[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 95 (Monday, June 5, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Page S3241]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONFIRMATION OF AMUL R. THAPAR
Mr. VAN HOLLEN. Mr. President, I could not support Judge Amul
Thapar's nomination to fill the vacancy on the U.S. Court of Appeals
for the Sixth Circuit. I was extremely concerned about Judge Thapar's
views about how the law applies to the issue of money in politics.
According to Judge Thapar, ``there is simply no difference between
saying that one supports an organization by using words and saying that
one supports an organization by donating money.'' His opinion on the
role of money in politics in Winter v. Wolnitzek was so extreme that,
even in this post-Citizens United era, it was unanimously overruled by
the Sixth Circuit. Judge Thapar's willingness to dismiss ethical rules
created to avoid partisanship and to ensure impartiality is troubling
and prevented me from supporting his nomination.
Ever since the Supreme Court rulings in Citizens United v. FEC and
McCutcheon v. Federal Election Commission, No. 12-536, our political
system has been infiltrated by dark money. The untraceable and
unlimited amount of money pouring into elections has changed our
political system for the worse, and Americans across party lines agree.
Eighty-four percent of Americans think that money has too much
influence in politics, and over half of Americans think that
politicians only promote policies in support of their donors and not
their voters. President Trump has nominated a judge who wants to erode
what few protections currently exist to limit money in politics and
whose views are outside of the mainstream.
Judge Thapar's views on money in politics may be among the reasons
why the conservative Federalist Society and the Heritage Foundation
included Judge Thapar on the short list of possible Supreme Court
nominees that they prepared for President Trump. I find President
Trump's outsourcing of the judicial selection process to third-party
organizations alarming. Traditionally, Presidential administrations
have consulted with Senators of both parties as they selected judicial
nominees. The Trump administration consults with partisan organizations
instead.
The very fact that this vacancy existed is another example of
Republican obstructionism and the unnecessary politicization of the
judiciary. Former-President Obama nominated Judge Lisabeth Tabor Hughes
to fill this vacant seat in March 2016. Much like the Supreme Court
seat vacated by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia, Republicans
refused to hold a hearing or fill the seat.
The seat should have been filled long ago, but regardless, Judge
Thapar is not the right person to fill it now.
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