] But there must be something different in the way that the ] Democrats are blocking Bush's nominees, right? The ] Republicans say that Democrats are doing is ] "unprecedented." ] ] ] Oh, yes they do. Just the other day on Fox News, Utah ] Sen. Orrin Hatch, the former chairman of the Senate ] Judiciary Committee, proclaimed: "We've never had a ] filibuster of judges in the history of this country." In ] a myth vs. fact sheet, the Republican National Committee ] says that "having to overcome a filibuster (or obtaining ] 60 votes) on judicial nominees is unprecedented." ] ] ] But that's not a fact. In 1968, Republicans led a ] filibuster against Lyndon Johnson's nomination of Abe ] Fortas as chief justice. And that isn't the only ] Republican attempt to filibuster a judicial nominee in ] recent history. During the Clinton years, the ] Congressional Research Service says, Democrats were ] forced to bring cloture motions on six judicial nominees. ] While the existence of a cloture motion doesn't always ] mean that a filibuster is in effect, in at least some ] instances it has meant just that: In 2000, Frist himself ] voted to support a filibuster against Richard Paez, ] Clinton's nominee to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the ] Ninth Circuit. This article presents a very good assessment of just what can and can't happen along the lines of the "Nuclear Option." It's not as cut and dry as many would think. Everything you wanted to know about the Nuclear Option |