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Republicans launch power grab in US Senate
By Patrick Martin and Joseph Kay
23 May 2005
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Senate Republicans filed a motion Friday to end debate over
the nomination of extreme right-wing Texas jurist Priscilla Owen
to the US Court of Appeals and force an up-or-down vote. The motion
begins a series of parliamentary maneuvers that could end with
the effective suppression of minority rights in the US upper house.
A Republican victory would insure that when the next Supreme
Court vacancy occurs, Bush will be able to force Senate confirmation
of a nominee backed by the Christian fundamentalists, committed
to abolishing womens right to abortion and imposing other
retrograde and anti-democratic social policies.
If Democrats carry out plans to filibuster the nomination of
Owenby using procedural rules in the Senate that allow debate
to continue indefinitely unless 60 of 100 senators vote to end
itRepublicans have threatened to change Senate rules to
eliminate the filibuster option. This would allow the Republican
Party to appoint life-time judicial nominees without accommodating
in any way the position of the minority party.
Because of previous Democratic threats of an escalating retaliation,
bringing the Senate to a virtual halt, former Republican Majority
Leader Trent Lott once christened the proposed termination of
the right to filibuster nominations the nuclear option.
This is the name now universally used in the media to refer to
what is, in reality, a power grab by the Republican Party and
an effort to establish complete right-wing control over the functioning
of Congress.
The Senate Republican leadership and the Bush administration
are seeking to disguise this fact by constant invocations of the
principle of majority rule and maintaining that elementary fairness
requires that every judicial nomination by the president should
receive an up-or-down vote in the Senate.
They have even claimed that the US Constitution, which gives
the Senate the power to advise and consent on judicial
nominations, implicitly mandates such a vote. This interpretation,
however, would undo 215 years of constitutional precedent, under
which advise and consent has always included the power
to reject, either by direct vote or by refusal to vote.
For the past two weeks, Washington political and media circles
have been filled with speculation over whether the Republican
leadership has the 50 votes required to sustain the nuclear
option. With the 44 Democrats and one independent opposed,
and three RepublicansJohn McCain of Arizona, Lincoln Chafee
of Rhode Island, and Olympia Snowe of Mainealready announcing
they will vote no, three more Republican defectors
would defeat the measure.
There has been an intensive campaign of White House political
pressure and Christian fundamentalist lobbying, directed at the
handful of Republicans believed to be wavering. These include
such Senate veterans as Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, John Warner
of Virginia and Richard Lugar of Indiana, as well as Chuck Hagel
of Nebraska and Susan Collins of Maine.
All five have cited concerns over the reversal of longstanding
precedents, the threat of institutional breakdown, and the loss
of protection for minority rights. In his initial comments during
the Owen debate, Specter, chairman of the Judiciary Committee,
warned that the nuclear option could do substantial damage
to the institution.... It is my personal view that the option
of a filibuster for really extraordinary, egregious circumstances
ought to be retained.
The mounting tension in Washington found expression in hysterical
comments by Republican leaders as the Senate debate got under
way. Republican Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist himself compared
the Democratic tactic of filibustering judicial nominations to
assassinating these individualsa particularly
inflammatory characterization given recent incidents in which
judges and their families have been murdered by criminal defendants
or unsuccessful plaintiffs. Attempting to outdo Frist, Senator
Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, the third-ranking Republican and
a favorite of the Christian right, compared the Democrats to Adolf
Hitler.
Two things have characterized the protracted political conflict
over judicial nominations: a steady weakening of the Democratic
Partys opposition to the ultra-right, and the increasingly
vitriolic and dictatorial demeanor of the Republicans as they
consolidate control over all branches of the federal governmentthe
White House, the Congress, and the federal judiciary.
This control is out of all proportion to the actual support
for the program of the ultra-right among the American people.
Bush won reelection by a margin of 51-48 percent, the narrowest
reelection victory for a US president in over a century. Republicans
control the House by 231-204 and the Senate by 55-45. Yet the
Republicans are demanding 100 percent control of the federal judiciary,
a branch of the government which is already firmly under Republican
domination, with about two-thirds of all federal judges appointed
by Reagan, George H.W. Bush or the current president.
The fight over judicial nominees and Senate procedure in the
confirmation process is the latest in an ongoing struggle within
the ruling elite over forms of rule. This struggle has found expression
in a series of constitutional crises over the past decade, each
involving a further attempt to suppress democratic rights.
In the impeachment crisis of the latter years of the Clinton
administration, the Republican right sought to exploit a sex scandal
in order to unseat a twice-elected president. This was followed
by the elections of 2000, in which the outcome of the election
was decided through the intervention of the Supreme Court, which
halted a recount of the votes in Florida and handed the Presidency
to George W. Bush.
Most recently, the attempt by Congress to intervene in the
case of Terri Schiavo represented a fundamental attack on the
independence of the judiciary. In spite of overwhelming public
opposition, the federal government, acting at the behest of a
small layer of fundamentalist Christians, inserted itself in the
judicial process to promote the pro-life agenda of
the far-right.
In each of these cases, the determination of the Republican
Party to lay siege to basic democratic rights and constitutional
procedures has stood in stark contrast to the capitulation of
the Democratic Party. At no time have the Democrats sought to
carry out a serious fight for democratic rights, to expose the
extremely reactionary forces behind the Republican onslaught and
mobilize the population against them.
It is significant that on the eve of the upcoming confrontation
over judicial appointments, the Democrats have begun to retreat
from earlier threats that they have made. On Sunday, Democratic
Whip Dick Durbin said on CBSs Face the Nation
that the Democrats will not shut the government down
if Republicans rewrite Senate rules. He insisted that they would
merely follow the rules and continue to push an agenda the
Republicans dont want to talk about. In other words,
the Democrats will respond to a Republican decision to eliminate
the filibuster for judicial nominees with their traditional timidity
and spinelessness.
Statements of other leading Democrats have consisted entirely
of appeals to the Republicans to agree to a compromise that would
avoid a confrontation. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid said
on Sunday, We need to withdraw from the precipice and forge
a bipartisan compromise to resolve this matter. Any such
compromise will include the confirmation of the majority of those
judges that are still pending. The orientation of the Democrats
is directed entirely at winning over a section of the Republican
Party moderates. It is within the Republican Party
that the real struggle over policy is being carried out.
Political initiative, once again, is entirely on the side of
the extreme right. The Democratic Party is in retreat in the face
of the determination of the Republicans to rewrite rules and consolidate
their control. This situation can be explained only by the fact
that, while Democrats may differ with Republicans on certain tactical
questions, what unites the two parties is vastly greater than
what separates them. On questions touching the basic interests
of the ruling class in the United States, there is complete agreement.
The determination of the Republican Party expresses the fact
that it represents directly and consistently the interests of
the most reactionary sections of the ruling elite in the US, having
broken completely with all methods of class compromise. The impotence
of the Democratic Party, on the other hand, is a product of the
enormous chasm between its attempts to portray itself as a popular
party and its ultimate subordination to the same class interests.
More than anything else, the Democrats are afraid that any
appeal to the broad mass of working people could spark a social
movement that would threaten the Democrats own social and
political interests. Given the extent of the power grab that the
Republican Party is carrying out, it is striking the extent to
which all these policies and decisions are being made completely
outside of any broader involvement of masses of people.
As the World Socialist Web Site has continually warned,
there does not exist within the ruling elite any broad constituency
committed to the defense of democratic rights. Again and again
the same pattern of Republican assault and Democratic capitulation
repeats itself. The central lesson to be drawn from this pattern
is the impossibility of defending democratic rights on the basis
of the capitalist system and its political representatives.
See Also:
US: the panicked evacuation of Capitol
Hill
[13 May 2005]
The Republican Party and the
Christian right: sowing the seeds of an American fascist movement
[28 April 2005]
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