Showing posts with label 2022. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2022. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

Proposed Amendment B to the Wyoming Constitution Defeated.

Courthouses of the West: Vote No on the Proposed Amendment B to the Wyoming...: Let's get political for a second. Oh no, you are likely thinking, isn't this blog dedicated to architecture and the like? Sure, it c...

Apparently, my view was held by a large number of Wyoming voters. This went down in defeat by a fairly significant margin.  Not just failed to meet the threshold, but just was outright defeated. 

Friday, March 25, 2022

Jackson Hearing Concludes.

Courthouses of the West: News of the Supreme Court. Day three of the Jacks...:   The Jackson hearings: Key moments from Day 3 and Court remains silent on Thomas’ condition after he entered the hospital last week I have ...

These hearings are now concluded, and Judge Jackson will be confirmed.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell indicated that he would not vote to confirm Judge Jackson. Republican votes are not needed for this, due to the removal of the filibuster provisions for Supreme Court nominations back during the last period in which the Democrats controlled the Senate, so barring something spectacularly bizarre, confirmation is assured.

I'll confess that, as previously noted, unlike the norm, I never got into the confirmation hearings.  Usually I do in fact follow them, but I just didn't.  I picked up bits and pieces of the news on them, including Ted Cruz reading from a children's book, and a question on if the Judge could define what a woman is, but as the news all came out of context, I frankly haven't paid much attention to it.

Saturday, February 26, 2022

Lex Anteinternet: Biden Nominates Kentaji Brown Jackson to the United States Supreme Court

Lex Anteinternet: Biden Nominates Kentaji Brown Jackson to the Unite...:   

Biden Nominates Kentaji Brown Jackson to the United States Supreme Court

 

Jackson with Justice Breyer, whom she is nominated to replace.

She's no doubt qualified and is a sitting DC Circuit Federal Appeals Court Judge, but I'll admit I'm disappointed.  Jackson is a Harvard Law graduate, making the Ivy League grip on the court seemingly irreversible.  She's also married to another Harvard graduate, a surgeon, who is of the Boston Brahmin class.

I was hoping for a less Ivy League nominee

She's likely to pass, however, the Senate Judiciary Committee and receive enough votes to be seated, an important consideration for any nominee is this highly polarized era.

Wednesday, January 26, 2022

Justice Stephen Breyer To Retire.

Just when you thought the news wasn't tense enough. . . Russians looming over Ukraine. . . PRC looming over Taiwan. . . the mid term election. . . a baseball lockout. . . 


Justice Stephen Breyer decides to retire.

Uff.

Well, off to a titanic nomination spat with a 50/50 divided Senate.

The filibuster, however, won't apply, so the Democrats, assuming they can all agree on the replacement nominee, will get somebody in.  They key will be satisfying the moderate Democrats, although they are few in number.

Breyer, a 1964 Harvard law graduate, was appointed to the Court by Bill Clinton in 1994.  He was principally a government attorney early in his career before becoming a Harvard professor in 1967, although he took time out from that pursuit to engage in government service from time to time, including serving as a Watergate prosecutor.  He was an expert on administrative law.  He went on the bench in 1980.

Breyer had one of those legal careers that's both enviable and deceptive.  Undoubtedly highly intelligent, he actually practiced real law very little, spending no time whatsoever in private practice and the most of his career in academia or on the bench.  Of some slight interest, in his early legal career, 1964 and 1965, he was completing eight years in the Army Reserve, from which he left as a corporal.

Beyer, who is 83, has been under enormous pressure to retire due to Democratic fears that if he does not do so prior to the November election and should then pass away, certain a possibility at his advanced age, his replacement would not get through a Republican Senate or would be nominated by a Republican President.