[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 161 (Wednesday, November 13, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7971-S7973]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NOMINATIONS
Ms. WARREN. Madam President, it hasn't been even a month since the
end of the Republican shutdown of the government, and they are already
back at trying to paralyze the government again.
Yesterday, the Republicans blocked an up-or-down vote on the
nomination
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of Nina Pillard to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals. This filibuster
comes just 1 week after Republicans filibustered the nomination of
Patricia Millett to the DC Circuit, and less than 1 year after
Republicans filibustered Caitlin Halligan, who eventually just gave up
and withdrew her nomination.
Republicans now hold the dubious distinction of having filibustered
all three women that President Obama nominated to the DC Circuit.
Collectively, these women have diverse experiences in private practice,
in government, and in public interest law. Between them, they have
argued an amazing 45 cases before the Supreme Court and have
participated in many more. All three have the support of a majority of
Senators. So why have they been filibustered? The reason is simple.
They are caught in a fight over the future of our courts--a fight over
whether the courts will be a neutral forum that decides every dispute
fairly or whether the courts will be stacked in favor of the wealthy
and the powerful.
Every day in Congress we deal with the influence of powerful groups
and their armies of lobbyists. But in our democracy, when we write
laws, sometimes we can push back on that power. In our democracy we
have tools that can be used in the legislative process--tools such as
open debate, public opinion, and political accountability, tools that
can help the people win these fights. I saw it happen up close in the
2008 financial crisis when we were able to get a strong consumer
financial protection bureau despite the efforts of the large financial
institutions to kill it.
But the story doesn't end when Congress passes a law. Powerful
interests don't just give up. They shift their fight to the courts
because they know that if they can weaken or overturn a law in court,
they turn defeat into victory. If they can break the courts by putting
enough sympathetic judges in lifetime positions, a friendly judicial
system will give them the chance to undermine any laws they don't like.
That is already happening in the Supreme Court. Three well-respected
legal scholars, including Judge Richard Posner of the Seventh Circuit,
a distinguished judge and conservative Reagan appointee, recently
examined almost 20,000 Supreme Court cases from the last 65 years. The
researchers concluded that the five conservative justices currently
sitting on the Supreme Court are in the top 10 most procorporate
justices in more than half a century. Justices Alito and Roberts are
number one and number two.
Take a look at the win rate of the national Chamber of Commerce in
cases before the Supreme Court. According to the Constitutional
Accountability Center, the national Chamber moved from a 43-percent win
rate during the last 5 terms of the Burger court, to a 56-percent win
rate under the Rehnquist court, to a 70-percent rate under the Roberts
court. Follow this procorporate trend to its logical conclusion, and
pretty soon you will have a Supreme Court that is a wholly owned
subsidiary of big business.
The powerful interests that work to rig the Supreme Court also want
to rig the lower courts. The DC Circuit is a particular target because
that court has the power to overturn agency regulations. If a business
doesn't like it when the agencies implement the will of Congress, they
try to undermine those agencies through the DC Circuit.
In the next 5 years, the DC Circuit will decide some of the most
important cases of our time--including cases which will decide whether
Wall Street reform will have real bite or whether it will just be
toothless. Swaps dealers, the securities industry, the Business
Roundtable, and the Chamber of Commerce are all lining up to challenge
the new rules that agencies have written to try to put some teeth into
Wall Street reform and other laws. These big-industry players want
business-friendly judges to help bail them out.
So let's be clear. Nine of the 14 judges on the DC Circuit who
currently hear cases were appointed by Republican Presidents. The
President with the most appointees on that court right now is Ronald
Reagan.
This lopsided court has been busy striking down environmental
regulations that stop companies from spewing mercury into the air we
breathe, striking down investor protections that hold corporate boards
accountable, striking down a requirement for employers to provide
access to birth control under ObamaCare. Each of these regulations
exists because Congress has passed laws telling the agencies to write
them.
It is true that sometimes an agency may get it wrong, but these days
the DC Circuit seems to be finding more and more ways to help bail out
the businesses that never wanted to be regulated in the first place.
Republicans have noticed what is going on with this lopsided court.
They would like to keep things the way they are, and they have not been
subtle about it. Many Republicans have talked openly of their
opposition to any new judges to fill the three vacancies on this court
precisely because the new nominees will give the court more balance and
fairness. Republicans may prefer a rigged court that gives their
corporate friends and their armies of lobbyists and lawyers a second
chance to undercut the will of Congress, but that is not the job of
judges. Judges aren't supposed to make law. Judges aren't supposed to
tilt politically one way or the other.
Republicans may not like Wall Street reform. They may not like
ObamaCare. But Congress passed those laws. President Obama signed those
laws. President Obama ran for reelection on those laws, while his
opponent pledged to repeal them--and his opponent lost by nearly 5
million votes. It is not up to judges to overturn those laws or their
associated regulations just because they don't fit the judges' policy
preferences.
There are three vacancies on the DC Circuit, and the President has
nominated three impressive people to fill those vacancies--including
Patricia Millett and Nina Pillard. These nominees are not ideological.
They have extraordinary legal resumes and have received bipartisan
support from top litigators around the country. They are among the top
legal minds of this generation.
This is how the President plans to push back against efforts to tilt
our judicial system: by nominating judges who will be judges--judges
who will be fair, judges who will be evenhanded, judges who will have
the diversity of professional experience to understand and consider all
sides of an issue.
I understand that Republicans may prefer to keep the DC Circuit
exactly as it is. But article II, section 2 of the Constitution says
the President of the United States nominates judges, with the advice
and consent of the Senate. There is no clause that says, except when
that President is a Democrat. Democrats allowed President George W.
Bush to put four very conservative judges on the DC Circuit. All four
are still serving, and one is Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court.
There are three vacancies in the DC Circuit Court of Appeals. The
President of the United States has nominated judges to fill those
vacancies. That is his job, and it is the job of the Senate to confirm
highly qualified, independent judges. That is how our system works.
That is what the Constitution demands.
Republicans these days do not seem to like that. They keep looking
for ways to keep this President from doing his job. So far they have
shut down the government, they have filibustered people he has
nominated to fill his administration, and they are now filibustering
judges to block him from filling any of the vacancies with highly
qualified people. We need to call out these filibusters for what they
are--naked attempts to nullify the results of the last Presidential
election, to force us to govern as though President Obama had not won
the 2012 election.
President Obama did win the 2012 election--by 5 million votes. He has
done what the Constitution requires him to do--nominated highly
qualified people to fill open vacancies on the Federal bench. If
Republicans continue to filibuster these highly qualified nominees for
no reason other than to nullify the President's constitutional
authority, then Senators not only have the right to change the
filibuster rules, Senators have a duty to change the filibuster rules.
We cannot turn our back on the Constitution. We cannot abdicate our
oath of office. We have a responsibility to protect and defend our
democracy, and that includes protecting the neutrality of our courts
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and preserving the constitutional power of the President to nominate
highly qualified people to court vacancies.
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