The Supreme Court vacancy created by the death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg focuses attention on an obscure—but very important—process within our system of government; namely, how does such a job opening get filled?
First, there’s no manual, rulebook, or set of instructions. The Constitution, in fact, has very little to say about it.
It gives the power to make nominations to the president and the power of “advice and consent” to the Senate. And the Constitution allows the Senate to determine its own rules for doing business.
That’s the extent of it. The Constitution doesn’t tell either the president or the Senate how to fulfill their responsibilities when it comes to appointing judges.
Second, every vacancy and every nomination is unique. Justices sometimes announce months in advance that they will step aside on a specific date. Others say they won’t leave until their successor is finally confirmed.
Vacancies can occur suddenly, as with the unexpected death of Justice Antonin Scalia in 2016, or after a long decline in a justice’s health.
Similarly, presidents can make a nomination quickly or take a long while to think about it. President George H.W. Bush announced his nomination of Clarence Thomas in 1991 only a few days after Justice Thurgood Marshall announced his retirement. By contrast, President Bill Clinton took more than three months to nominate Ginsburg to replace Justice Byron White in 1993.
Third, the length and complexity of the Senate’s confirmation process also vary considerably. The Judiciary Committee, for example, held its first hearing on a Supreme Court nomination in 1916, but confirmed at least a dozen nominees after that without a hearing at all.
The committee held a hearing on eight Supreme Court nominees who did not attend, including Earl Warren in 1953. Justices Stanley Reed (1938) and William O. Douglas (1939) attended their hearings, but said nothing and were asked no questions. While Reed’s hearing lasted almost an hour, Douglas’ was over in just five minutes.
The entire confirmation process is sometimes over before virtually anyone knows it has begun. The Senate confirmed James Byrnes in 1941 on the same day that President Franklin Roosevelt nominated him. Four years later, Roosevelt’s nomination of Harold Burton languished longer (for a single day).
In 1962, the Senate confirmed White without even a...
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ReplyDelete- Conor McGregor
I noticed again; Biden has to "touch" the women.
ReplyDeleteIf President Trump names a nominee on Saturday, the appointment can be made on Monday morning. The Judiciary
ReplyDeleteCommittee hearings can be bypassed because the Constitution requires only a simple majority in the Senate.
The downside to this scenario is that the Democrats flying monkeys (Antifa and BLM) are going to go bat
guano crazy if the Judiciary hearings are bypassed!