Sunday, January 8, 2012

Even A Liberal Gets It

Steve Sebelius is a liberal columnist for the LVRJ and even he understands Crybaby Harry Reid's dementia/hypocrisy. In a column about the so called "recess" appointments by President Obama, Sebelius rips Crybaby Reid and his dementia, eerrr, politic playing.
From Seblius's column: But Obama's appointment of Cordray using his "recess appointment" powers is an equally dangerous, equally unprecedented act. Why? Well, the Senate is technically not in "recess." Thus, no recess appointments.
During the closing days of the George W. Bush administration, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid began holding so-called pro forma sessions when the Senate would typically be on vacation. He staged these short sessions -- in which a senator gavels in and gavels out, usually in about 30 seconds -- to deny Bush the chance to make recess appointments.
Back in 2007, Reid called recess appointments of controversial nominees "an end run around the Senate and the Constitution," although they are clearly permitted in the text. In 2008, he said "we don't let [Bush] have recess appointments because they are mischievous." And in 2005, Reid said the recess appointment of John Bolton as U.N. ambassador was an "abuse of power."
On Wednesday, however, Reid said he supported Obama's "recess" appointment, accusing Republicans of -- where have we heard this before? -- trying to make an end run around the law. The urgency of helping consumers justifies the move, Reid implied in a statement.
White House Counsel Kathryn Ruemmler contends the pro forma sessions of the Senate are a gimmick designed to render a constitutional power of the president obsolete. Former Justice Department official Steven Bradbury (who was denied a recess appointment thanks to pro forma sessions organized by Reid) quotes former Attorney General Henry Daugherty saying "to give the word recess a technical and not practical construction is to disregard substance for form."
But whenever I hear somebody appeal to "substance" over "form," in matters of law, I get the sense somebody's trying to put one over on me....
http://www.lvrj.com/opinion/you-need-a-recess-to-make-recess-appointments-136797788.html
But that's a risky interpretation. What's to stop Obama (or a future president) from saying that partisan gridlock has so crippled the Senate that it's incapable of giving advice and consent in general? Could not that be used as justification to make recess appointments all the time?
By making a recess appointment when there's no recess, Obama has surrendered the moral and constitutional high ground. By failing to object, Reid shows not only intellectual dishonesty but also a shocking willingness to surrender an important prerogative of the legislative branch. And just because it makes good politics -- can you imagine the mileage Democrats could get from a Republican lawsuit asserting the right to block consumer protections? -- doesn't mean it's a good idea.

A liberal columnist calling Crybaby Reid dishonest? Hope he has his resume handy.

1 comment:

  1. Here's the thing: Congress passed the laws required to create the Consumer Protecection Bureau. But the Republicans in Congress really don't like that fact. So, they've blocked every effort at appointing a leader for that organization.

    So, Republicans were in effect making it impossible for the agency they voted for to be functional. That in itself is something of a paradox. Obama recitified that, and apparently, it will really be difficult for anybody to do anything about it. Which is fine, because just about nobody thought that the person appointed was a problem in the first place! They just didn't like the agency that they'd created!

    It's a poopy mess no matter how you look at it. And the Republicans don't come off well from any angle.

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