Thursday, December 11, 2008

Leahy responds to Specter on holding off on Holder's hearings

TPM:

Given the amount of material to go through, Specter said, the hearings should not begin until January 26 at the earliest.

The speech followed a letter sent last night by Specter to Leahy.

In response, Leahy just now fired off a letter back to his longtime colleague --
"Dear Arlen", it begins -- expressing surprise at Specter's surprise.

Leahy writes:

As I have said repeatedly from the time reports of his likely designation began appearing in the press in mid-November, I thought we should move promptly. It hardly came as a surprise when the President-elect announced that Eric would be a key part of his national security team at the designation announcement on December 1. My recollection is that your initial reaction on November 18 was that you were at that time already reviewing his record. Of course, Eric is someone you and I both know well and have known and worked with for years.

Leahy also cites historical precedent to argue that the timing of the hearings is not unusual:

After the contentious 2000 presidential election, I also proceeded promptly to hold the hearing on the designation by President-elect Bush of John Ashcroft to be Attorney General. John's designation was not formally announced until December 22, but I held his hearing 25 days later. I do not think President-elect Obama should be penalized for proceeding promptly with transition and designating his Attorney General selection three weeks before President Bush had.

I am sure you recall during your first year in the Senate how promptly Chairman Thurmond proceeded on the designation of William French Smith to be Attorney General at the beginning of the Reagan administration. The Committee completed its consideration of President Reagan's lawyer to be the Attorney General of the United States with a vote on January 16, even though he was not designated until December 11. We have known about Eric's designation officially for 10 days, and unofficially for more than three weeks. The Committee would have to vote on January 6, the first day of the new Congress, to approximate that timeline.

President Carter's first Attorney General, Griffin Bell, was not designated until December 18, yet his hearing and Committee consideration were completed by January 19. Approximating that timeline would have the Committee voting before the new Congress even comes into session.

Leahy even brings up past favors he has done for Specter:

I have sought to accommodate your interests on many occasions. I scheduled field hearings for you in Pennsylvania on foreclosure and health care mergers issues, and worked hard to ensure fair treatment and confirmation for nominations in which you had a personal interest.

1 comment:

airJackie said...

Let's see who wins this clash. Holder as Deputy AG can recommend but only Clinton could approve and sign a pardon. Specter is a lawyer and he knows that. This is another stall tactic and it will be used on all Obama/Biden candidates. The GOP will do it best to let this country go down as far as possible so they can say in 3 years it was Obama's fault not Bush/Cheney. Look Specter got his wings with the fake Magic Bullet story that Americans brought and he's been lying ever since.