Posted on 07/08/2018 4:48:42 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
National conservative leader and former Ohio Secretary of State and U.N. Ambassador Ken Blackwell expressed grave doubts Sunday about Judge Raymond Kethledges nomination to the Supreme Court, pushing back on the Gorsuch 2.0 label advocated by Kethledge supporters by using Souter 2.0. On Twitter, Blackwell, who was a senior member of the Trump transition team, wrote that Kethledge worried him. We cant afford Souter 2.0, he wrote, referring to George H.W. Bush nominee Justice David Souter, who, despite the endorsement of many solid conservatives, became an anchor of the left-wing of the Supreme Court for almost 20 years:
J. Kenneth Blackwell @kenblackwell Kethledge for #SCOTUS worries me. Reminds me too much of Souter. Been on bench for a decade, very few big cases - we can't afford Souter 2.0. 9:07 AM - Jul 8, 2018
The term was a play on Gorsuch 2.0, a moniker coined for Kethledge by conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt this week. Hewitt has links to Never Trump sentiment and relied on some Never Trumpers in the conservative legal world to bolster the case for Kethledge. The term, which implies a certain inevitability of a Kethledge pick, was widely picked up by the press. The Hill, the Washington Post, the New York Times, and others published pieces referring to Gorsuch 2.0.
Blackwell, in his tweet, referred to Kethledges lack of big cases in his time on the federal bench.
(Excerpt) Read more at breitbart.com ...
(iii) Other workers
Other qualifiedimmigrants who are capable, at the time of petitioning for classification under this paragraph, of performing unskilled labor, not of a temporary or seasonal nature, for which qualified workers are not available in the United States.
In October 2006, Deluxe Inn, a motel in Lansing, Michigan, filed a Form 9089 with the Department of Labor on Patels behalf. In that application, Deluxe Inn claimed that it was offering Patel a position as a lodging manager at an hourly wage of $22.28, or $46,342 per year, that it had advertised the position previously through a notice in two issues of a local newspaper, but that no qualified American workers had applied for the job.This is laughable. An job posting in a "local" newspaper, twice, is supposed to suffice as proof that another American was not available to take the job?
Ah, no! That is not what an appellate court does in a case like this.
You show your ignorance. There is no factual record because there were no proceedings in a lower court to establish a factual record. There were no proceedings because that lower court determined the individual lacked standing. So he appealed. The Appellate Court reversed, which means that they determined Patel had standing, sending the case back to the trial court for a full hearing on the facts of the case, hearing sworn testimony from both sides.
He shouldn't because it is irrelevant. The issue before the court of appeals was whether Patel had standing to seek judicial review. You want the appellate court to predetermine the likely outcome of that review before it happens. That is not how judicial process works.
Factual Background
In October 2006, Deluxe Inn, a motel in Lansing, Michigan, filed a Form 9089 with the Department of Labor on Patels behalf. In that application, Deluxe Inn claimed that it was offering Patel a position as a lodging manager at an hourly wage of $22.28, or $46,342 per year, that it had advertised the position previously through a notice in two issues of a local newspaper, but that no qualified American workers had applied for the job.
Your ignorance is on full display.
I’m just glad that it’s in Trump’s hands....
Yeah, but you gotta admit, a ringing endorsement for Kethledge from Hugh "I heart Romney" Hewitt is cause for concern.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.