People vote for state legislatures. California liberals can still have their abortions, it should be a state issue.Originally posted by: miketheidiotlast time i checked, states don't vote, people do.
Originally posted by: Jhhnn
From charrison-
"That is exactly that. There is nothing that requires it be there or not. There are many things that cannot be filibustered in the senate as they have been excluded from that rule."
Quite true. The important part to remember about those exceptions is that they were codified by following the rules of the Senate, not by breaking them... The Constitution specifically allows the Senate to make its own rules, even though it doesn't provide for their enforcement in any realistic way. The Framers apparently never considered the idea that some would be so power hungry and myopic that they'd attempt to break the rules to change the rules, an oxymoron if ever there was one...
The framers never considered liberal courts utterly abusing the future 14th amendment for ridiculous causes, nor Harry Reids idea of "co-nomination".
Text
How do we know the Framers of the Constitution would oppose judicial filibusters?
First, the Founding Father?s were true believers in the concept of majority governance. As Thomas Jefferson wrote, ?the law of the majority is the natural law of every society of men.? To allow a small minority in the Senate to bind up the judicial confirmation process is repugnant to this fundamental constitutional principle.
Secondly, the Founding Fathers were very specific as to when supermajorities are permissible. There are six such exceptions: ratification of the Constitution itself, overriding a presidential veto, Senate consent to a treaty, Senate conviction of an impeached official, the presence of a quorum in the House for the election of the President and amending the Constitution. Judicial confirmations are not among them.
Third, the power to appoint judges to the federal courts is enumerated in Article II of the Constitution, which describes the powers of the president, and not in Article I, which defines the powers of Congress.
Finally, there is senatorial precedent. This is the first time in history that the filibuster rule is being abused in this manner. Senators from both parties have abided by constitutional mandate to ?advise and consent? through a simple majority up-or-down vote on judicial nominees for more than 200 years.
