Over two hundred years ago, a man who wrote under the name of
Publius was hunched over his desk one evening. He was attempting
to convince New Yorkers to ratify the proposed United States
Constitution. After a moment of thought, he dipped his quill into
the ink and wrote the following: The President is to
nominate, and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate,
to appoint ... judges of the Supreme Court.
Publius, of course, was the pen name used by three of our
nations founders when they wrote the eighty-five newspaper
essays now known as the Federalist Papers. Among the
authors was Alexander Hamilton, who wrote essay number 76, from
which I just quoted. These fading words on a yellowed document
reveal that what a handful of U.S. senators are doing today is a
constitutional travesty.
Democratic senators have for months been filibustering judges
chosen by President Bush to serve on the federal courts. If the
full Senate were allowed to vote on these fine judges, they would
easily be confirmed. But a hostile minority is using the
filibuster tactic to prevent such a votepurely for
ideological reasons.
In so doing, they are behaving as if the Senate is supposed to
have equal say with the president in deciding who sits on the
court. That is nonsense.
The Constitution could not be clearer. The nomination is made
by the president alone. The Senate is to give its advice and
consentnot demand ideological purity. Alexander Hamilton
explained the intent in his essay number 76. It is not
likely, he wrote, that [the Senates] sanction
would often be refused where there were not special and strong
reasons for the refusal.
The advice and consent clause, Hamilton continued, was
intended
to provide a check upon a president who would, say, appoint his
brother, or engage in favoritism, or reward family connections or
personal benefactorsnothing more.
And yet, today a Senate minority is using the filibuster to
prevent a vote on highly qualified judges, like Bill Pryor or
Miguel Estrada, an able Hispanic lawyer who was nominated and had
to be withdrawn, and Janice Brown, an African-American judge from
California. And the grounds for opposition is not what the
constitutional framers intended; its ideological. They just
do not like what these judges believe.
This filibuster should offend us for another reason.
Americas founders, informed by their Christian
understanding of the Fall, provided for a system of checks and
balances so that no one branch of government would have power
over the other. But today a minority in the Congress is holding
hostage judges named to the court. This is a fundamental assault
on an independent judiciary and, thus, a violation of the balance
of powers.
The Senate is debating this week whether to change its rules
so that a simple majority could confirm a judge. That would
prevent nominees from being filibustered. This is the only way we
will have judges who interpret the law instead of making it up.
Please pick up your phone and call your senators: Jam the
Capitol switchboard. The rules must be changed to avoid the
hijacking of the Constitution. And then, ask your neighbors to do
the same. Let them know that the unfit characters
Hamilton described two centuries ago are not President
Bushs nominees, but those who are trying to upend the
Constitution.
Copyright © 2005 Prison Fellowship. Used with permission.