Harry Reid’s back is against the wall.
He thinks that if he doesn’t oppose Rod Blagojevich’s appointment of Roland Burris to fill Barack Obama’s vacant Senate seat, John Cornyn and the Republicans will make the Democrats wear Blago around their necks for the rest of their natural lives.
And on that count, he’s probably right.
But the decisions Reid is making right now are politically motivated, with little regard for the law. The Democrats are only in this position, and looking so compromised, because of bad decisions Reid has made in the past.
How will it look if the Sergent at Arms bars Burris from the Senate floor, but did nothing to Harriet Miers and Karl Rove when they defied Senate subpoenas?
How will it look if they refuse to accept Burris
into the Democratic Caucus after having accepted Joe Lieberman, who spent years enabling Bush administration crime and corruption as Chairman of the Homeland Security Committee?
How does it look to be screaming about Burris’s "taint" when they did nothing for decades about Ted Stevens, and gave him a standing ovation even after he’d been convicted? Or for that matter, their inaction with regard to Larry Craig?
How does it look now that Reid is manipulating Senate procedure to exclude Burris, but simply shrugged his shoulders over Samuel Alito, warrantless wiretapping and the Military Commissions Act?
As Athenae said, "I don’t even know what to do when Harry Reid wakes up from his two-year nap and discovers that THIS is a bridge too far."
Walter Dellinger argues that after eight years of executive contempt for the rule of law, the most important thing right now is not whether Burris is seated or not, but that Reid’s actions be impeccable:
If we are serious about the "rule of law" our first principle should be that the Senate’s power to decide (even if unreviewable) is the always and only the power to decide correctly under the law, not the power to decide however the majority of the Senate prefers to decide. The fact that some grounds for rejecting Burris might be unreviewable by the courts means that the Senate should take more care, not less, to be sure it is acting a constitutionally legitimate manner.
Blagojevich’s appointment is, of course, a shameful act by a disgraced Governor, a blight on the reputation of Burris for accepting, and a political embarrassment for Democrats. The proper question, however, is whether the Senate, acting in good faith, can reach a conscientious conclusion that this appointment, however unwise and unwelcome, is also unlawful under Illinois law or under the United States Constitution. If it isn’t unlawful, he has to be seated.
That is not, however, the way in which Harry Reid is comporting himself at the moment. Rather than advocate to strip Blagojevich of the power to make the Senate appointment, Reid didn’t want to risk losing the seat in a special election and wrote a letter in opposition, urging Blagojevich to step down instead.
We all know how that worked out.
Then fifty members of the Democratic Caucus signed a letter saying they would oppose any Blagojevich appointment from being seated — without due consideration as to whether the Senate had the right to do so. Although there is considerable disagreement on that front, it is not at all certain that they can.
Now Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White says that he will not sign the appointment of Roland Burris, and it isn’t clear he has the legal authority to do that, either:
Signing the certification is a ministerial act, not an established right of veto. The decision on who to appoint is the governor’s and the governor’s alone under Illinois law; there is no power promulgated for the SoS to have decision making authority. If White can simply refuse to sign the certification, and that stops the process in it’s tracks, he would have unmitigated veto power over the appointment. He does not.
But rather than try and determine whether this was a legal action, Reid called White and egged him on, to "thank him for his strong position on this important matter."
Reid intends to use this "lack of certification" to deny Burris the right to be sworn in on this coming Tuesday:
Should Burris appear in Washington without that certification, armed police officers stand ready to bar him from the Senate floor, said a Democratic official briefed on Senate leaders’ plans.
Is any of this legal or ethical? That isn’t a question Reid seems to be asking.
As Dellinger notes:
Less important than the conclusion reached is the importance of having the Senate make a good faith effort to answer it according to its best understanding of the law rather than on the basis of sheer unreviewable power. Rejecting Burris without first ascertaining that there is a solid legal basis for doing so would be a greater stain on the Senate’s honor than seating someone who foolishly accepted appoint[ment] by a knave.
If Reid doesn’t stop making political expediency the ultimate arbiter of his actions, the only clear winner is going to be George Bush and his legacy of contempt for the rule of law.



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Could someone please arrest Reid at an airport mensroom
431 hrs & 13 min
I get the impression that Reid is taking the path of least resistance – to the GOP line of BS, since he seems to believe whatever they tell him.
I hope he’s replaced this session by someone with more respect for the Constitution and a better understanding of the majority leader’s job. (Heck, at this point, DiFi might do a better job.)
Yeah keeping the GOP from being mad at them continues to be the D’s blueprint.
Can we all agree that Sen. Reid must go as Majority Leader? The man is a total disaster for our party!
I still don’t get why any Dem would accept the seat. They have to know that they will get no support from the Senate Dems. Is it really worth being able to call yourself Senator for the rest of your life? Vanity they name is politician.
Rule of Law = Only for the non-Villagers. After all, the Villagers obviously know what is best for us. So what if they ignore the law?
Rust Limpballs, Insanity, and BillO might talk mean about them on the radio and KKKarl won’t invite them for quail wings.
I don’t get it. Reid, as well as Obama, should be pressuring Blago and Burris until it’s too much for them and they have to withdraw. He’s not breaking any laws doing this now.
Thanks for pointing out the rule of law angle on this, Jane. I agree that Blago is wrong not to resign, that he should not have attempted an appointment while he is under investigation for selling the seat and that Burris was wrong to accept the appointment. Yet, as you point out, Blago still is the Governor and he alone has the power to make the appointment.
My preference would be to seat Burris but not to accept him into the caucus. Let him prove himself with a few votes of conscience and go from there. Bonus points to Reid if he used this as his wake-up and went back to kick Joe out at the same time. (not that any of this would happen)
DIGG is open
Happy New Year Jane!
Thanks once again for Firedoglake and people who talk about important issues.
The rule of law has never been too popular with Reid and Pelosi. If I had taken an oath to “protect and defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same;” I would never have “taken impeachment off the table”. Faced with war crimes, over two million violations of FISA, a scheme to obstruct justice for Jack Abramoff, then using the AUSA’s to obstruct justice for the entire US, while establishing the Republican Party rezidents throughout the executive (just like they have already done with the judiciary), Reid and Pelosi throw up their hands. There is no solution.
The rule of law is already dead. We are just going to find out what the death march sounds like.
OT : Reports : Denver schools Bennett to be appointed to replace Salazar
http://tpmelectioncentral.talk…..e_to_b.php
430 hrs & 47 min
Senate Dems are like a rudderless ship…
good grief!
What is worse seating a guy with a tainted appointment or breaking the law.
Seriously this crew is out of control.
Dugg, thanks for opening it.
Worse than operating purely for political expediency is making the worst possible political choices. If he just could have made some good political decisions I wouldn’t mind the political expediency so much.
Great Idea JimWhite! Jane’s point that the Secretary of State cannot block the appointment on the technicality of the signature is correct; all that is required is for Blago to appear before the Secretary and say “That’s my signature” with two witnesses and if Ill.Sec.State wants to stay out of prison, he will have to certify the appointment. Alternative is for Blago to file a Mandamus to Ill.SupremeCourt compelling SecState to certify. Either way Burris has to be seated, by law. JimWhite’s idea to not bring him into caucus (and also, censure for participating in what appears to be a criminal conspiracy tom sell the senate seat on Blago’s part) and ethics investigation will make it less likely for this to happen elsewhere. But of course Lousiana said that when the Govenor ran the state from prison…
Again with the Blago/Burris stuff?
You go girl!!!
What a time to stand up and pose like a man.
This whole scenario would make an excellent con law school final exam question, federalism, states rights, you know, the state’s substantive and procedural choice of how to fill a vacated federal senate seat with federal checks spiced up with egotistical politicians at both levels.
If I were writing that final exam, I would add this: imagine further Blago gets the wiretap evidence tossed at trial and is found not guilty on a technicality. Those same tapes likely could not be used in an impeachment. (I suppose then the IL leg might opt for the special election. Due process is part of the rule of law, after all, as is the presumption of innocence.
That would be a fun final to grade.
Burris has already filed with the Ill.Supreme.Ct. to force Sec.State to certify him.
You forgot Sen Vitter sleeping around is one thing for a Senator but wearing Diapers? And this guy backs traditional marriage for straight people, husbands like him are the reason for divorce! But Reid would rather shake hands with a bad baby who dosn’t wash his hands than Burris who is qualified and has done nothing wrong.
Ken Salazar’s replacement announced, via the Denver Post;
http://www.denverpost.com/ci_11355396?source=rss
Judging from Reid’s most recent statements (”The DEMOCRATIC CAUCUS will refuse to seat Burris…”) that is basically what Reid intends to happen. that or else some court or another issues a ruling and he claims he wasn’t going to seat dirty Burris but “the courts forced him to”. either way, though, he’s setting himself up to look like he caved yet again.
A-frickin-men to that! If I were a Senator angling for Reid’s position, I would be using this fiasco as Exhibit A for why Harry’s gotta go.
Does anyone think Reid is purposefully weakening the Democrats from Day One of the new Congress? Instead of setting a new tone, they are running around like chickens lacking heads … Or is there some elaborate deal related to this posturing?
I don’t see how it’s possible something like that would work. Blago has no reason to deal with them at all because they can offer him nothing, good or bad, as long as he’s under investigation. Burris is playing a strong hand PR-wise (it may be strong legally as well), and is content to let it play out it seems. It would look too ugly not to seat him no matter who appointed him, and Senate precedent has shown outright crooks were seated. Reid let too many of Bush’s appointments sail for this not to look bad, and made this mess to begin with.
Of course the wording of the question(s) is important.
Does Candidate.B have a substantive or procedural right to have Sec.State certify his appointment? Does Governor.B have the authority to issue the appointment? Does the Senate have the right to refuse to seat Candidate.B? If Senate cannot refuse to seat Candidate.B, do they have the right to expel him? Can the Senate legally use the seating and expulsion to obtain under color of law an authority or power to refuse to seat, which they otherwise do not have?
Thanks Jane, these are the best:
Blago/Burris are background. This story is really about Harry.
Harry should have backed a special election he has people to research stuff FDR did quite well getting Dems elected by doing a stimulus package..
My fear is that Harry has plans to cut Obama’s stimulus package, water down health care fold for the GOP every chance he gots you know business as usual.
In that kind of environment we could loose the Illinois Senate seat held by Obama and Harry would not be Senate Leader anymore.
But outside of that happening is there anything else likely to cause the Dems to lose in Illinois?
Yes
Two of the more useless senators: Daschle is interviewing Reid on cspan2 right now. Just tuned in so I don’t know what the topic is or when it was recorded. Not date bug on upper right.
Reid us a total dodobrain.
Never attribute to malice what can be adequately explained by stupidity.
Boxturtle (Pardon Blago and give him Reids job! He’ll need the big office for those cajones he’s flashing)
Harry Reid has hisself some Big Daddy issues…damn.
It would be hard to write a question more interesting than the way this is all unfolding. However, while there is generally no one right answer on a law school final, out here in the real world, the Dems as led by Reid (and by implication Obama) look ridiculous.
Remember the red meat state that voted Stevens out of office (you can see Russia from their house!)? People get tired of corruption and incompetence (uncle Toobz!). Democrats last fall determined that with the Blago corruption problems, they did not want a special election (a mistake, but they folded their tent and now have to sleep on it). All the legal authority left to fill the seat is in Gov.B’s hands.
True since there was no special election the Dems left in all in Blago’s hands and screwed themselves.
While law school is designed to get you to think of all the ways to argue something, statutory construction is designed to give one “right” answer (in the case of well written law). Precedent then further limits statutory interpretation. The Founding Fathers would believe that there is one right answer, one in line with Natural Law and the Rights and Dignity of Man.
Just as interesting is the question whether once George Bush and Richard Cheney leave office, can they be arrested and extradited to the International Criminal Court in the Hague to face the War Crimes charges against them? Do the Geneva Conventions apply?
Reid is a Republican. They are all corrupt.
“Fightin” Harry Reid has ascended to the throne of most hated man in the Progressive Blogosphere, punking Joe Lieberman for the honor!
And dammit, he’s worked very hard to acquire this crown of shame!
Every move he makes digs the hole deeper for him and his fellow Dem Senators…at this rate they won’t have the political capital to help O pass the necessary bills to improve the financial situation in this country.
The only gift Harry has is the ability to self-castrate!
I added some “facts” that made one answer less automatic, but I agree, generally there is a stronger answer on an exam, as there is in the real world, but you look for advocacy, the ability to see the various angles, as well as the “right” answer, IIRC.
But I’d love to see the Bush/Cheney war crimes question addressed, on an exam but also for real. Having just finished The Reader which deals in part with post-Nazi Germany’s attempts to confront its past, I think we’re going to have to deal with this somehow, someway, but, regrettably, unlikely in a forum like The Hague or an impeachment trial.
Question: If through some bizarre circumstance the Illinois Supreme Court rules against Burris or refuses to take his case, what happens then?
Give ‘Em Head Harry
There is an obvious solution here, and it requires Barack Obama’s getting off his high horse and negotiating a deal between Burris & the Senate Dems. My guess is that Burris really just wants to be Senator long enough to put the title on his already-built fancy tombstone-mausoleum thingy. So Obama just needs to get a written agreement from Burris that he’ll step down the minute Blagojevich is removed as Governor to make way for the new Governor to appoint someone else. In exchange, the Dems need to seat Burris, give him most privileges, let him have at least a skeleton staff and be nice to him. Everybody saves face that way; Burris get his title carved on the tomb & the Dems aren’t stuck with Burris for long (unless Blago doesn’t get removed, in which case they’ve got Burris for two years. Burris hasn’t won a statewide office or primary in years, so slim-to-no chance he’ll be back).
Here’s hoping Obama has figured this out and we get this nonsense behind us. If he hasn’t, the Dems and the nation suffers, and Obama begins his presidency on a note even less auspicious than the Rick Warren pick affords.
The Constant Weader at http://www.RealityChex.com
This is painful. Whatever your opinion of Sen. Reid, you can’t really want him to lose on this, if you are a Democrat. Sen. Reid is not going anywhere. If he loses, all the Democrats lose. President Elect Obama’s on the hook along with all the Senators who signed.
The best we can hope for is a do-over where Gov. Blagojevich rescinds the appointment, and the State Legislature passes a law allowing a special election.
Burris will probably win an election. Maybe he should win. He is the first elected African American to win Illinois statewide office. He would be running to fill President-elect Obama’s Senate seat. The prospect of the Senate becoming an all white body again, is not appealing to me. All most people have heard about Burris is widely televised high praise from Gov. Blagojevich’s opponents.
Both sides could make a case for a moral victory.
After giving in so many times Sen. Reid can’t afford to lose now that he is taking such a public stand. The Democratic party can afford it even less.
Sen. Reid is not going anywhere. He is taking all the heat on this, but he is following Senate Democrats, and the President-elect on this issue, not leading them.