In this paper we assess the effect of possible supermajority rules on the now contentious Senate confirmation process for judges. We deploy a formula for evaluating supermajority rules that we have developed in other papers. First, we consider a sixty-vote rule in the Senate for the confirmation of federal judges - an explicit version of the supermajority norm that may be emerging from the filibuster. While we briefly discuss how such a rule would affect the project of maximizing the number of originalist judges, for the most part we evaluate the rule on the realist assumption that judges will pursue their own political and policy preferences. The case for applying an appropriately framed supermajority confirmation rule to Supreme Court j...
The United States Constitution grants to the Senate the duty to provide its “advice and consent” to ...
This article first briefly summarizes the issues that arise in the lower-court judicial confirmation...
One crucial locus of gridlock is appointments to the United States Courts of Appeals, which have gro...
In this paper we assess the effect of possible supermajority rules on the now contentious Senate con...
Controversy over the Senate’s filibuster practice dominates modern discussion of American legislativ...
Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominees have in recent years grown increasingly cont...
ABSTRACT In 1816, the Senate created the Committee on the Judiciary to assist in its task of providi...
This report provides an overview of the major issues which have been raised recently in the Senate r...
The confirmation process for Supreme Court justices is examined as a form of indirect constitutional...
In this piece, Professor Carl Tobias descriptively scrutinizes the nomination and confirmation regim...
In testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, I argued (and still believe) that Judge Robert B...
The Bush Administration will likely have the opportunity to make a number of appointments to the Sup...
In recent years, commentators have complained about what they regard as an increasingly dysfunction...
An investigation of Supreme Court Confirmation hearings reveals many queries posed to nominees refer...
While the U.S. Senate is now unable to make use of the filibuster to delay judicial nominees to fede...
The United States Constitution grants to the Senate the duty to provide its “advice and consent” to ...
This article first briefly summarizes the issues that arise in the lower-court judicial confirmation...
One crucial locus of gridlock is appointments to the United States Courts of Appeals, which have gro...
In this paper we assess the effect of possible supermajority rules on the now contentious Senate con...
Controversy over the Senate’s filibuster practice dominates modern discussion of American legislativ...
Senate confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominees have in recent years grown increasingly cont...
ABSTRACT In 1816, the Senate created the Committee on the Judiciary to assist in its task of providi...
This report provides an overview of the major issues which have been raised recently in the Senate r...
The confirmation process for Supreme Court justices is examined as a form of indirect constitutional...
In this piece, Professor Carl Tobias descriptively scrutinizes the nomination and confirmation regim...
In testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, I argued (and still believe) that Judge Robert B...
The Bush Administration will likely have the opportunity to make a number of appointments to the Sup...
In recent years, commentators have complained about what they regard as an increasingly dysfunction...
An investigation of Supreme Court Confirmation hearings reveals many queries posed to nominees refer...
While the U.S. Senate is now unable to make use of the filibuster to delay judicial nominees to fede...
The United States Constitution grants to the Senate the duty to provide its “advice and consent” to ...
This article first briefly summarizes the issues that arise in the lower-court judicial confirmation...
One crucial locus of gridlock is appointments to the United States Courts of Appeals, which have gro...