Griffith to miss Demos' deadline
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., ranking Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, repeatedly has warned that Democrats will seek to shut down judicial confirmations after the first national party convention. Democrats hold theirs next week. Leahy said former Committee Chairman Strom Thurmond, D-S.C., started such election-year slowdowns.
The last slim chance at beating that deadline evaporated for Griffith, who is nominated to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, when a confirmation hearing scheduled for him this week was canceled.
Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said the cancellation was the result of the American Bar Association not finishing its rating of Griffith in time. That means the hearing will not be held until after the Senate returns from its month-long August recess.
Hatch said he is not giving up on Griffith's nomination.
While slowing down confirmations is common before a presidential election to ensure a potential lame-duck president doesn't pack courts with nominees that opponents would rather see the new president appoint, many exceptions have occurred, and the Senate often continues with confirmations through the year, he said.
"Strom Thurmond unilaterally on his own . . . when he was chairman could say whatever he wanted to, but that didn't bind the whole committee, and it doesn't bind me," Hatch said.
"He (Leahy) raises the 'Thurmond rule' to remind us that Sen. Thurmond, who was inconsistent in applying his own ideas, should bind the whole committee, but it doesn't," he said.
"To make a long story short, we're going to keep on pushing ahead on judges and hopefully get a number of them through before the end of the year," Hatch said.
Because of term limits that Republicans impose on their committee chairmen, Hatch must give up his chairmanship of the Judiciary Committee at the end of the year. He could make confirmation of Griffith one last favor for his service there or use it as a bargaining chip for other legislation that Democrats seek.
Griffith's nomination was also delayed, in part, because of disclosures in recent months that he did not have a license to practice law in Utah for the four years he has worked at BYU. University spokesmen said a current license wasn't necessary for his mostly administrative work there.



You can be the first to comment on this story.