Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
International

Obama Picks Judge Garland As Supreme Court Court Nominee Over Indian American Sri Srinivasan

Darpan News Desk IANS, 16 Mar, 2016 12:46 PM
    US President Barack Obama on Wednesday chose a white judge over Indian American Sri Srinivasan as his nominee to the Supreme Court, setting up a dramatic political fight with Senate Republicans who have vowed to block his choice.
     
    Obama's nominee Merrick Garland, 63, a judge on the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, is much older than Chandigarh-born Srinivasan and other contenders on his short list such as judges Paul Watford and Jane Kelly.
     
    In a speech in the White House Rose Garden, Obama praised Garland, a graduate of Harvard and Harvard Law School and an appointee of president Bill Clinton as "one of America sharpest legal minds".
     
     
    After conducting interviews last week, Obama is reported to have narrowed his list to include Srinivasan, Garland, and Watford, each of them considered "consensus" candidates for their history in gaining confirmation support from Republicans.
     
    But Senate Republicans do not plan to vet or have hearings on the nominee, and say the next president should be able to choose a replacement for justice Antonin Scalia who died last month.
     
    Obama and Democrats argue that with 10 months left in his term, there is plenty of time for the Senate to take up and confirm a new justice.
     
    Garland's supporters argue he is the nominee that the senators couldn't refuse even in a contentious environment, according to CNN. "He's the establishment of the establishment," one backer was quoted as saying.
     
     
    Obama's formal announcement came hours after telling his supporters in an email: "I've made my decision."
     
    "I've devoted a considerable amount of time and deliberation to this decision," he wrote.
     
    "I've consulted with legal experts and people across the political spectrum, both inside and outside government. And we've reached out to every member of the Senate, who each have a responsibility to do their job and take this nomination just as seriously."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Donald Trump's Positions On Trade, Alliances Could Roil Asia Ties

    With characteristic brashness, Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump has staked out uncompromising positions on Asia policy that could potentially roil U.S. relations with the region if he won the White House.

    Donald Trump's Positions On Trade, Alliances Could Roil Asia Ties

    Anti-Trump Republicans Come To Terms With Cruz Nomination

    Trump, in turn, is renewing his vigorous criticism of the Texas senator, casting the rival he calls "Lying Ted" as too polarizing to break the Washington gridlock or win a general election.

    Anti-Trump Republicans Come To Terms With Cruz Nomination

    Belgian Police Find 25 Sikhs In A Secret Compartment Of A Romanian Truck

    Belgian Police Find 25 Sikhs In A Secret Compartment Of A Romanian Truck
    Police in Essen in Antwerp Province discovered 25 undocumented people in a secret compartment in a lorry at an industrial zone on Tuesday. The migrants were aged between 2 and 88.

    Belgian Police Find 25 Sikhs In A Secret Compartment Of A Romanian Truck

    Indian Student Attacked In Russia Dies

    Indian Student Attacked In Russia Dies
    An Indian medical student, who was in a state of coma after being attacked by unidentified miscreants in a Russian city, has died, External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj said on Wednesday.

    Indian Student Attacked In Russia Dies

    Donald Trump Declares Himself Unbeatable If Republicans Unite

    Speaking to MSNBC on Wednesday morning, Trump said: "If the Republican party unites behind us, nobody can beat us."

    Donald Trump Declares Himself Unbeatable If Republicans Unite

    Trudeau's Foreign Policy Adviser Writes Of 'Waning' U.S. Influence

    Trudeau's Foreign Policy Adviser Writes Of 'Waning' U.S. Influence
      The decline of the United States is a theme that has filled books and scholarly articles, fuelled punditry and even spawned billionaire Donald Trump's now-familiar mantra to "make America great again."  

    Trudeau's Foreign Policy Adviser Writes Of 'Waning' U.S. Influence