COMMENTS:
* Maybe McTurtle and Senator HogSlop finally figured out that the votes of the people in 2012 should count as much as or more than those who have not yet voted in 2016. Nah, probably not.
* Not a chance. This has been their strategy since day one of plotting to make Obama a one term President. Their unbridled hatred of Obama is now an all consuming obsession they are willing to commit Treason over. They are sick with hatred for Obama and the American people who twice committed the gravest of all sins, in their warped and twisted minds, elected an "uppity @!$%#" who had the gall to think he could even walk in their rarefied world no less as the most important and powerful man in the world. What the GOP are doing, and have been doing, is damaging the very fabric of our Nation and is unprecedented. Their obstruction and willingness to use taxpayer money for their political vendettas is criminal. No one has done anything to punish them so this is now how govt will be conducted. Pettiness and spite shall be the first ingredient before putting the well being of the people and the Country.
* Haven't we had enough of these Republicans in Congress? It's long past time to vote them out.
* Another reason we need term limits and election reform.
* My thinking is considering how we already know how McConnell will react, a qualified nomination will appear in mid May, use the summer for exposure of the obstructionism, then withdrawal and present another just before the election.
* If they don't want to do their jobs then stop paying them and their staff.
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Senate Republicans capable of embarrassment after all
By Steve Benen, February 26, 2016
As a rule, congressional Republicans are, in a rather literal sense, shameless. They take quite a bit of pride in their issue positions, their partisan tactics, and their far-right ideology. Regardless of criticisms, election results, policy analyses, or any other considerations, GOP lawmakers hold their heads high – confident in their unapologetic righteousness.
At least most of the time, that is.
The Republicans’ decision to impose a Supreme Court blockade against any President Obama nominee, sight unseen, without regard for qualifications, is an obstructionist tactic unlike anything seen in American history. And in an interesting twist, GOP lawmakers don’t seem altogether proud of themselves.
On Tuesday, for example, reporters waited outside the Senate chamber, eager to speak to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) about the unfolding scandal. The New York Times reported that the Iowa Republican, upon leaving the chamber, “raised a binder to cover his face before hurriedly retreating.”
No “Profile in Courage” award for you, Chuck.
Of course, it’s not just the troubled Judiciary Committee chairman feeling uneasy about trying to defend the indefensible. The Huffington Post reported yesterday on the case of bashfulness that’s broken out among the Republican ranks.
As Democrats tried to raise the pressure on their recalcitrant colleagues on Thursday by accusing them of abandoning their responsibility to the Constitution, Republicans on Capitol Hill were ducking and dodging reporters’ questions on what’s shaping up to be one of the biggest battles in Washington.You don’t need a lot of Capitol Hill experience to know confident senators don’t flee questions about an ongoing controversy.
Several senators ran away from The Huffington Post this week as we tried to ask if they thought a Supreme Court nominee should get a hearing.
But flee they did.
Sen. Joni Ernst (R-Iowa) said she had to “go vote,” even though she could have talked as she walked to an elevator down the hall. Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) didn’t even let HuffPost get the full question out before saying, “I don’t do hallway interviews.” Sen. Dan Coats (R-Ind.) said he had to “run to a meeting” and disappeared into an elevator. Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) listened to the question and, with a blank look, said, “I’m not doing any interviews.” […]That’s just a sampling. Others were equally reluctant to defend their own party’s tactics.
Asked about his signature on a letter stating that Obama’s nominee shouldn’t get a hearing or a vote, [Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.)] reiterated he did not wish to discuss the subject.
It’s an unusual posture for the party. Indeed, most of the time, it seems Senate Republicans aren’t capable of embarrassment at all.
But that’s how ridiculous the GOP’s Supreme Court blockade is. We’ve finally seen a partisan tantrum so extreme that congressional Republicans themselves are reluctant to even try to defend it.
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