02-20-2004, 09:20 PM
The Jays Wrote:If the president can appoint his own judges with out checks and balances from the senate. Then how do we know that he’s not passing laws that can be unconstitutional? The Judicial branch of government decides that.Black Lazerus Wrote:I don't see how that's making a law that is infringing upon the rights of others.The Jays Wrote:This is how Jay's...GonzoStyle Wrote:How can the government do it? The Constitution says you can't make laws that infrige upon the rights of others.Quote:The government cannot make laws which which infringe upon the rights of others; they cannot make laws which say who is better and who is inferior.
wow, you really are clueless.
The legislature does, and have made laws that infringe upon the rights of others, and the executive branch has enforced those laws, and it is the job of the judicial branch to deem those laws unconstitutional.
Gerald Herbert/AP Photo
Bush Installs Judge by Bypassing Senate
By JEFFREY McMURRAY
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Bypassing Senate Democrats who have stalled his judicial nominations, President Bush installed Alabama Attorney General William Pryor on the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on Friday.
Bush praised Pryor as "this leading American lawyer" and complained that the Senate had unfairly blocked him and other White House nominees.
"A minority of Democratic senators has been using unprecedented obstructionist tactics to prevent him and other qualified nominees from receiving up-or-down votes," Bush said. "Their tactics are inconsistent with the Senate's constitutional responsibility and are hurting our judicial system."
Pryor was immediately sworn in in Alabama.