Posted on 05/15/2005 10:25:07 PM PDT by bitt
The nomination of John Bolton as am bassador to the United Nations fi nally cleared the Foreign Relations Committee last week and is heading for the Senate floor, but Democrats are still working to torpedo it on everything save the actual merits. Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) announced at week's end that she is placing a "hold" on the nomination until the State Department forks over a barrel-full of documents demanded by the Dems in hopes of finding a smoking gun to sink Bolton once and for all.
Placing a hold means the nomination is subject to an open-ended delay. It would take 60 votes to override a hold and then any other senator, or even Boxer herself, could announce another hold.
Of course, Democrats were helped along Thursday by the histrionics of Sen. George Voinovich (R-Ohio), who said he opposes the nomination, but that he would not block a full Senate vote.
Voinovich said he determined Bolton's unsuitability while "poring over the hundreds of pages of testimony."
Of course, if the senator actually had attended the hearings at which that testimony was heard, he might have formed a different opinion.
As it is, Voinovich placed himself as have the Democrats in the bizarre position of picking a fight with someone who thinks America needs to get tough with the United Nations.
That is, the same body that has most recently ignored genocide in Rwanda and Darfur and named Zimbabwe (!) to its human-rights commission.
Is this really what Democrats want?
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
John Kerry campaigned last year on the notion that America needs more, not less, U.N. influence in its foreign-policy making and he paid a heavy price for it.
Now he's busily running again for the White House; last week he asked: "Who is [Bolton] speaking for?"
That's similar to the question critics hurled at Daniel Patrick Moynihan during his term as U.N. ambassador, now widely regarded as among the most significant in the world body's history.
State Department bureaucrats despised Moynihan and continually worked to undercut him. Most U.N. diplomats including U.S. allies agreed with the British envoy, who publicly compared him to Wyatt Earp and complained that "he's not making my job any easier."
That's because Moynihan himself had declared, in what could serve as an eloquent rebuke to Bolton's foes, that "the main point of public diplomacy, which the U.N. is, is not to paper over differences, but to make their existence known and to make them clear." '
A question about Senate rules and "holds."
Can a senator similarly put a "hold" on a judicial nominee?
If this is the case, then what good will it do to eliminate the judicial filibuster rule? They'll just put a "hold" on any conservative judicial nominee...
What is the situation with respect to judicial "holds?"
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