President Bush set up a showdown with Senate Democrats on Monday by
renominating 20 failed judicial nominees, many of whom had been
denounced by critics as "right-wing extremists." The renewed
battle over the nominees promises to produce plenty of fireworks as
Bush begins his second term with an expanded Senate Republican majority
and still-defiant Senate Democrats. Senate Majority Leader Bill
Frist, a Tennessee Republican, has threatened to change the Senate's
rules to prevent any more procedural hurdles known as filibusters
against judicial nominees. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada
has vowed Democrats are "not going to cut and run" from any such fight.
Democrats have also promised to retaliate against any rule change by
invoking other procedural hurdles that could bring the Senate to a
standstill. "Republicans would rue the day they changed the rules,"
Reid has warned. Democrats blocked 10 of Bush's judicial nominees with
filibusters during his first term. In addition, more than a dozen
others were left hanging when Congress came to a close last year. [more]
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