If you’re going back to Tyler, then this proves the opposite case. Because the Court started with 6 Justices.
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Replying to @neeratanden @Yellow_Dog1959
If you concede - as the record clearly shows - that you were wrong to claim that not taking up a nominee "had never happened," then yes, we can also discuss the history of the Court's size.
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Replying to @baseballcrank @Yellow_Dog1959
I don't concede it because I don't know the record of the Tyler Administration, but since you mischaracterized the Fortas case, I'm not planning to take your graph's word for it.
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Replying to @neeratanden @Yellow_Dog1959
Mischaracterized how? Bipartisan filibuster, Democrat-controlled Senate, major ethical problems. The history is well-known.
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Replying to @baseballcrank @Yellow_Dog1959
Fortas is not an example for your argument. But more importantly this whole graph seems error ridden. Harlan was confirmed! But in the graph it says there was inaction. Taking a long time is not the same as inaction.
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You're reading it backward - his nomination was rejected, then his second nomination was withdrawn after the Senate declined to act - more here https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL31171.pdf …
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Yes, the Senate was held by the opposing party, so it declined to confirm. Just as happened in 2016.
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No, I've argued all along that the presidents gets nominees confirmed in election years (or lame duck sessions) when his party controls the Senate, & not when they don't. The history is quite clear.
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