Here is
the second piece I promised (in an earlier post) about the
battle against Chuck Hagel.
It’s a 1,000 word piece with several moving parts, but here’s
the nut of the thesis:
[Senators] should consider a filibuster in its historical
context, which originally was, honestly, to extend debate in order
to have more time to persuade the public and other senators of
one’s case. In extreme circumstances, of course,
the ceaseless delay became, in effect, an
outright blockage of legislation or nominees – but the legislative
death-by-filibuster approach, rather than the “serve the cause of
honest debate” approach, was rare enough that its use signaled a
matter of particularly high importance, rather than a
run-of-the-mill issue or action.
It would thus be more appropriate, not less,
to use death-by-filibuster on the nomination of a Defense Secretary
than on the nomination of, say, a U.S. Attorney. And it certainly
would be appropriate to put a series of delays on such a nomination
if it were reasonably thought that more relevant information was or
should be forthcoming, or if it were reasonably thought that public
opinion could be significantly altered – and especially if a
sincere attempt were made in the meantime, via public debate on the
Senate floor, to change fellow senators’ minds.
Finally of note, there are reasons within the internal logic of
the Constitution (if not its outright letter) that make a
filibuster of a Cabinet nominee more appropriate than a lengthy
filibuster of a judicial nominee – and that make a filibuster
specifically of the nominee for the Pentagon the single most
appropriate of all potential blocking actions against officials
requiring presidential appointment with the “advice and consent” of
the Senate……
There’s also a whole lot of links to stories providing a
boatload of different reasons why Hagel is so
objectionable.
There is no good reason to rush this nomination through.