Friday, April 15, 2005

Nuke 'Em Frist
Salon's War Room gathers some more analysis regarding The Right Reverend Dr. Senator Bill Frist's overture to the radical right Christian conservative base and the use of the "nuclear option" to halt Democratic filibuster of judicial nominees:

 
[Family Research Council head Tony] Perkins argues that, in blocking 10 of Bush's nominees, a "radical minority" has launched an "unprecedented filibuster." It's not true technically, and it's not true generally. Democrats haven't actually filibustered most of the 10, and filibustering a judicial nominee isn't unprecedented: The Republicans filibustered Lyndon Johnson's nomination of Abe Fortas as chief justice in 1968. More to the point, Perkins' argument -- and it is one frequently repeated by Republicans in the Senate -- misses the larger point: They may not have used the filibuster, but Republicans used all sorts of other tactics to block Bill Clinton's nominees to the federal courts.

John McCain acknowledged as much Thursday as he said, once again, that he opposes the Republican plan to "go nuclear" by wiping out the right to filibuster judicial nominees. The Arizona senator is one of two Republicans who have said, more or less unequivocally, that they'll vote against the "nuclear option." The other is Rhode Island Sen. Lincoln Chafee. The Los Angeles Times ran down the rest of the math the other day. If Frist loses four more Republicans, the "nuclear option" is dead. Those four could be Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins of Maine, John Warner of Virginia and Chuck Hagel of Nebraska, each of whom has expressed doubts about the nuclear option. As the Times says, other Republican senators are also wary but fear going public and incurring the wrath of the Republican leadership -- or the religious right.

Will Frist take a chance on the nuclear option even if he might not win? The Washington Post says he doesn't have much choice, at least if he wants to keep the religious right happy -- and his political ambitions alive. The Post quotes Richard Lessner, the executive director of the American Conservative Union: "If Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist hopes to capture the Republican nomination for president in 2008, then he has to see to it that the Bush judicial nominees are confirmed. If he fails, then he is dead as a presidential wannabe."
 


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