Before White House Chief of Staff Jack Lew had even been nominated to President Obama's cabinet, Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.), the top Republican on the Senate Budget Committee, said Lew "must never be secretary of Treasury." Yesterday on CNBC, the far-right Alabama senator went even further.
For those who can't watch clips online, Sessions specifically said, "I intend to oppose this nomination." Asked if he would filibuster Lew's nomination, Sessions added, "We'll just see what happens."
I tend to think most of this is pointless chest-thumping that won't amount to anything. Even if Sessions were to launch the first-ever filibuster of a Treasury secretary nominee, he'd almost certainly have trouble finding 40 friends to help him prevent an up-or-down vote.
But let's not overlook Sessions' stated rationale: "I don't think [Lew] brings to -- certainly doesn't bring the gravitas of former New York Fed chairmen like Secretary Geithner and other very prominent people we've had as secretary of Treasury."
Wait, what? The ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee is preparing to go to political war over a perceived sense of gravitas?
I suppose this is a subjective matter -- Lew strikes me as a rather accomplished and impressive individual, but obviously opinions can vary -- but if we're going to start judging cabinet secretaries based on Jeff Sessions' ambiguous standards on stature, the confirmation process will soon reach new depths of dysfunction.
In fact, if this is on the table as an important Washington metric, I might also suggest Sessions lacks the gravitas to have a leading role over who is and isn't in a presidential cabinet.
But even putting that aside, Sessions' incoherent opposition to Lew's nomination only helps underscore what we discussed yesterday: the Senate's filibuster rules need to be reformed to prevent these ridiculous antics. Indeed, Dave Weigel reported that Sessions is inadvertently helping his Democratic opponents.
Sessions' outrage was manna to an unexpected group of people: Democrats. For months, a group of freshman Democratic senators have been trying to nail down 51 votes to reform the filibuster. On Jan. 22, when the Senate votes on this congressional session's rulebook, they'll need to keep that group together. Every time a Republican threatens an Obama nominee, their job gets easier.
"It really does highlight how the intentional paralysis of the Senate, through the use of a filibuster as a party tool, has gotten out of hand," says Oregon Sen. Jeff Merkley, one of the authors of the reform plan. "Here are qualified people, the president has just won re-election, and [Republicans] are making it as difficult as possible to get them confirmed."
As Jonathan Bernstein explained, filibuster reform is increasingly about nominations, not legislation. When it comes to individual bills, filibuster reform is far less urgent -- allowing Senate Democrats to pass bills that will quickly die in a GOP-led House is inconsequential. But when it comes to confirming qualified nominees that Republicans oppose for nonsensical reasons, filibuster reform starts to look increasingly important.
In other words, just keep on talking, Sen. Sessions.





You didn't actually expect him to admit his reason for opposing Lew was simply that Obama picked him.....Did you?
They (THE GOP) still haven't figured out they LOST! Every nomination has one of them with their underwear in a twirl.
What the Republicans don't like is that Lew knows how things work, and is so knowledgeable and respected within the administration that he was able to single-handedly keep President Can't-We-Al-Just-Get-Along, and the two idiots Daley and Geithner from selling the country down the river in the name of a "Grand Bargain" with the Republicans back in the debacle of the debt crisis of 2011. It got so bad, with Lew shooting fish in the barrel with every proposal Bonehead and the Idiot Brigade was making in the "negotiation" that they cried he wasn't being fair and got him sent out of the room, at which point President Wet-Noodle-For-A-Backbone began accepting the "bargain" - until Lew killed it once the meeting was over, when Bonehead thought he had won.
They don't like that he's usually the smartest guy in the room, since Republicans are always the dumbest guy in the room.
Republicans are opposing everyone with an IQ over 140 because they are utterly defenseless.
This is just more idiotic douchebaggery by people that can't explain their way out of a paper bag.
A bowel movement by Jack Lew has more gravitas than the entire organism posing as Jefferson Beauregard Sessions III.
Hilarious. OTOH, isn't anyone else tired of Obama's inability to appoint someone who isn't part of the revolving door of multinationals/government, who is more interested in protecting the status quo of banks than in reforming them? Lew fits perfectly into Obama's snuggling partners in Wall Street's big gilded kingsize bed.
@BB12Chicago, I am not sure why you think Lew is a Wall Street guy. From what I read about him, Lew worked briefly for Citibank, but the vast majority of his experience is in the public sector.
BB12 - you might want to check your facts. Being a Lefty Moron is embarrassing to the rest of us.
Children, no need for inflammatory language.
At the end of its useful life it expands to a great and terrifying size, then collapses to become a White Dwarf.
I speak of a star in the galaxy, not a self important twerp in the Senate.
in this case the difference being...What
The supernova of pomposity?
The black hole of hyperbole?
The Quasar of rhetorical gibberish?
The fact that Jeff Sessions has somehow managed to pull off being the ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee is astounding and tells me more than just the "Filibuster" rules need reforming!
The fact that he's calling out someone else that actually KNOWS something that's gravitas and nerve!
Sessions (R-Ala.),,, LMAO,,,
Sessions proves that the average white Alabamian voter is dumber than a bag of rocks. But we knew that already.
Well OF COURSE, Sessions couldn't say he doesn't want Lew as Treasury Secretary because he negotiates to well. THAT argument about sent me around the bend. The GOP doesn't LIKE him because he doesn't give in to their BS.
Every time Jeff "Beauregard" Sessions opens his mouth, the collective IQ of the nation dips a little. Just an embarrassment, and proof positive that the country would be better off without Alabama.
The country would be better off without the Confederacy.
FWIW, since we are discussing filibusters, I do see a distinction between nominees who serve at the pleasure of the executive, and those with lifetime appointments. It is reasonable to have closer scrutiny, and a higher bar for those who cannot be removed.
Alabama elected Henry Gibson to the Senate?
Who knew?
I'd say it was amazin that Skeeter here lurned the werd Fillibuster but he grew up with horses so he musta known it all along..
Another GOP used car salesman, what a surprise! Sorry GOP, but you self-marginalized two decades ago so I can't be to blame entirely with my comment here.
What do you mean, he grew up with horses? Don't insult horses. I have owned three horses in my life and each one had a smarter rear end than this idiot.
Why can't these doodoo head interviewers ask "can you be a little more specific?"?
And let these doodoo heads R-bagsof dig their graves a little deeper.
You, the interviewer, will be even more famous, if your the one for whom some R-bagof "hung himself". How hard is that? Just get them talking...
Someone who looks like Howdy Doody in his golden years is worried about someone else's gravitas? It would be quite amusing if he weren't a senator.
Sessions is a clown. period.
Hey! Don't lump me in with that lump -- no relation.
If the Democrats are portrayed as "not marching in lock step with each other" - why is it that the moment Bernie Sanders raises objections he is instantly marginalized by the Left with no counter point. - This occurred today on Alex Wagner.
And they talked about Rachel there as well.
It was implied, in that same show, that Rachel was part of the crazy left wing media who would dare mention the appointment of John Brennan as maybe... slightly... controversial.
Are we back to Democrats with no spine?
Do you really expect anyting diffeent from thease southern right wing ideologs? Par for the course for these unhappy, vindictive, narrow minded, I mean closed minded, self serving Republicans....