[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 60 (Tuesday, April 19, 2016)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2191-S2192]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
OKLAHOMA CITY BOMBING ANNIVERSARY AND FILLING THE SUPREME COURT VACANCY
Mr. LANKFORD. Mr. President, in February of this year, Justice Scalia
passed away. It was an enormous loss to the Nation.
In the hours and the days following that, Republicans in the Senate
had the opportunity to talk about their constitutional responsibility--
the responsibility of advice and consent. Supreme Court justices don't
show up to the Supreme Court because the President just nominates them.
In the Constitution, article II, section 2, lays out a 50-50
proposition.
The President has the first 50 percent. He narrows down his list, and
he nominates.
The Senate then has the second 50 percent. They have the power of
what is called advice and consent. The first half of that is when. Is
this the right time to do a nominee? And with many nominees,
historically--Ambassadors, Justices, Cabinet officers--the Senate has
had a long delay to be able to say: No, this is not the right time.
So the first question is, Is this the right time? The second question
is, Is this the right person? That is the process of advice and
consent, and it has been for 200 years.
So what has happened since February? Since February, Republicans
[[Page S2192]]
have been very consistent--myself included--to say: This is not the
time to have a Supreme Court Justice go through the nomination process.
In the hours after Justice Scalia passed away, we made it very clear so
that any nominee who went through the process, regardless of who they
were, would know in advance this: You will not move to a hearing
because it is not the right time. Of our two-part test--Is this the
right time? Is this the right person?--the first part is not complete.
It is not the right time. So this nominee will not move at all
throughout this entire year, and everyone knew that in advance.
So I understand Republicans have talked about the first test on that,
the priority of ``is this the right time?'' Democrats have focused on
``is this the right person?'' They have focused on Judge Garland as the
nominee. They want to be able to raise and talk about his profile, and
I get the politics of that. But it is just the politics of it. We would
expect that banter back and forth on the politics, but this is a
settled issue among Republicans. He will not move through the
nomination process.
But we hit a new low today on this floor, and I had to come and
address it. Today, this moved from a conversation about whether this is
the right time and whether this is the right person to drawing in the
memory of the 168 lives that were lost in Oklahoma City 21 years ago
today--April 19, 1995. It was the worst act of terrorism at that time
on American soil, carried out by another American, killing 168 people
at the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. A Ryder truck loaded
with fertilizer and diesel pulled up to the front and blew it up,
killing 168.
Timothy McVeigh carried that out. He got into his Ford and drove
north to leave out of the State. But 90 minutes later--90 minutes
later--Trooper Charlie Hanger, who was just doing his job, saw a
vehicle on I-35 without a license plate on it, pulled him over, found
out he also had a weapon on him, and put him in jail to be able to hold
him. Trooper Charlie Hanger, doing his job, actually arrested the
person who had killed 168 people just 90 minutes before, not knowing
it.
Local law enforcement and individuals quickly went through the debris
trying to find individuals to save and evidence to be able to identify
who this was. Within a few hours, they found the axle of the Ryder
truck. They called the rental company. They identified it. They did a
composite sketch, and they figured out within hours who this might be--
a guy named Timothy McVeigh. Running a search on him, they figured out
he was already in jail. He had been picked up by Trooper Charlie
Hanger. Before he was released--because he was in the process of being
released--they were able to hold him and unwind a horrific crime. It
was incredible local law enforcement. It was an incredible task that
happened.
Within 40 hours of that event occurring, a gentleman named Merrick
Garland had come from DC, where he worked for the Department of
Justice, to Oklahoma City to help on the Federal side of the
prosecution, along with thousands of other people from around the
country. Our State and our city was overwhelmed with the compassion of
people around the country as we saw what happened, and Merrick Garland
was one of those. We are grateful as a community for what he did in the
prosecution of Timothy McVeigh, what he did against Terry Nichols, and
what he did against Michael Fortier. We are grateful for his work
there.
But today, on the floor of this Senate, the implication was laid out
twofold. One is that, since Judge Garland served the country and did
that, he deserves something else. I have never met Judge Garland. I
will meet him next week and, quite frankly, look him in the face and
say: Thank you for your service to Oklahoma.
To make clear again the same position before, there will be no
nomination this year. He does deserve our gratitude. He doesn't deserve
a lifetime appointment onto the bench because of his faithful service
to our country and to our community as is being alluded to.
The politics of it really, really deeply struck me as an Oklahoman--
that for some reason, today, of all days, the tragedy that happened to
168 people and their death 21 years ago suddenly became paraded out
here as a political prop. One of the Senators was even standing with a
picture of a dead child behind him like she is a prop. This child is
not a prop for politics. She has a name. She was identified as a
toddler. She was 1 year and 1 day old. She was killed in the Murrah
Building the day after her 1-year birthday. She is not some random
toddler. Her name is Baylee, and she is not to be used as a prop for
politics in the Supreme Court nomination process.
It is absolutely fair game to talk about the record of Judge Garland
and what he has done. We are grateful as Oklahomans for his service to
our State and to our Nation to put away those awful terrorists. But to
use a child who was killed in the Murrah Building bombing as a prop so
far exceeds the line that I had to come and speak about it and say that
I am absolutely offended--and I should be.
So it was 21 years ago today. We remember. It is a statement that
comes up to Oklahomans over and over: We remember. We remember the
victims. We remember the survivors. We remember the first responders.
We remember the thousands of people who came from across the country to
help us. We remember, and we will continue to remember. But don't do
politics with the life and death of the children and adults in Oklahoma
City. Let's keep this where it should be. We could have the debate
about process. Do not draw this in.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Wisconsin.
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