COMMENTS:
* McCain gets crazier the older he gets.
* Since when has McCain followed instruction from Obama on any topic? McCain should live by the standards he's followed in the past. Or, barring that, just do his job. He has voted on Supreme Court nominee's in the past during an election year, show some consistency.
* Why can't they just do their jobs? They continue to twist themselves into pretzels which means we don't go anywhere.
* Republicans have reached a point where they think this IS their job. They think they have a duty to block everything. They are trying to gut our democracy and unless a substantial number are voted out they are casually performing acts of treason and gutting our Constitution almost daily. I started following politics when I was in 5th grade and worked my first political campaign when I was 13 years old. I have a masters degree in Political Science. I'm a lifelong liberal and a former Army officer. I have never seen anything as disgusting as what republicans have become. They put greed and love of power over our country every single time. They have earned my contempt with their actions and words. There was a time when I could sometimes vote republican on the local and state level. Those days are long gone and I think we are watching a political rarity: the death of a political party. The irony is the GOP prepared and drank the poison themselves. The sooner they pass into history the better.
* ... McCain has sold his soul to the oligarchs for political power. You are right, he has absolutely no integrity and no morals.
* "Premeditated incompetence" sums up Sen. McCain precisely.
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McCain abandons previous standards on Supreme Court nominees
By Steve Benen, February 17, 2016
Not long after Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia’s passing, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) announced his support for the Republican Party’s blockade against any President Obama nominee. The senator’s partisan reaction was swift and unequivocal.
It’s also wholly at odds with everything McCain has said and done throughout his career. The Huffington Post reported yesterday:
The top Democrat vying to challenge John McCain for his Senate seat this fall is accusing the Arizona Republican of hypocrisy over the effort to replace – or rather not replace – the late Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. […]Indeed, the Kirkpatrick campaign uncovered some real gems. In one particularly notable example, McCain sat down with MSNBC’s Chris Matthews in July 2005, making the case that if Democrats want to choose Supreme Court nominees, then they should “win the next presidential election,” since “that’s the way the system works.”
The campaign team for Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick (D-Ariz.), who’s running to replace McCain, found the senator’s switch so noteworthy that they went looking for those previous occasions when he explained why presidents deserve votes on nominees. And they found them.
For the record, Democrats did, in fact, win the next presidential election.
The senator also noted at the time that he “voted for both Justice Breyer and Justice Ginsburg, because I believed that President Clinton won the election,” and “elections have consequences.”
McCain added, “The American voter was very well aware of what kind of judge the president of the United States was going to appoint and they decided to re-elect him. Maybe that wasn’t the reason, but they knew that came with the deal.”
Right. And in 2012, Republicans spent a fair amount of time telling Americans that the future of the Supreme Court was on the line. To borrow a phrase, voters were very well aware of what kind of judge President Obama was going to appoint and they decided to re-elect him. Maybe that wasn’t the reason, but they knew that came with the deal.
Perhaps McCain might make the case that 2016 is qualitatively different because it’s a presidential election year, but let’s not forget that McCain was in the Senate in 1988 when he voted along with 96 other senators to confirm Justice Anthony Kennedy.
As for the senator’s explanation, his office issued a written statement blaming the “nuclear option” for destroying “any semblance of cooperation.” As a substantive matter, this can charitably be described as gibberish.
In case McCain’s forgotten, the Senate Republican minority imposed a blockade in 2013 on any President Obama nominee for the D.C. Circuit, regardless of merit, filibustering literally every jurist considered for the appellate bench. Republicans said at the time that the partisan blockade would continue indefinitely, even on judges who enjoyed majority support in the Senate.
Left with no choice, Democrats restored majority rule using a legislative maneuver that Republicans came up with during the Bush/Cheney era. McCain and his cohorts now believe that change justifies a new tantrum and another blockade. There is simply no way to take such an argument seriously.
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