law professor at the University of Michigan, reviewed Goodlatte’s list of cases for us and said that “only Noel Canning can be fairly cited to support this position.”
     
    • Like Like x 1
    #45
  6. anon_de_plume

    anon_de_plume Porn Star

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    Are you actually blaming these shooting on Obama? Really?
     
    #46
  7. M4MPetCock

    M4MPetCock Porn Star Banned!

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    Note the name of the party that, throughout history, has acted in a manner like "the Biden rule", which Democrats are now whining about.


    Does the Senate have a constitutional responsibility to consider a Supreme Court nomination?


    By Glenn Kessler March 16 Follow @GlennKesslerWP

    The Republican members met behind closed doors to unilaterally decide, without any input from this committee, that this committee and the Senate as a whole will refuse to consider any nominee this year. It’s a dereliction of our constitutional duty.”

    — Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.), floor remarks, March 3, 2016

    “The Constitution is very clear that we can’t walk away from a constitutional responsibility when it comes to a vacancy on the Supreme Court.”

    — Sen. Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), floor remarks, March 3

    “The Senate shall advise and consent by voting on that nominee. That is what the plain language of the Constitution requires.”

    — Sen. Michael F. Bennet, (D-Colo.), March 2

    “The Senate has responsibility to give that nominee a fair consideration with a timely hearing and a timely vote. It was deeply troubling to me and the people that I work for in Wisconsin that the Republican majority would choose not to fulfill their constitutional duty.”

    –Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.), March 14

    The upcoming battle over President Obama’s nominee for the Supreme Court vacancy created by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia has both parties digging in their heels, with Republicans citing a vague precedent that nominations are not considered in an election year and Democrats claiming that Republicans have a “constitutional responsibility” to at least hold hearings and a vote on a nominee.

    We’ve previously looked at how, depending on the circumstances, Democrats and Republicans have flip-flopped on the question of nominations in an election year. We also examined the often-ignored case of William Brennan’s 1956 elevation during the court in an election year.

    So let’s tackle this issue. Is there a precedent for the current Republican refusal to consider Obama’s nominee? (We are not trying to single out the lawmakers above, just showing a representative sample of the rhetoric.)


    The Facts
    One problem with studying this issue is that, because Supreme Court justices have lifetime tenure, there are relatively few examples. Over nearly 230 years, there have been only 124 Justices. Presidents have submitted 160 nominations, of whom 148 received action on the floor of the Senate, according to the Congressional Research Service.

    These are not huge numbers, though it does indicate that most nominees are considered by the Senate. But there are even fewer examples of vacancies taking place — and being considered — in a presidential election year. Even more unusual is an instance when the presidency is held by one party and Senate is held by an opposing party. (The one recent example, as we noted, is the case of Brennan, but even then, his confirmation hearings did not take place until after the election.)

    Though the examples are few, they tend to support the right of Republicans to handle — or not handle —this nomination as they wish.

    In August 1828, Justice Robert Trimble died just as President John Quincy Adams was battling a tough reelection campaign against Democrat Andrew Jackson. Adams ended up losing to Jackson, but in December nominated Kentucky lawyer John Crittenden to replace Trimble. (Recall that before passage of the 20th Amendment in 1933, the presidential inauguration did not take place until March.)

    Supporters of Jackson opposed this lame-duck nomination, leading to a debate of nine days on the floor of the Senate. Supporters of Adams’s maneuver argued that it was a duty of the president to fill vacant slots, even in the waning days of a presidency. They offered an amendment on the floor:

    “That the duty of the Senate to confirm or reject the nominations of the President, is as imperative as his duty to nominate; that such has heretofore been the settled practice of the government; and that it is not now expedient or proper to alter it.”

    But this amendment was rejected in a voice vote and then the Senate voted 23-17 to adopt an amendment saying “that it is not expedient to act upon the nomination of John I. Crittenden.” A few days after becoming president, Jackson nominated John McLean, the Postmaster General under Adams, to replace Trimble. (Jackson did this mainly to get McLean out of the Cabinet and to remove the possibility of him running for president, according to a study of the confirmation process.)

    According to the Congressional Research Service, “By this action, the early Senate declined to endorse the principle that proper practice required it to consider and proceed to a final vote on every nomination.”

    Then there’s the case of Justice Henry Baldwin, who died in April 1844. That was also an election year, but the sitting president, John Tyler, was not running for reelection, having been expelled from the Whig Party during his presidency. So in effect, the Whig-controlled Senate was run by an opposition party.

    Tyler made nine Supreme Court nominations during his presidency, but only one was approved. He made three nominations to fill Baldwin’s seat, all of which were rejected by the Senate until the new president, James Polk, took office. Polk was a Democrat, and even his first choice for the seat was rejected by the still-majority Whigs.

    During the 1852 campaign between Democrat Franklin Pierce and Whig Winfield Scott, Justice John McKinley died in July. President Millard Fillmore, a Whig who was not running for reelection, nominated three candidates — one in August, one in January and one in February. The Democratic-controlled Senate took no action on two candidates and the third withdrew after the Senate postponed a vote until after inauguration. One of Fillmore’s nominations was never even considered by the Senate, while the other was simply tabled.

    Pierce thus was given the Supreme Court nomination once he became president. (His nominee was confirmed one day after the nomination was submitted to the Senate.)

    We realize these are all very old examples, back before there even was a Republican Party. And there is always an exception to the rule. In 1888, as Democrat Grover Cleveland sought a second term, he nominated Melville Fuller to be chief justice after the death of Morrison Waite. The Republican-controlled Senate was unenthusiastic, but Fuller was finally confirmed 41-20 after a delay. (Cleveland lost the election to Benjamin Harrison, though he had won the popular vote, and then won a rematch in 1892.)

    In 1916 and 1932, election-year court vacancies were quickly filled by the Senate, but both occurred when the presidency and the Senate were controlled by the same party. The 1916 situation was unusual because the departing Supreme Court justice, Charles Evans Hughes, resigned after accepting the Republican nomination to challenge President Woodrow Wilson.

    The most recent and perhaps relevant example is Lyndon B. Johnson’s 1968 nomination of Abe Fortas, at the time an associate justice, to be chief justice. Earl Warren in June had announced he would retire and wanted to make sure Johnson had a chance to nominate his replacement.

    Johnson at the time was a lame duck, having decided not seek reelection. While Democrats controlled the Senate, southern Democrats were angry at the Warren Court’s record on jurisprudence — and the Republican presidential nominee, Richard Nixon, had pledged to nominate a southerner as his first Supreme Court pick.

    Nineteen Senators, in fact, declared that they would refuse to accept any nomination by Johnson because he was a lame duck. The Fortas nomination eventually ran aground over ethics issues and his close relationship with Johnson, and he eventually withdrew after his nomination failed a cloture vote.

    In effect, the 19 senators refusing to consider any Johnson nominee (mostly southern Democrats) created a working opposition majority with Republicans. Thus lawmakers were able to preserve the vacancy for the next president – who nominated a conservative, Warren Burger, as chief justice.

    (Note: Some readers have asked why I did not include Anthony Kennedy, who was confirmed on Feb. 3, 1988, an election year, by a Democratic-controlled Senate after being nominated by a Republican president. That’s because he was filling a vacancy that opened up on June 26, 1987, well before the election year. Kennedy was the third nominee for the position.)

    The Pinocchio Test
    As you can see, there is no recent parallel to the current situation: a president filling a sudden vacancy on the court in an election year when the Senate is controlled by the opposition party, particularly when the vacancy occurred with nearly a year left in the presidential term.

    But it is also clear that politics has always played a role — and the Senate has set the rules to act as it wants. Nearly 200 years ago, the Senate made it clear that it was not required to act on a Supreme Court nomination. In periods of divided government, especially with elections looming, the Senate has chosen not to act — or to create circumstances under which the president’s nominee either withdrew or was not considered. Indeed, the patterns don’t suggest the Senate used procedures out of constitutional duty, out of deference for what the Constitution says or what previous Senates have done. Instead they used procedures based on the political circumstances of each confirmation.

    It’s matter of opinion whether a refusal to consider a nominee is a dereliction of constitutional duty or walking away from a constitutional responsibility. But the Senate majority can in effect do what it wants – unless it becomes politically uncomfortable. Democrats who suggest otherwise are simply telling supporters a politically convenient fairy tale.

    Three Pinocchios

    three pinocchios.jpg
     
    #47
  8. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    To just think that those yo-yo's were voted in office to uphold and defend the U.S. Constitution., certainly makes ya wanna say ....huh?
     
    #48
  9. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump says he's planning to release a list of judges that he would select from to fill Supreme Court vacancies if he's elected president in an effort to ease concerns about his picks.

    "I am going to give a list of either five or 10 judges that I will pick, 100 percent pick, that I will put in for nomination. Because some of the people that are against me say: 'We don't know if he's going to pick the right judge. Supposing he picks a liberal judge or supposing he picks a pro-choice judge,'" Trump told a local gathering of Republicans in Palm Beach, Florida Sunday night.

    He says the list would include judges "that everybody respects, likes and totally admires" — "great conservative judges, great intellects, the people that you want."

    "I will guarantee that those are going to be the first judges that I put up for nomination if I win. And that should solve that problem," he said.
     
    #49
  10. Sanity_is_Relative

    Sanity_is_Relative Porn Star

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    • Like Like x 1
    #50
  11. anon_de_plume

    anon_de_plume Porn Star

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    They're not blocking it, they're ignoring it, their only principle here is to refuse to address it because it is Obama's choice. Hope it backfires and they get voted out.
     
    1. shootersa
      Yep. It's called politics. Deal with it.
       
      shootersa, Mar 22, 2016
    #51
  12. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    They will get voted out, if they block Trump.

    I cant see much concern over not even taking a vote on Obama's nominee for SCOTUS,, this nation does not need a moderate in SCOTUS, this nation needs a true constitutional conservative.
     
    #52
  13. M4MPetCock

    M4MPetCock Porn Star Banned!

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    Yes, they are ignoring it. As far as the "principle", whether it's the "only" or "one of many", consult "Senate Democrats, 1829", or "Senate Democrats, 1852") Post #48, just 2 above yours.


    Language adopted by Senate Democrats 1929:
     
    1. M4MPetCock
      Woops. Just noticed this.

       
      M4MPetCock, Mar 22, 2016
    2. anon_de_plume
      You're actually comparing democrats of 1829 to those of today? Seriously?
       
      anon_de_plume, Mar 23, 2016
    3. M4MPetCock
      What I was doing was pointing out who set the precedent, even going so far as to adopt an amendment on the Senate floor, of saying that says the Senate doesn't have to act right away on a lame duck nomination to the Supreme Court. And I also pointed out how subsequent Democrat-controlled Senates continued in that manner, even right up to 1952. But hey, "who cares how we've acted for almost 200 years. We want you guys to do it differently."
       
      M4MPetCock, Mar 23, 2016
    4. anon_de_plume
      You missed my point, democrats and republicans of those times do not relate top their modern parties. Hell, even just 50 years ago, the parties were very different. To say that "this party did this" doesn't really mean much.
       
      anon_de_plume, Mar 23, 2016
    #53
  14. Wee Hector

    Wee Hector Porn Star

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    Looking in as an outsider, surely whoever is elected to the Supreme Court will be of little importance to the US and the world if Trump is elected president.
     
    1. conroe4
      you're very wrong about that...supreme court can trump Trump.
       
      conroe4, Mar 21, 2016
    #54
  15. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    I would suggest that you remain an outsider.

    Well the entire world was for Obama, now that the door is revolving, the entire world is against Trump...............I fucking love it.
     
    • Like Like x 1
    #55
  16. piggit

    piggit A Fine Wine of a Woman

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    This is tremendous news. Mr. Trump is getting serious about the GOP establishment's concern about him, which is something of a surprise. I'm sure that after meeting with Republican senators, he is aware of what they want. I really look forward to his announcement.

    It will solidify the choice for many who are on the fence.
     
    #56
  17. piggit

    piggit A Fine Wine of a Woman

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    I couldn't disagree more. The SCOTUS should be comprised of 9 moderate judges, whose job should be to interpret and apply the law without being politically beholden to a particular party.

    We should can replace every departing justice with a moderate.
     
    • Like Like x 1
    #57
  18. RandyKnight

    RandyKnight Have Gun, Will Travel

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    Well then check out todays speech by teleprompter.......

     
    #58
  19. piggit

    piggit A Fine Wine of a Woman

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    I'm afraid you missed the point or accidentally posted a video unrelated to the naming of replacements for Justice Scalia.
     
    #59
  20. ace's n 8's

    ace's n 8's Porn Star

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    I agree that it could make the decision for those that are riding the fence, yet on the other hand, who gives a good tinkers fuck what the Establishment wants, it's not about the establishment, it's about what the people want.
    I could not disagree more, we have enough (moderate)activist judges in the judicial system.
     
    #60