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Violating the Oath – Voting For Cloture

From the diaries by Erick

I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same …

In voting for cloture (see roll call vote here) on the nomination of Jack McConnell on Wednesday, 11 Republican Senators violated the oath they took to defend the constitution.  It’s that simple.

Senators Alexander, Brown of Massachusetts, Chambliss, Collins, Graham, Isakson, Kirk, McCain, Murkowski, Snowe and Thune provided Democrats with the necessary votes to overcome a filibuster of McConnell to be a district court judge in Rhode Island.

How bad is Jack McConnell?  One only needs to look to the scathing Dear Colleague letter circulated by Senator Cornyn prior to the Senate conducting a cloture vote.  After pointing out that McConnell had been dishonest in his testimony to the Judiciary Committee, Senator Cornyn stated in part:

[Mr. McConnell's] 25-year legal career is surrounded by ethical cloud. As a crusading plaintiff’s lawyer, “Mr. McConnell and his firm helped pioneer the practice of soliciting public officials to bring lawsuits in which the private lawyers are paid a percentage of any judgment or settlement.” Specifically, Mr. McConnell has helped initiate and direct the litigation of mass tort suits brought by state attorneys general against tobacco and lead -based paint manufacturers. I have long argued that these types of outsourced contingent-fee arrangements are inherently unethical and inevitably lead to the appearance of public corruption. In Texas, for instance, my predecessor as Attorney General served over three years in federal prison for his role in manipulating documents related to a contingent-fee contract and attempting to channel settlement funds to a close friend. While in the private sector contingency fee agreements, though not without controversy, can provide a poor person a key to the courthouse they could not otherwise afford, they have special problems in the public sector. In the public sectors it would be analogous to outsourcing traffic tickets to a private security firm paid by a percentage of the income – no checks, no balances, no exercise of prosecutorial discretion, just a pure profit motive.

He’s that bad.

The 11 Republican Senators tried to be too cute for a half.  They voted in favor of cloture, but then voted “against” confirming Mr. McConnell.  The problem here is that anyone, who can count to 60, knows that cloture is the only vote that matters.  A nominee can be confirmed by a simple majority vote and the Democrats have more than a simple majority.

Now some will say, as Senator Alexander did on the Senate floor, you cannot start filibustering district court nominees.  I could not disagree more.  The oath Senators take require them to filibuster district court nominees, when those nominees will not adhere to the rule of law and submit themselves to the constitution.

The oath Senators take is to defend the constitution, not to allow the constitution to be assaulted.  How many members, understanding that a criminal is coming into their homes, would leave their doors unlocked?  Not one.  That’s what you do when you vote for cloture, understanding that a nominee is going to be confirmed.  You invite the scoundrel in, understanding that he is about to assault the constitution, you’ve taken an oath to defend.  The only way to defend the constitution is to lock to door.  Voting no on cloture locks the door.

There is absolutely no way to defend voting for cloture but against the nominee.  When you vote against the nominee, you’re saying he’s not qualified.  If he is not qualified, why give him a chance to be confirmed?  The American people did not elect you to defend the constitutional partially, allowing the criminal in the house, hoping to shoot him when you catch him in the middle of the act.  You were elected to defend the constitution fully.  Voting yes for cloture, but then voting against the nominee is not only too cute for a half, it is a violation of the oath.  It’s that simple.

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COMMENTS

  • roppongibob

    Erick. We outsource corrections and prisons. We outsource traffic enforcement. We outsource our wars. So be it.

    McConnell may be a dirt bag, but he is a main stream dirtbag. No better or worse than the rest.

    • Doc Holliday

      what are you a lefty blackwater/halliburton freak? Tell our troops that we outsource our wars.

  • AceInTX

    1) There is not a single person in American no matter how radical that a sizable number of enablers in the Republican party won’t vote to confirm. There is no nominee that is so bad that John Sydney McLoser and his band of merry lackey’s won’t crawl on his belly to confirm for his democrats “Friends”

    2) After spending the better part of Bush’s two terms fighting and filibustering Republican nominees to the bench and leaving huge swaths of vacancies across the federal Judiciary, Obama will in a single term pack the judiciary from stem to stern with leftist judges who will wreak havoc and play hell with us for the next 30 years

    but hey…We just HAVE to keep voting for these 11 losers because we have to settle for what we can get in their blue states

    sigh

    • AceInTX

      McCain and his merry band of vermin have kicked the door down and made it possible…

      but hey…at least they voted against McConnell after they made it possible for him to be confirmed….

      now THAT’s something to cheer about

      YEEEEHHHHHAAAWWWWWW!!!!!!

    • rightwingmom52
      • AceInTX

        they’;; still say Chamblis and Alexander can do as they make excuses for their back stabbing

        • AceInTX

          Art must be proud

  • tea4me

    …no matter how forceful he is about how wrong he was on cap and tax…the mere fact that he ever had the poor judgement to even think that way disqualifies him.

  • Carn

    We got really frustrated when the Dems and Left wouldn’t even allow a vote, on up or down, yes or no vote on the Senate floor over some of our nominees. It just violated a basic sense of fairness that they would block a vote and not let the majority of the Senate speak and work its will. So why is it suddenly OK for us to do that? Voting to allow a vote is not the same as the vote itself.

    Maybe Senators can be criticized for voting for cloture in this case, but accusing them of violating their oath to the Constitution by having done so is shrill, hysterical over-statement, the kind that makes decision makers roll their eyes and permanently ignore anything you have to say afterwards. Probably rightfully so.

    • greghalvorson

      You’ve GOT to be kidding? The Dems can roll us on judicial nominees, but when we have power, we’re supposed to be kind? You, my friend, are part of the problem. Wake the hell up!

  • greghalvorson

    This is yet another big gov Rino establishment disgrace…. That said, is it too much to ask that the author capitalize the Constitution moving forward?

  • jiminga

    and our two RINO senators continue to disappoint (Isaakson & Chambliss). Many here are hopeful they’ll be primaried next time around, particularly Chambliss.

    • wesok101

      Especially Chambliss. He is on the Commission that Obama has appointed to come up with an acceptable debt reduction plan. Gues what! He is going to agree to a plan that will require automatic tax increases whenever future dept reductions are not working. These automatic tax increases will happen without any action by congress and there is no end to them after they go into effect. Chambliss is not just a RINO he is a TRAITOR to the people of Georgia and the USA.

  • Locked and Loaded

    Oh yeah, they think they are so smart, too cute. I only have to see one of these types of betrayals to forever be against these traitorous leeches.

  • gonzo55

    I’d expect this from Murkowski, Grahm, McCain, etc, but apparently Thune has joined the ranks of RINOs. You know, seeing Senator Santorum on Fox News tonight has reminded me how far we’ve fallen. What a bedrock of common sense conservatism!

  • AceInTX
  • Doc Holliday

    Santorum is an ultra social con.

  • Doc Holliday

    maybe not even a few. It is that he leads with it, that is what turns people off. Also, he lost his own state, how can he go from that to winning the nation?

  • http://www.gmsplace.com/ civil truth

    …in favor of Arlen Specter. That is something I will not forget.

    And he went down in flames in 2006 and has really been largely out of the picture since, which is why he’s been ignored by the media. Tonight, we saw the first taste of what he will face, and he didn’t do too well: he talked too fast as he tried to explain away his past, which comes across very poorly. And if he actually were to become a serious contender, the media (or the Dems) could always pull out his “man on dog” comment from 2003. He’s the second most polarizing candidate after Ron Paul.

    And others have noted his big government credentials. His heart at one time was in the right place before he got corrupted by Washington insider status. But at this point, his presidential ship has sailed and he wasn’t on it.

  • aesthete

    not that he trusts God with too much: it is that he trusts government with too much.

  • Doc Holliday
  • acat

    statists are godless communists.

    Mew

  • http://www.gmsplace.com/ civil truth

    and between the two, Huckabee is worse. Which given my statements about Santorum says a lot about Huckabee.

    My contention with Santorum is over his political behavior, not the sincerity of his beliefs. Whereas not only does Huckabee’s lust for more government impeach his conservative credentials, but his sincerity is also open to impeachment charges.

  • tea4me

    He’s the prototypical canned politician. He says what he thinks his audience wants to hear. He comes across as a panderer. He’s weak, and i’ve felt that way since I first saw him before Obama got elected. Sorry for those who disagree…but that’s my opinion. Always has been. And he did nothing to disuade me tonight.

    The Lunthz polled audience got it right. He didn’t even get an honorable mention tonight.

    Sorry I had to post this here, but Erick hasn’t provided an opportunity to post on his opinion.

  • popster

    I would expect, Brown is a big disappointing RINO on this issue. This so called judge is nothing more than a Kagan activist.

  • acat

    Thune has the sense to realize 2012 isn’t his year.

    Mew

  • Carn

    I don’t know that I disagree with Santorum on anything. He’s a great foreign policy, social, and economic conservative. The problem is that he’s running as the anti-Obamacare candidate, when he is responsible for ObamaCare passing.

    Why? His all out endorsement of Specter in 2004 helped put Specter over the top in a 52-48 heartbreaker over Toomey. Specter voted for ObamaCare; Toomey never would have.

  • audax

    …on Bill Bennetts show. Now look what we have instead of good ole Joe! A real RINO Senator who votes for cloture!

  • audax

    He needs a Middle East geography lesson and better political info. Again, on Bill Bennetts Show, santorum pontificated that Bethleham is in Gaza and governed by Hamas who wont let Christians visit at Christmas holidays. Last I checked, Bethleham was 7 or 8 miles SSE of Jerusalem on the West Bank and there were many Christians there during the Holy Days.

    The real deal breaker with santorum is he wants to suck up to the RINO’s by backstabbing Conservative-nouns like Pat Toomey and Joe Miller. Who will be next for the “knife”.

    small s in santorum for a reason.