Ken Donnelly, the Arlington Democrat who serves as Assistant
Majority Whip, introduced a resolution calling upon the U.S. Senate to act swiftly
on the nomination of a Supreme Court justice to replace Antonin Scalia, who
died in his sleep Feb. 13 while on a trip to Texas.
Donnelly described the measure as “a simple ask and an
important resolution.” It states, in part:
“Whereas there are several examples in history where a judge
has been successfully nominated, confirmed and appointed to the Supreme Court
in the year preceding a presidential election, including Justice Anthony
Kennedy by President Reagan, Justice Benjamin Cardozo by President Hoover and
Justice Louis Brandeis by President Wilson, and
“Whereas, in the event of a vacancy on the Supreme Court,
failing to timely nominate, consider and confirm the next justice for partisan
political reasons would undermine the plain meaning and intent of the Constitution
and be a profound disservice to the American people, now therefore be it
“Resolved that the members of the Massachusetts Senate
respectfully urge the members of the United States Senate to swiftly and
diligently fulfill their constitutional responsibility by granting a fair
hearing and a timely vote to the President’s next nominee to the Supreme
Court.”
You will recall that the Republican majority in control of
the U.S. Senate has said they will not even meet with President Obama’s next
Supreme Court nominee, never mind hold hearings or vote on that person.
Donnelly contrasted the endless partisan warfare and
cynicism within the U.S. Senate to the normal fair play and comity in the
Massachusetts Senate. Said he, “When we
have 34 Democrats in this branch and five Republicans, we make sure the
Republicans have a say. To have it happen in Washington, D.C., that the
Republicans don’t let the Democrats have a voice is hypocritical.” [Note: All quotations in this post have been excerpted from a State House News Service account of the Senate session of Thursday, Feb. 25, 2016.]
Minority Leader Bruce Tarr of Gloucester was quick to
disagree. “This invitation, this
resolution,” he declared, “is an invitation to the hounds of partisanship to
enter this chamber, to consume our thoughts, to consume our debate, at a time
when the issues are pressing and critical.”
Donnelly said, “I believe it is important to make sure that
our citizens, the 160,000 people that I represent (in the Fourth Middlesex
District), believe in the political system.
For the many people in my district that spent weeks and months and in
some cases years going all across this country to elect the President of the
United States and have a vote, I feel insulted that the people down in
Washington could say the people should decide.
They have decided. They decided in the election (of 2012) who
should be President until January, 2017.
To say otherwise is insulting. To
say our president is a lame duck is a terrible message to send across the
world.”
Tarr said, “If we go down the path of this resolution, then
I would suspect that, using the logic of the gentleman (Donnelly), we have an
obligation to file resolutions every day to express frustration with the
inaction of the President and Congress.
We don’t yet have a state budget in place and have not yet lifted the
cap on net metering and have not addressed ourselves to the things we want to
do with regard to the opioid crisis.
“If we want to say that our time will be consumed by things
of a national scale that we are all interested in, we have the ability to take
the direction and the focus of the (Massachusetts) Senate away from what we
have done thus far and become a proxy for the United States Congress.
“As much as I understand the frustration and concern of many
of us on this one issue, I wonder how many other appointments have not been
acted on (in Washington). Are we going
to debate those?”
Tarr moved that Donnelly’s resolution be tabled, and it
was. Senate President Stan Rosenberg then
announced the resolution would be brought up at the Senate’s next formal
session, which will likely be held on Thursday, March 3.
We can only hope that the next discussion on this issue will
be as lively as the first. Invitations to the hounds of partisanship and
terrible messages, indeed!
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