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Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Fri November 22, 2013 3:34 am
by stip
higher stakes/higher threshold

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Fri November 22, 2013 3:40 am
by Norah
Yeah, more power/more scrutiny.

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Fri November 22, 2013 3:50 am
by stip
it'd be nice if this turned into a debate about finally establishing term limits for justices, but it won't

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Fri November 22, 2013 6:42 pm
by Chris_H_2
cutuphalfdead wrote:Yeah, more power/more scrutiny.
The DC Circuit is pretty powerful.

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Fri November 22, 2013 6:43 pm
by Norah
Chris_H_2 wrote:
cutuphalfdead wrote:Yeah, more power/more scrutiny.
The DC Circuit is pretty powerful.
As powerful as the Supreme Court?

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Fri November 22, 2013 7:34 pm
by Chris_H_2
cutuphalfdead wrote:
Chris_H_2 wrote:
cutuphalfdead wrote:Yeah, more power/more scrutiny.
The DC Circuit is pretty powerful.
As powerful as the Supreme Court?
It's where most justices on the S. Ct. come from. It's why there's so much hub bub surrounding the DC Circuit that led to the nuclear option.

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Sun November 24, 2013 10:56 am
by stip
Chris_H_2 wrote:
Green Habit wrote:
Chris_H_2 wrote:Listen, you're preaching to the converted on giving deference to a president's nomination so long as the person is (a) qualified, and (b) not a serial killer. The problem with both parties is that members have taken it upon themselves to define a person's qualifications based on their ideologies, and have tried to administer a litmus test to demonstrate that the nominee is "out of touch" or "too far to the [left or right]." I think it's despicable.

At the same time, I also see what's going on with the recent fights and, in particular, the opportunity that the Democrats see to facilitate the White House's agenda of legislating by regulation. Hence, the focus on the DC Circuit. Frankly, I think the matter is overblown.
So do you think that there's any time when a procedural supermajority is proper?
I think it was proper as was. It was originally to be used as a shield to avoid getting railroaded by a simple majority.
But it was not intended to be a vehicle for negating the results of elections. Filibustering a particularly odious nominee is one thing. Filibustering the idea of appointing any nominee is something else.

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Sun November 24, 2013 7:25 pm
by Chris_H_2
stip wrote:
Chris_H_2 wrote:
Green Habit wrote:
Chris_H_2 wrote:Listen, you're preaching to the converted on giving deference to a president's nomination so long as the person is (a) qualified, and (b) not a serial killer. The problem with both parties is that members have taken it upon themselves to define a person's qualifications based on their ideologies, and have tried to administer a litmus test to demonstrate that the nominee is "out of touch" or "too far to the [left or right]." I think it's despicable.

At the same time, I also see what's going on with the recent fights and, in particular, the opportunity that the Democrats see to facilitate the White House's agenda of legislating by regulation. Hence, the focus on the DC Circuit. Frankly, I think the matter is overblown.
So do you think that there's any time when a procedural supermajority is proper?
I think it was proper as was. It was originally to be used as a shield to avoid getting railroaded by a simple majority.
But it was not intended to be a vehicle for negating the results of elections. Filibustering a particularly odious nominee is one thing. Filibustering the idea of appointing any nominee is something else.
There's nothing new about the Republicans are doing. Democrats and Republicans do the same thing. It's the reason that Obama, when he was the junior senator from Illinois, railed against the idea of changing the rules. It's also the reason that Reid said he would never do it.

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Sun November 24, 2013 7:54 pm
by Green Habit
Chris_H_2 wrote:There's nothing new about the Republicans are doing. Democrats and Republicans do the same thing. It's the reason that Obama, when he was the junior senator from Illinois, railed against the idea of changing the rules. It's also the reason that Reid said he would never do it.
I think it's still a bad rule regardless if it's been around for a while or if both sides do it.

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Mon November 25, 2013 3:25 am
by stip
Chris_H_2 wrote:
stip wrote:
Chris_H_2 wrote:
Green Habit wrote:
Chris_H_2 wrote:Listen, you're preaching to the converted on giving deference to a president's nomination so long as the person is (a) qualified, and (b) not a serial killer. The problem with both parties is that members have taken it upon themselves to define a person's qualifications based on their ideologies, and have tried to administer a litmus test to demonstrate that the nominee is "out of touch" or "too far to the [left or right]." I think it's despicable.

At the same time, I also see what's going on with the recent fights and, in particular, the opportunity that the Democrats see to facilitate the White House's agenda of legislating by regulation. Hence, the focus on the DC Circuit. Frankly, I think the matter is overblown.
So do you think that there's any time when a procedural supermajority is proper?
I think it was proper as was. It was originally to be used as a shield to avoid getting railroaded by a simple majority.
But it was not intended to be a vehicle for negating the results of elections. Filibustering a particularly odious nominee is one thing. Filibustering the idea of appointing any nominee is something else.
There's nothing new about the Republicans are doing. Democrats and Republicans do the same thing. It's the reason that Obama, when he was the junior senator from Illinois, railed against the idea of changing the rules. It's also the reason that Reid said he would never do it.
This is pretty new, actually. Both in terms of the size and scope of what is happening. This goes beyond partisanship into the basic nullification of democratic rule.

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Fri December 06, 2013 12:23 pm
by stip
Fun fact. This may have shifted slightly, and of course the politics probably would not align directly like this, but the smallest 21 states make up 11% of the countries population and have the ability, via fillibuster, to thwart the will of the other 89%.

Re: Supermajorities

Posted: Mon December 09, 2013 10:41 pm
by Chris_H_2
stip wrote:Fun fact. This may have shifted slightly, and of course the politics probably would not align directly like this, but the smallest 21 states make up 11% of the countries population and have the ability, via fillibuster, to thwart the will of the other 89%.
I suppose that you're equating the ideologies of certain members of Congress with the "will" of their constituents, no?