[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 31 (Tuesday, February 28, 2012)]
[Senate]
[Pages S1065-S1066]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
JUDICIAL NOMINATIONS
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I was heartened by the dialog between
Senators Reid and McConnell this morning, talking about more bipartisan
cooperation, civility, and cooperation to try to deal with
appropriations bills. I would like to commend to the Republican leader
not just those important issues but the equally important issue of
judicial nominations. It is no secret that the Senate's process for
considering nominations has deteriorated under the Obama administration
because of resistance from the Republican side of the aisle.
It is a long-honored tradition in America that a President of the
United States fills vacancies on the Federal courts with the advice and
consent of the Senate. That has been the process since the beginning of
this Republic. Yet today we find stacked on our calendar literally 19
judicial nominees pending on the Senate floor. Fourteen of these
nominees were reported from the Judiciary Committee last year, some of
them as far back as October. They have been sitting here for months.
Seventeen of the nominees were reported out of committee with broad
bipartisan support, 12 of them unanimously. Ten nominees, incidentally,
are supported by their Republican home State Senators.
The bottom line is that judicial nominees with no controversy and
with widespread bipartisan approval are being held up on the Senate
calendar and not approved. Why? I can tell you why. It is fairly clear.
It is part of a strategy that says: If you hold up the judicial
nominees as long as possible, in comes that moment of the so-
called Thurmond rule or Thurmond tradition. This relates to Senator
Strom Thurmond of South Carolina, who basically said when we are
engaged in the depths of a Presidential campaign, the Senate should
stop approval of judicial nominees.
There is nothing in the law that requires that. There is certainly
nothing in the Constitution. In fact, we have in our own way found
exceptions in the past. But what we are seeing now is an effort by the
Republicans to hold up or stop judicial nominees in the hopes that the
positions will be left vacant through the entire calendar year and
then, if they have their way at the polls, a Republican President will
fill the vacancies a year from now with new nominees. That is crass. It
is unfair.
The men and women who submit their names to be considered as judicial
nominees go through a rigorous background check at many different
levels--first by the Senators who would nominate them, then by the
White House, then the routine examination by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, then once reported to the Senate Judiciary Committee for
further investigation and hearing. Their lives are on hold during this
process. They wait on the Senate. Once they have cleared these hurdles
and finally reach the calendar, many of them believe they can breathe a
sigh of relief. A unanimous vote or a strong bipartisan vote in the
[[Page S1066]]
Judiciary Committee used to be a signal of success on the floor. Not
anymore. At this point they reach the ultimate roadblock: they are
stopped on the Senate floor by the Republican minority.
It is not just unfair to judicial nominees--men and women of quality,
many of whom have been proposed by Republican Senators--it is
fundamentally unfair to our court system. You see, many of these
nominees are filling vacancies that are absolutely essential.
Last week I received a letter from the chief judge of the Northern
District of Illinois, Judge Jim Holderman. His district is one that has
been declared a judicial emergency, meaning the backlog of cases is
stacking up and the vacancies need to be filled. He was writing to me
and Senator Kirk asking that we do everything in our power to move two
noncontroversial, strongly supported nominees through the Judiciary
Committee. They are moved through. These two, who came through a
bipartisan process, are now sitting on the Senate calendar. They are
John Lee and Jay Tharp. John Lee is my nominee, and Jay Tharp is
Senator Kirk's nominee. A bipartisan agreement by a bipartisan
committee has led to their selection. No one has questioned their
ability to serve well on the Federal court.
This is what Judge Holderman wrote:
The vacancies [that they would fill] have been declared
judicial emergencies by the Administrative Office of the U.S.
Courts. More than a thousand cases that would have been
addressed by judges in those positions have been delayed. The
other judges of the district have worked to resolve these
cases as promptly as possible along with our other assigned
cases, but we need help. . . .
He went on to say:
Recently, two other active judges [in the Northern
District] were in the hospital and remain unable to take new
assignments. New civil case filings in our district court
have increased. . . .
Judge Holderman concludes by saying, `` . . . the people of the
northern district of Illinois need your assistance,'' he writes to
Senator Kirk and myself, and the full Senate should ``promptly confirm
the nominees Jay Tharp and John Lee.''
This is a classic illustration. Well-qualified individuals, having
cleared the hurdle, receiving strong bipartisan support in the Senate
Judiciary Committee, are mired down on the Senate calendar. Time after
time we see when we can finally spring one of these nominations that
will have 80 or 90 votes of Senators who approve it. They are
noncontroversial. It is clearly a slowdown strategy, so the other side
of the aisle, saying their prayers that they can replace President
Obama, will literally leave these vacancies for a year or more in the
hopes that another President will pick another person. That is unfair
to the process. It is certainly unfair to the nominees. It is unfair to
this system of government where we are shirking our responsibility to
advise and consent for critical vacancies to be filled so our Federal
courts can operate in the best interests of justice across America.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from New York.
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