[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 120 (Tuesday, July 29, 2014)]
[Senate]
[Page S5044]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
VOTE EXPLANATION
Mr. RUBIO. Mr. President, due to family commitments in Florida, I was
unable to vote on the confirmation of Pamela Harris to the Fourth
Circuit Court of Appeals. Had I been present, I would have voted
against Ms. Harris's confirmation.
The Senate has few responsibilities more important than providing
advice and consent on the President's judicial nominations. These are
lifetime appointments with great power, whose decisions directly impact
the life, liberty, and property of the parties who come before them.
Americans deserve a judiciary staffed by lawyers who are not just
highly capable but who are also men and women of a particular
character. We rightfully expect judges to understand their important
but properly limited role to say what the law is, without bias, without
agenda. As passionately as a judge may feel about a particular issue,
when he or she puts on that black robe, all personal views must be set
aside.
No one can deny Ms. Harris has a first rate mind or that she has
built an impressive career. Unfortunately, many of her statements
during that career suggest that her mind is better suited to academia,
or elective office, than it is to the bench. She has identified herself
as ``profoundly liberal'' and said she views the Constitution as
``profoundly progressive.'' These types of statements, along with
troubling interpretations of the First Amendment among other issues,
paint a picture of a nominee more likely to become a liberal activist
judge than one who neutrally applies the law.
For those reasons, I would not have supported granting Ms. Harris the
profound power that comes with lifetime tenure on the Federal bench.
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