http://www.tpmmuckraker.com/archives/004628.phpNo one will ever say "poor Chuck Schumer."
But Chuck is in a bind, to be sure. He's never been shy about taking credit. And when the White House was reportedly musing about selecting someone like Ted Olson to replace the attorney general who Schumer helped drive from office, Schumer didn't hesitate to publicly recommend a "consensus" candidate like his old acquaintance Michael Mukasey.
But after Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) finished with him, Mukasey was a consensus candidate no more. And given a second chance, he still refused to call drowning someone (under controlled circumstances) torture.
Now, as we said yesterday, it all comes down to the Senate Judiciary Committee, of which Schumer is a very vocal member. And with four Democrats already coming out against Mukasey, Schumer's in the novel position of being one of the key swing votes, reports The Washington Post:
Republicans privately say that the nominee's prospects hang on a few votes, particularly those of Schumer and Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who has broken ranks with her party in the past.
Until yesterday, Schumer was ducking cameras rather than answer questions about Mukasey. And when he finally talked to reporters, it was clear why he'd been camera shy. He told reporters yesterday on a conference call that he's caught in a "substantive tough spot." And even during that call he vaulted back and forth on how he might vote:
"From this administration, we will never get somebody who agrees with us on issues like torture and wiretapping," Schumer said at one point, suggesting an argument in favor of Mukasey, who faces a Senate Judiciary Committee vote on Tuesday. "The best thing we can hope for is someone who will depoliticize the Justice Department and put rule of law first."
But Schumer said minutes later that his mind is not made up: "He's the best we can get, but that doesn't necessarily ensure a yes vote. I thought John Roberts was the best we could get, but I voted no."...
"The question is whether he will show the requisite independence," Schumer said. "That's what I want to clear in my own head. . . . If Congress passes a law forbidding waterboarding, would he enforce that?"
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