Misunderstanding The Blago Farce
Digby and Jane Hamsher [in a comment, Jane states that her objection is to excluding Burris from the Democratic Caucus, not to attempts to not seat Burris. My apologies to Jane for my confusion.] misunderstand the Blago Farce. Digby cites Jack and Jill blog writing:
Harry Reid, as well as the President-Elect, needs to explain why Traitor Joe Lieberman was allowed to keep his Senate seat . . .
Digby argues, by implication, that Burris has a better claim to a Senate seat than Lieberman. A few facts get in the way of this silliness. Joe Lieberman won an election. Rod Blagojevich is about to be impeached and likely go to jail - for trying to sell a Senate seat, among other things. Burris would be appointed by Blagojevich, not elected by the people. Suuure, Burris has the better claim. Sheesh. More errors on the flip.
Digby further writes:
I would add that the little end run by the Attorney General to have Blagojevich removed by the state supreme court and the Senate's clearly unconstitutional assertion that they can refuse to seat anyone they choose doesn't exactly reassure me that the Dems are going to be all that much more respectful of the law than the Republicans were. There are proper ways to handle this stuff and these are not among them.
That paragraph is pretty disrespectful of the facts and the law. The Attorney General went to court and made an argument, a good faith argument, to a court of law. The argument was rejected. The parties accepted the judgment of the court. This is the essence of respect for the law. The Bush Administration refused to go to court to have its legal theories tested. Muddled thinking by Digby here.
In terms of the Senate's claim regarding the Blagojevich appointment, Digby simply misstates the claim. The Senate does not claim "they can refuse to seat anyone they choose." What the Senate is claiming is that since Blagojevich has been accused by the US Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois Patrick Fitzgerald of trying to sell the Senate seat, that Blagojevich is incapacitated from making an appointment to that seat.
In terms of the constitutionality of that assertion, that remains to be tested. The Powelll v. McCormack case is NOT determinative of this question in my opinion. [Scribe points us to this SCOTUSBlog analysis of the issue. I agree with it.]
Finally, I think the political judgment of Digby and Hamsher here is completely wrong, but who knows, maybe they are right. But the lack of respect for the facts and a proper explanation of the issues involved in the posts was extremely bothersome to me.
Speaking for me only
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