Midnight oil
Midnight oil

When actual news happens, writing APR can be a bit frustrating. Like posting a set of Superbowl predictions the morning after the big game, reading the columns put together by the, ahem, cream of beltway journalism several days before the world takes a lurch, offers little more than a forensic level of interest. 

In this case, somewhere between now and when Maureen Dowd wrote her six hundredth piece on how upset she is that Hillary Clinton stood by Bill, Atonin Scalia died.

In writing about the Civil War, historian Barbara Fields said that it might have been a “very ugly filthy war with no redeeming characteristics at all” except that the cause of emancipation “ennobled what otherwise would have been meaningless carnage into something higher.”  

In more democratic (small d or big D, take your pick) times, we might expect that President Obama nominates a replacement for Scalia, that replacement receives some weeks of Senate review, and is then approved. It’s happened that way just over one hundred times. However, as the howling on the right already indicates, the replacement of Scalia might easily stretch into the election.

In which case, Fields’ quote will have a new use. This election, which has been ugly, filthy, and above all blindingly silly and disheartening, may be elevated into a direct referendum on compelling, divisive issues which have roiled the country for decades. Americans will step into a voting booth knowing that they are as close to voting directly on a woman’s right to choose, on affirmative action, on the right to organize, on the continuation of the Voting Rights Act as we are ever likely to achieve.

Don’t expect the election to stop being ugly, filthy, silly or disheartening. But we just got a reminder: it’s also of staggering import.

The New York Times on this decision...

Justice Antonin Scalia… served on the Supreme Court for 30 years and made as big a mark on the court and on American law and politics as some of the chief justices under whom he served. It took about 10 minutes after the announcement of his death for the right wing to start screaming that the Senate should not confirm a replacement while President Obama is in office.

Given how blindly ideological the Republicans in the Senate are, after nearly eight years of doing little besides trying to thwart Mr. Obama, it is disturbingly likely that Mitch McConnell, the Senate majority leader and architect of the just-say-no approach, will lead his colleagues in keeping Justice Scalia’s seat open, and the highest court in the land essentially paralyzed, in the hope that one of the hard-right Republicans running for the presidency will win.

Mr. McConnell announced on Saturday night that “this vacancy should not be filled until we have a new president,” claiming that he wanted to give American voters the chance to decide.

If you don’t hear the drum-roll and the bugles being sounded, you’re not listening. What’s that tune? This is important. This is important. This is important. 

Justice Scalia, who was appointed by President Ronald Reagan in 1986... was more than any other conservative justice responsible for bringing ideology to the foreground in the court’s deliberations and, sometimes, its decisions. The conservative justices who preceded him, including Justice Rehnquist, and who followed him, like Anthony Kennedy, were not ideological animals in the same sense as Justice Scalia. …

Justice Scalia wrote few of the divided court’s 5-to-4 decisions, perhaps because the chief justices were aware that Justice Scalia’s lack of self-control in his judgments made him unreliable in those cases.

One prominent exception was his majority decision in District of Columbia v. Heller, in which the court ruled for the first time that the Second Amendment granted an individual right to bear arms. But Justice Scalia did say that that right was not absolute, and that certain weapons like assault rifles could be banned, but the case still set the court’s fundamentalist approach to gun rights.

Now. Let’s go inside and see what else is up. But before you do, get Glory playing on the speakers. You’re going to need it.

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From the moment that the Republican presidential contenders took the stage—or, more accurately, attempted to take the stage—for their final pre-New Hampshire debate last Saturday night, it was clear that the GOP was in trouble (with a capital "T").

The establishment's would-be savior, Marco Rubio, immediately dispelled with the notion (perpetuated by the "liberal media") that he's a strong candidate.

And then, much to Chris Christie's (and the internet's) delight, he dispelled with it again ... and again ... and again.

And once more for good measure.

When all was said and done, Rubio had thoroughly dispelled with the notion—and, in the process, thoroughly discredited himself.

The next day, his campaign tried to (literally) tackle their growing "robot problem" head-on, to no avail.

In fact, they probably made the situation worse.

After finishing a disappointing (though not at all surprising) 5th place in the New Hampshire primary, a contrite Rubio promised his supporters that he'd never again embarrass them—but, given his history, it seems likely that he'll repeat himself (again).

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What’s coming up on Sunday Kos …

  • Should we ban parents from kids sporting events, by Mark E Andersen
  • He holds my heart. Frederick Douglass, by Denise Oliver Velez
  • US military to assess and manage risks of climate change, by Susan Grigsby
  • Only fundamental change, not micromanagement, will prevent more lead poisoning after Flint, by David Akadjian
  • Big corporations will always cheat (yep, I said cheat) on their taxes. Here's how to deal with it, by Ian Reifowitz
  • If only Lavoy Finicum had not been a white man…, by Frank Vyan Walton
  • How Bernie Sanders lost me ... and Hillary Clinton won me over, by Laura Clawson
  • Presidents and cartoons: You think Obama gets dissed? Look what Abe Lincoln faced, by Sher Watts Spooner
  • A rose by any other name, by DarkSyde
  • Sanders, Trump, the Horatio Alger myth, and the lie of American meritocracy, by Chauncey DeVega
  • Is it time for grassroots movements to coalesce around The Bernie Sanders Revolution, by Egberto Willies

Did you know that today is officially “Share a link about your favorite new continuing science fiction novel broken into a series of blog posts and podcasts Day”? Well, that’s probably because it isn’t. But it should be.

It’s Skimsday on the planet Rusk, a day when the two suns of the planet where Denny lives are both skating the horizon. But let’s call this Sharesday. As in “press that Twitter button, or that Facebook button, or post a url out there somewhere because I need the eyeballs.” Sharesday. Because it sounds better than Shamelessselfpromotionday.

This is the third episode of On Whetsday. Denny has danced at the spaceport and he’s shared a meal with friends. Now he’s off to the marketsuch as it is.

And while you’re clicking, be sure and click through to the On Whetsday podcast where actor Raymond Shinn is reading the book in weekly segments.

Okay, pull the ripcord, we’re going in ...

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Two words describe this entire debate: pathetic and embarrassing. 

You can watch the action on CBS or at the live stream at CBSNews.com.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:55:01 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Closing statements:

Kasich: Pretty much as incoherent as ever. Loves South Carolina. We’re all part of a big mosaic. I’ll send the power back. Spirit of America. The Lord wants us to engage. I have no idea what he’s talking about. But he feels inspired.

Carson: More coherent than Kasich, bizarrely. Then he starts talking about Stalin. Stalin is bringing us down? Not if you vote for Carson. He’ll empower you.

Jeb!: The next president will be faced with an unforeseen challenge. Deep shit, there, Jeb! He’ll be a uniter. “We” led in Florida after natural disasters and shit. Not sure that the royal “we” is the way to go here.

Rubio: It’s a difficult time in our country. Jobs. Culture. Right and wrong. Dogs and cats sleeping together. But 2016 can be a turning point and if you elect him we’ll, well, reboot. By outlawing abortion and gay marriage. Laws that come from God. Scary shit there.

Cruz: “Our country literally hangs in the balance.” Seems to be hitting Rubio as a DC guy who will work with Democrats. Brings in Scalia. Says 2nd amendment, life, religious liberty on the line. More scary shit.

Trump: We’ll make our country great again. We’re not winning now but will win again, blah blah blah. Says everybody else on the stage is there for the special interests. He won’t be.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:59:21 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Man, what a train wreck of a “debate.” That’s sure not going to help McConnell and friends make the case for the next president choosing the next SCOTUS justice.

Pure insanity. Yelling over each other, calling each other liars … which is actually true. Just pathetic to watch to see who can be the least presidential.

You can watch the action on CBS or at the live stream at CBSNews.com.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:32:06 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Rubio: Anti-poverty programs have become a way of life. Has a plan to turn over anti-poverty programs over to the states because Nikki Haley will do a better job curing poverty than Barack Obama.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:36:24 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Kasich asked if having Democratic support will hurt him. Like Kasich is really going to get Democratic support. Either in the primaries or in the general. These moderators are not good.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:39:57 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Oh, good lord. First Trump is asked whether he’s okay with people telling him he’s wrong. And then “but what about all the profanity.” Seriously. They really asked that. Yeesh. Jeb! says he wants to comment on that, then Dickerson fights with him about whether or not he can weigh in on Trump’s profanity. Dickerson says “no,” and Jeb! then trashes Trump anyway. Working hard to get any talking point he hasn’t yet used in a response to that.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:41:53 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

To repeat my colleague Joan: These moderators are not good.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:43:09 AM +00:00 · Barbara Morrill

To repeat my colleague Meteor Blades: can't we just shift to a fistfight?

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:46:38 AM +00:00 · Barbara Morrill

How bad is this? 

x

 

GREENVILLE, SC - FEBRUARY 13:  Republican presidential candidates (L-R) Jeb Bush, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Donald Trump participate in a CBS News GOP Debate February 13, 2016 at the Peace Center in Greenville, South Carolina. Residents of South Carolina w
GREENVILLE, SC - FEBRUARY 13:  Republican presidential candidates (L-R) Jeb Bush, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Donald Trump participate in a CBS News GOP Debate February 13, 2016 at the Peace Center in Greenville, South Carolina. Residents of South Carolina w

The Republican debate continues with much sniping, along with moderators unable to control said sniping. Obamacare, immigration, whatever, it’s getting ugly. And remains stupid.

You can watch the action on CBS or at the live stream at CBSNews.com.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:13:26 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

We just had a very strange and personal interchange between Jeb! and Trump—Jeb! saying he's weak because he's mean to women, Trump saying something about Jeb! wanting to moon people. Which apparently did. Very strange and more ridiculous. But it gives Kasich a nice chance to tsk-tsk and play the good guy.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:12:20 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Jeb: People come because they want to improve lives for their families. We should show more respect for the fact they are struggling. But we should control our borders. Trump: Claims Bush is weak on immigration. Nobody was talking about immigration, The Donald says, until he raised it. Trump and Bush get into pissing match about unrelated stuff. Fun for us!!

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:14:37 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Kasich: Thinks all the personal attacks are setting the stage for Hillary Clinton to win the presidency. Audience applauds, presumably not for Hillary. Defines what he thinks is a reasonable immigration policy.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:17:50 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Warrior for the poor? Cruz says he wants to lift people out of poverty and refers to his father who “fled” Cuba in 1957 and came with little money when he arrived. If we had Obamacare when his father was washing dishes in 1957, his father would have been laid off because hurt the business. Need to cut regulations and taxes. Yes, THAT will end poverty.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:29:57 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Trump and Cruz going after it over a question about Trump’s changing his mind on issues. Cruz says Trump says Planned Parenthood is wonderful, and that Trump called Carson pathological. Trump says Cruz lies about everything and everybody hates him and also reminds everyone that Cruz supported John Roberts who upheld Obamacare. Then Jeb! says stuff about Reagan. Then Cruz says he wouldn’t have nominated Roberts. Then they yell at each other again about Roberts. And this is so, so, so out of John Dickerson’s hands. It’s a mess.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:31:29 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Rubio: Anti-poverty programs have become a way of life. Has a plan to turn over anti-poverty programs over to the states because Nikki Haley will do a better job curing poverty than Barack Obama.

GREENVILLE, SC - FEBRUARY 13:  Republican presidential candidates (L-R) Ohio Governor John Kasich, Jeb Bush, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), Donald Trump, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) and Ben Carson participate in a CBS News GOP Debate February 13, 2016 at the Peace Cen
GREENVILLE, SC - FEBRUARY 13:  Republican presidential candidates (L-R) Ohio Governor John Kasich, Jeb Bush, Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX), Donald Trump, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) and Ben Carson participate in a CBS News GOP Debate February 13, 2016 at the Peace Cen

Gawd, this is just pathetic. 

You can watch the action on CBS or at the live stream at CBSNews.com.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:45:42 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Trump asked by the Wall Street Journal reporter (of course) why he won’t cut Social Security. Says he’s going to save SS by bringing jobs back from overseas where “they’re taking our jobs.” We’ll bring all that money back from overseas and the companies that are moving out. “We’re dying… And our workers are losing their jobs.” I’m the only one who will save SS! He’ll do it by doing away with waste, fraud, and abuse. Talks about all the people who are older than 106 who clearly aren’t still alive but are getting SS. Utter nonsense, but at least he doesn’t want to smash SS.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:48:44 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Cruz asked specifically what he will do on taxes: Talks about employment and harm to middle class. Cut taxes and regulations to help small business. First $36,000, pay nothing. Everything above that gets a 10% tax. Consumption tax has been attacked b y conservatives. Business flat tax is not a value added tax, it's a 16% business tax but combined with abolishing inheritance tax, corporate income tax and payroll tax. This would raise everybody's income by double digits, Cruz claims.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:50:17 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Rubio on his tax plan—he’s all about the families, donchaknow. Gets a little overboard on his strong family schtick, and avoids all questions about tax giveaways to the wealthy. Of course.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:51:51 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

WSJ reporter, again, bashing Kasich for accepting Medicaid expansion. Kasich defends it, talks about how the working poor are being helped and how it’s helped his state’s economy. “We want everyone to rise, and will make them personally responsible for the help that they get.”

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:53:34 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Jeb! Yeah, helping all those poor sick people is great. But REPEAL OBAMACARE!!! It’s a great thing that Florida and South Carolina didn’t expand Medicaid. Kasich says Jeb!’s first two years in Florida showed a lot of Medicaid growth, and also says Reagan expanded Medicaid. So there.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:56:25 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Question to Bush: Tax on hedge fund managers. Bush says that these managers should pay tax on capital gains as regular income. Won't hurt them since overall capital gains rate will be lower. 

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:02:52 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Question to Trump: What’s a “humane” solution on immigration. “I will build a wall. The wall will be paid for by Mexico. We are not being  treated right.” So, yeah, humane has nothing to do with it.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 3:08:11 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Rubio: Nope, no amnesty support here. Never mind what I might have said years ago. Says we need to enforce existing laws, blah, blah, blah. Gives a nod toward being humane. Oh, and reminds us that last immigration reform was in 1986 and was a disaster and hmmmm…. who was president then?

Cruz hitting Rubio on amnesty for working with Schumer and Reid. Some boos in the audience for hitting him on it. Cruz, the oil slick, borrows a Trump phrase about the “donor class” in the audience opposing him. Didn’t really work. 

Rubio says Cruz is not “purist” on immigration reform. Cruz says Rubio supports citizenship for 12 million people here illegally, his record in Florida, now Rubio hitting him for not speaking Spanish. Says Cruz is continuing his history of lying. And it’s a slap fest.

The thrilla in Greenvilla continues …

You can watch the action on CBS or at the live stream at CBSNews.com.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:22:20 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

National security. Trump: How hard do we hit. Iran deal is disgrace and an embarrassment. Opposed Iraq invasion. Said we should attack the oil and take it and keep it. Rubio: What are we doing in Asia-Pacific area. What about Middle East. What about Russian. Need to reinvigorate NATO. Must take on Putin. What would you point to your past that would show you can handle crisis? Rubio: Obama said he would not take action against Assad in 2014 unless Senate acted. We needed to do something, but Obama did too little. It would allow Assad to strengthen his grip and it was the right decision.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:26:48 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Question asked of Kasich on Putin: Support for Ukraine. Strengthen NATO. The world is desperate for U.S. leadership against radical Islam. Make sure this century is the best we have ever seen. Bush: Says the lack of leadership from Obama, Kerry, Clinton is hurting us. Can defeat ISIS and Assad. He would have a strategy against Assad. He would contain Iran and make sure it doesn't build a nuke.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:29:00 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Trump attacks Jeb! on his answer on Russian and Syria. Says that the first thing we have to do is take out ISIS. That we’ve spent $5 trillion on the kinds of policies Jeb! is pushing and it’s been a disaster and, by the way, Lindsey Graham is with Bush and he got “0” in the polls. Lots of yelling between Jeb! and Trump and booing and outrage, but not a lot of illumination.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:30:36 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Ted Cruz plan to tear up the Iran deal would guarantee hardliners there would build a nuke.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:34:50 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Trump asked if he still thinks George W Bush should have be impeached? “The war in Iraq was a big, fat mistake.” Reminds audience that it took Jeb! five days to figure out how to answer the question of whether the war was a mistake. “George Bush made a mistake. The war was a mistake.” “They lied. They said there were WMD and there were no WMD.” Lots of boos.

Jeb! doesn’t address Trump’s insults but says he’s sick and tired of Barack Obama blaming all his problems on W. Also says he loves his family and how his brother “kept us safe.” Trump reminds that the World Trade Center came down on Bush’s watch. Then Jeb! says he loves his mom. Lots of boos for Trump in this exchange.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:37:46 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Kasich: Got involved in civil war in Iraq and shouldn't have. Forgets that the U.S. caused that civil war with its aggressive incompetence. Rubio: Glad Dubya was in the White House on 9/11 and not Al Gore. Claims Bush kept us safe. Trump says he lost hundreds of friends on 9/11 and challenges the idea that Bush kept us safe. Audience boos. 

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:39:38 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Carson asked about nation building and Iraq. Not sure what he’s really answering, except that it’s all Obama’s fault. And it’s “asinine thinking” to not want to bomb oil fields of pipelines because it could cause civilian deaths or massive environmental damage.

GREENVILLE, SC - FEBRUARY 13:  Last minute preparations are made on the stage for the Republican Presidential debate on February 13, 2016 in Greenville, South Carolina. This evenings debate will see the six remaining candidates go at each other in a state
GREENVILLE, SC - FEBRUARY 13:  Last minute preparations are made on the stage for the Republican Presidential debate on February 13, 2016 in Greenville, South Carolina. This evenings debate will see the six remaining candidates go at each other in a state

Before the death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia earlier today, the burning questions for tonight’s Republican debate were things like finding out if Donald Trump could go two hours without dropping the f-bomb, if Marco Rubio could avoid another short-circuit, or if Ben Carson could manage to stay awake.

Now? The biggest question is who can present the most vile argument as to why they want to ignore the United States Constitution and say that President Obama has no right to fulfill his duty to said Constitution to nominate a replacement for the Supreme Court. Carefully phrased, of course, to leave unsaid “because he’s black.”

You can watch the action on CBS or at the live stream at CBSNews.com.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:02:33 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

I am shocked that Republicans would agree to a debate at The Peace Center

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:02:34 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Well that was smart. They didn’t call them out individually, thereby avoiding a repeat of the Ben Carson-traffic jam.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:04:02 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Begin with a moment of silence for Scalia, and promise to return to the Scalia question after this commercial break.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:06:19 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Three bells should mean they have to leave the debate.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:07:39 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

First question to Trump on Scalia. Dickerson asks that if he were president and had 11 months left in his term, would he abdicate that responsibility?

Trump says sure he’d want to, and President Obama will want to, but “Mitch” and the gang to stop it. “Delay, delay, delay,” and the crowd goes wild.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:09:09 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Kasich takes opportunity to talk about “sad” about Scalia and running so fast to politics. Wishes the President would not nominate someone, but if he does it has to be someone everyone will love. Says Obama should “put the country first,” and let the next president decide. The hell with the constitution!

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:10:47 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Carson says constitution doesn’t address the question of SCOTUS nominations????? Then wanders into lifetime appointments and that should be “looked into.” Then criticizes anyone who politicized his death and says Obama shouldn’t appoint anyone. That’s not politics.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:12:40 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Is Rubio open to filibuster reform? First he has to talk about how much he revered Scalia. Originalism. Names two decisions. Lies about how it has been 80 years since there’s been a lame-duck nomination and confirmation. 1988, Sen. Rubio. Anthony Kennedy. Dickerson forces answer on filibuster reform. Rubio says he’s opposed.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:13:03 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Question: What does Constitution says about picking a new justice and what about the filibuster. Rubio says the next president should pick the new justice for Scotus because the Constitution is not a living breathing document. Never in favor in removing filibuster on SCOTUS choices.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:16:51 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Ted Cruz says we have 80 years of not confirming justices during presidential election years. Calls Scalia a giant, a brilliant man who changed jurisprudence. One justice away from all state regulations on abortion being struck down. Senate should not allow Obama to choose another liberal justice. We need principled constutitionalists to the Court, which he says he will do.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:21:35 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

National security. Trump: How hard do we hit. Iran deal is disgrace and an embarrassment. Opposed Iraq invasion. Said we should attack the oil and take it and keep it. Rubio: What are we doing in Asia-Pacific area. What about Middle East. What about Russian. Need to reinvigorate NATO. Must take on Putin. What would you point to your past that would show you can handle crisis? Rubio: Obama said he would not take action against Assad in 2014 unless Senate acted. We needed to do something, but Obama did too little. It would allow Assad to strengthen his grip and it was the right decision.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 2:26:13 AM +00:00 · Meteor Blades

Question asked of Kasich on Putin: Support for Ukraine. Strengthen NATO. The world is desperate for U.S. leadership against radical Islam. Make sure this century is the best we have ever seen. Bush: Says the lack of leadership from Obama, Kerry, Clinton is hurting us. Can defeat ISIS and Assad. He would have a strategy against Assad. He would contain Iran and make sure it doesn't build a nuke.

President Obama will make a statement shortly on the death of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia. Various outlets have reported that President Obama intends to nominate a replacement, as sitting presidents have always done, despite the unreasonable and ridiculous demands of Senate Republicans that he defers to the next president.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 1:47:55 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

Scalia will be remembered as one of the "most consequential judges and thinkers to serve on the Supreme Court." Obama is providing essentially and obituary, with personal details of Scalia’s life.

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 1:48:21 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

“We join his fellow justices in mourning” their colleague. 

Sunday, Feb 14, 2016 · 1:50:13 AM +00:00 · Joan McCarter

“I plan to fulfill my constitutional responsibility” to nominate a replacement in due time. A veiled rebuke of Senate Republicans who have already politicized this event. Says “there will be plenty of time for the Senate to fulfill its obligations."

Sen. Mitch McConnell, in 2005, defending the absolute right of a sitting president to nominate judges.

"The Constitution of the United States is at stake.  Article II, Section 2 clearly provides that the President, and the President alone, nominates judges.  The Senate is empowered to give advice and consent.  But my Democratic colleagues want to change the rules.  They want to reinterpret the Constitution to require a supermajority for confirmation.  In effect, they would take away the power to nominate from the President and grant it to a minority of 41 Senators."

"[T]he Republican conference intends to restore the principle that, regardless of party, any President's judicial nominees, after full debate, deserve a simple up-or-down vote.  I know that some of our colleagues wish that restoration of this principle were not required. But it is a measured step that my friends on the other side of the aisle have unfortunately made necessary. For the first time in 214 years, they have changed the Senate's 'advise and consent' responsibilities to 'advise and obstruct.'"

Take it from Sen. Mitch McConnell: for the Senate to block a sitting president from nominating a Supreme Court nominee—not just a specific nominee, mind you, but any nominee at all, would put the Constitution of the United States itself at stake. And he's a patriot, so he would never even consider such a thing.