Posted on 12/13/2017 3:32:12 PM PST by Coronal
The Senate Judiciary Committees top Republican said Wednesday that two of President Trumps nominees for open seats on the federal bench will not be confirmed. One of them, Jeff Mateer, was nominated to serve as a federal judge in the Eastern District of Texas.
The Senate Judiciary Committees top Republican said Wednesday that two of President Trumps nominees for open seats on the federal bench will not be confirmed, just a day after urging the White House to reconsider them.
U.S. Sen. Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa, said that based on his discussions with the White House, the nominations of Jeff Mateer and Brett Talley would not move forward through the confirmation process. The decision comes after reports that both nominees made public comments celebrating groups or policies that were discriminatory.
The decision is a significant interruption of the Trump administrations plans to have the Senate swiftly confirm its judicial nominees, often over the objections of Democrats complaining that certain picks are too biased or too inexperienced for the federal bench.
Mateer was nominated to serve as a federal judge in the Eastern District of Texas, while Talley was nominated for a federal district court seat in Alabama. Last month, the committee approved Talleys nomination on a party-line vote, despite the American Bar Associations finding that he was not qualified to be a federal judge. The full Senate had yet to confirm his nomination.
(Excerpt) Read more at texastribune.org ...
Legislative sedition.
I would be real careful about what these folks consider discriminatory.
“He also seems to have written 16,381 postsmore than 3½ per dayon the University of Alabama fan message board TideFans.com....
...”Heaven forbid we let the facts get in the way of your righteous indignation, but Forrest, when he decommissioned his men, told them to make peace with the men they had fought and live as good citizens of the United States. It was only after the perceived depredations of the Union army during reconstruction that Forrest joined (it is highly unlikely that he founded or acted as the Grand Wizard) the first KKK, which was entirely different than the KKK of the early 19th Century. When the Klan turned to racial violence, he distanced himself from the organization as he had long supported the reconciliation of the races. In fact, he often spoke to black organizations.”
As best I can tell, the blog post was factual. Forrest DID distance himself from the KKK and DID speak to black groups. But this is turned into “defending the first KKK”?
ONLY if you lie about the post.
As for Mateer:
” Now, I submit to you, a parent of three children who are now young adults, a first grader really knows what their sexual identity? I mean it just really shows you how Satan’s plan is working and the destruction that’s going on.”
http://www.cnn.com/2017/09/20/politics/kfile-jeff-mateer-lgbt-remarks/index.html
Works for me! This transgender stuff is a bunch of lies told by the Father of Lies. Want to know what sex you are? Check the plumbing. And allowing homosexual marriage WILL open the door, and we WILL see people pressing for the unimaginable. I saw a news report about a woman who was denied the right to marry...a train station!
And by making this post on FreeRepublic, I am of course no longer open to becoming a judge. Not that I have any background for it anyways.
Recess appointments?
His own party will not allow him to do this, they have a proforma session every day set up to prevent just that.
Can you imagine?
They did not even do that for that SOB Obama.
I am beginning to understand how the French Revolution happened.
"The move, which requires the agreement of every senator ...."
One of the reasons they didn't want Moore in the Senate.
Senate blocks Trump from making recess appointments over break
To support their contention, the article mischaracterizes a quotation from Forrest where they have Forrest saying "I have no powder to burn killing negroes," where the imply he mean he WOULD kill negroes if he had powder. However that quotation is taken completely out of the context in which it was spoken. . . because he was having a discussion about the RADICALS among the veterans of the Confederates who were opposed to the Federal government in the KKK organization who might still take up arms and/or foment revolution again. Forrest went on in the very next sentence to state which makes the actual passage that Slate truncated read very differently: "I have no powder to burn killing negroes. I intend to kill the radicals." He goes on to state, "I have told them this and more. There is not a radical leader in this town but is a marked man; and if trouble should break out, not a one of them would be left alive. I have told them that they were trying to create disturbances and then slip out and leave the consequences to fall upon the Negro; but they can't do that. . ."
From those connected sentences in that discussion, Forrest indicates he is not opposed to the negroes but rather is intending to root out the radicals attempting to reignite the civil war, because that was the primary topic of the several paragraphs of the discussion, not hunting and killing blacks, but rather the vexatious problem of the radicals in his organization.
Yet the Slate article author, although linking to that entire passage, only extracts what appears to be a hint of "intended violence" toward negroes assumed by a 21st century reader who does not grasp the cadence of a 19th century speaker's actual negative connotation.
I suppose I should not be surprised that ignorance might be the reason that Slate actually links to the source document where the complete context IS provided, or, perhaps they just assumed that no would go and check their Liberal mischaracterization of what Forrest actually said which supports what the nominee explained in his online post.
The article's author also seems to be conveniently ignorant of the KKK's history. The Slate article also attempts to mischaracterize the founding of the KKK by imputing its foundation into the 20th Century, when its actual founding is well established in 1866. . . again, as the nominee's short but supposedly offensive online comment stated.
The honorable soldier Forrest disassociated himself from the organization as other leaders took the KKK into terrorism and violence to oust the Republican state governments in the South by suppressing the negro voters by any means including murder. By 1871, the early KKK had been disbanded. It was resurrected in 1915 as a White Supremacist organization by the Democrats.
Seeing your reply reminded me of freeper nathanbedford, whose thoughts I sought on this question. When I type his name into the user name search box, I get No Freeper by that name. Anyone know what happened to him?
Not a clue. . . usually even those who have been banished are still in the database. Perhaps he changed his Freepname?
Very good point.
If the Republicans had any political skills (or any Conservative principles) they would have tried to trap and humiliate Deputy A.G. Rod Rosenstein when he testified in Congress today about political bias in the Special Prosecutor's Office.
They must believe in the constitution.
Why did Trump not defend these guys instantly?
Both of their statements were completely reasonable and completely factual.
Both of them testified about these statements in earlier Senate hearings.
Freeper Nathan Bedford Forrest has discussed his interesting namesake and that same history.
Not near enough info to even speculate at this time - the question is, would a sane person consider the whole of the situations/context to be discriminatory? Our Congress Critters ain’t all there in the sanity department.
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