[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 51 (Thursday, March 26, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2028-S2029]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LYNCH NOMINATION
Mr. LEAHY. Mr. President, one great responsibility that distinguishes
the U.S. Senate is our constitutional role
[[Page S2029]]
of advice and consent. We have a solemn duty to consider nominees for
positions of great importance to the Nation, some of which are lifetime
appointments. Every day that the nomination of Loretta Lynch to be the
next Attorney General awaits a floor vote is another day the Senate
fails to function as it should.
The Attorney General is our Nation's top law enforcement official.
The position is critical to protecting our national security and our
most cherished civil rights. It is a position of honor and one that
deserves respect. And even though Senators have not always agreed with
the President's choice, there used to be a mutual respect for the
position and the process of filling it. That proud history is being
debased here in the Senate today. The Republican majority has turned
this vital position--and the highly respected nominee--into a
bargaining chip to be leveraged for political gain. This is not how to
treat a position of such importance to law enforcement and our national
security.
When I was chairman of the Judiciary Committee, I did not support the
nomination of Michael Mukasey, the choice of President George W. Bush.
But I did not obstruct the process or deny the Senate a vote. To the
contrary, we treated the position and the nominee with the historic
respect they both deserve. Judge Mukasey received a floor vote just 2
days after he was reported from committee and he was confirmed just 53
days after his nomination was announced. That process stands in sharp
contrast to that of Ms. Lynch. It has now been 28 days since she was
reported out of committee and 137 days since her nomination was first
announced.
The treatment of this excellent nominee is beneath the dignity of
this body. In January, Ms. Lynch testified before the Senate Judiciary
Committee for nearly 8 hours and she responded to nearly 900 written
questions. Not a single witness invited by Republicans opposed her
nomination. When Republicans stalled consideration of Ms. Lynch's
nomination in committee, Democrats noted the unnecessary delay and
raised concerns about filling this vital position. Senator Cornyn
dismissed this as ``faux outrage.'' But in November 2007, Senator
Cornyn complained that a 7-week process on the Mukasey nomination
threatened our national security. He issued a press release stating:
It is imperative that the president has his national
security team at full strength and the unnecessary delay of
Judge Mukasey's nomination has prevented that. He deserves an
immediate up-or-down vote by the full Senate.
Loretta Lynch's nomination has now been pending more than 19 weeks.
Where is the outrage now? Where is the concern for the President's
national security team to be at full strength?
Similarly, in early October 2007--just 3 weeks after Mr. Mukasey's
nomination was announced, the Republican leader criticized me for not
yet having set a hearing date, saying that Democrats should ``not hold
Judge Mukasey hostage while they play partisan games.'' That was after
3 weeks. We are now on week 19 for Ms. Lynch--that is more than six
times as long and Senator McConnell has openly linked her confirmation
to partisan politics by linking her vote to demands on legislation.
Senate Republicans' handling of the nomination process for the
Nation's top law enforcement officer has been disgraceful. And all of
this after Senate Democrats agreed not to process her nomination during
the lameduck because the current majority leader reassured us that she
would be treated fairly. Unfortunately, that has not been the case. No
one can deny that Ms. Lynch is eminently qualified for the job. No one
can deny that her nomination is a historic one. No one can deny that
her record safeguarding our Nation from terrorists and criminals is
beyond reproach. And no one can deny--based on the objective numbers--
that she is being treated worse than her predecessors. Ms. Lynch has
been treated unfairly compared to previous Attorneys General nominees
by whatever metric one chooses.
Republicans are holding back a top Federal prosecutor who has an
unparalleled record keeping Americans safe from terrorists. During her
tenure as U.S. attorney, the Eastern District of New York has
prosecuted significant terrorism cases. This includes the successful
prosecution of six individuals for their roles in a 2009 Al Qaeda plot
to attack the New York subway system; the convictions of four
terrorists plotting to attack John F. Kennedy Airport; and the
conviction of a terrorist who attempted to detonate an explosive device
at the New York Federal Reserve.
Rudy Giuliani, the former Republican Mayor of New York and a proud
law-and-order conservative, urged the Senate last week to end the delay
and to confirm Ms. Lynch. He said:
This woman is entitled to confirmation: not as a woman, not
as a man, but as a highly qualified candidate . . . Loretta
Lynch is more than qualified. She's overqualified to be
attorney general.
My friend Louis Freeh, former Director of the FBI and Federal judge,
has written that ``[i]n my twenty-five years of public service--23 in
the Department of Justice--I cannot think of a more qualified nominee
to be America's chief law enforcement officer.'' He has further stated
that ``Ms. Lynch is an atypically non-political appointment for that
office, a career professional without any political party ties or
activity.''
If we do not confirm Ms. Lynch before the upcoming recess, her
nomination will be pending before the full Senate for 46 days by the
time we return on April 13. That is nearly twice as long as all of the
past seven Attorneys General combined: Richard Thornburgh, 1 day;
William Barr, 5 days; Janet Reno, 1 day; John Ashcroft, 2 days, Alberto
Gonzales, 8 days; Michael Mukasey, 2 days; and Eric Holder, 5 days.
This delay is an embarrassment for the U.S. Senate.
I am concerned that the Senate will have to file a cloture motion and
vote to overcome a filibuster of Ms. Lynch's nomination. This would be
unprecedented and unwarranted. No Attorney General nomination in our
history has ever been met with a filibuster. We have never needed a
cloture vote for an Attorney General nomination. It appears that Senate
Republicans want to make history for all the wrong reasons. It is time
to stop playing politics and lead.
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