Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

forest444

(5,902 posts)
Tue Dec 15, 2015, 04:35 PM Dec 2015

Macri bypasses Congress to appoint two Supreme Court justices by decree (first since 1862).

Last edited Tue Dec 15, 2015, 05:10 PM - Edit history (1)

Argentine President Mauricio Macri appointed "by commission" (decree) two new members to the Argentine Supreme Court. No democratically elected Argentine president had appointed a Supreme Court justice by decree since Bartolomé Mitre in 1862.

The move raised eyebrows in both Congress and judiciary, since the constitutional mechanism for the appointment of Supreme Court justices in Argentina must be done with the advice and consent of the Senate. Macri is instead making use of Article 99, paragraph 19 of the Constitution, which empowers the president to "fill vacancies for jobs requiring the consent of the Senate, if the Senate is in recess, by means of appointments on commission expiring at the end of the next Congress." While Congress in Argentina is officially in recess from December 1 to March 1, Argentine presidents can (and typically do) call recess sessions if especially significant legislation is on the table; Macri announced over the weekend that he plans to rule entirely by decree until the next Congress convenes on March 1.

The two justices appointed by decree, Carlos Rosenkrantz and Horacio Rosatti, will serve until November 30, 2016, unless the Senate ratifies them.

The Supreme Court has had a vacancy for a year since Justice Raúl Zaffaroni resigned at the end of 2014 due to reaching the court's mandatory retirement age of 75. President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner's nominee to replace him, Roberto Carlés, enjoyed broad support from the Senate initially; but he never received the necessary two-thirds approval in the Senate due to a political pact among the opposition caucuses to block any Supreme Court justices until the next administration. Carlés' nomination was ultimately withdrawn in April. A second vacancy emerged when 97-year-old Carlos Fayt, the most conservative member of the Court, retired last Friday. Fayt, who was exempt from the age limit of 75 by a grandfather clause, waited until the day after Macri was sworn in to retire.

Macri's broad interpretation of his constitutional decree powers met with opposition from most Argentine constitutional lawyers interviewed regarding the controversy.

Speaking to University of Córdoba radio, constitutional lawyer Miguel Rodriguez Villafañe explained that Article 99/19 harkens back to an era when a legislator from a distant province often took weeks to reach Congress for an extraordinary session during the recess period. The president was thus empowered to fill such vacancies in those circumstances. "Today," he pointed out, "the president's office can make phone calls and gather all the senators within ten hours. Macri chose the shortcut instead."

For this reason, Villafañe Rodriguez said it is "urgent that Congress convene itself and exercise its own powers, lest by March next year the Judiciary be completely overrun and Congress itself be hamstrung by the many decrees that are already being implemented."

Former UCR Congressman Ricardo Gil Lavedra, one of the presiding judges in the historic 1985 Trial of the Juntas, condemend President Mauricio Macri’s decree. “It is a mistake and it’s a pity because we all count on institutional normality,” he told reporters today in an interview with the Radio 10 station.

“It is politically understandable why he wanted to bypass Congress; it buys him a year to negotiate other issues,” he conceded. “It is, however, a mistake and sets a very sinister precedent because future presidents will now name judges and justices during summer recess.”

Constitutional lawyer Andrés Gil Domínguez considered Macri’s decree “an exception that can only be applied in a situation of verifiable urgency. Today, we are not in such a situation.” He added that “considering the promises of consensus that he (Macri) touted during the campaign, it is important he reviews this measure."

“These decrees," Gil Domínguez concluded, "do harm to the nation's institutions.”

At: https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=es&u=http://www.cba24n.com.ar/content/macri-se-saltea-al-congreso-y-nombra-dos-jueces-de-la-corte&prev=search

And: http://buenosairesherald.com/article/205015/constitutional-lawyers-say-macris-decree-a-serious-mistake

3 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Macri bypasses Congress to appoint two Supreme Court justices by decree (first since 1862). (Original Post) forest444 Dec 2015 OP
Hideous behavior, just every bit as rotten as people could expect, isn't it? Recess appointments. Judi Lynn Dec 2015 #1
To be perfectly fair to them, Rosenkrantz and Rosatti are pretty moderate. forest444 Dec 2015 #2
Truly diabolical! The Kirshner supporters wouldn't be likely to go wild over this, Judi Lynn Dec 2015 #3

Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
1. Hideous behavior, just every bit as rotten as people could expect, isn't it? Recess appointments.
Tue Dec 15, 2015, 09:45 PM
Dec 2015

Last edited Wed Dec 16, 2015, 12:15 AM - Edit history (2)

George W. Bush did the same thing, after the Senate rejected Cuban "exile" Otto Reich for some position in the State Department, managing Latin American affairs. George Bush waited until they went home, and slip Otto Reich into place through this devious mechanism. Both right-wing monsters.

The circumstances for which the recess appointment was created are non-existent today. Why on earth don't politicians do away with them? The right-wing won't let them, just so perverts like Macri and Bush can take advantage of them.

Ordinarily a person would wonder why Argentina doesn't update its Constitution, and the same of the US. It's because in misusing their wording for their own purposes gives right-wingers a nasty edge over progressives. If a progressive dared to use Presidential decrees on his own, without seeking backing from his congress, at least, for show, anyway, the fascists would screech their bloody lungs out. You no doubt have seen what fascist trolls have scribbled here when Chavez/Maduro used the same mechanism, only WITH approval from the legislature. They chewed the curtains, threw fits on the floor, wailed, and threw every filthy name they could think of at their supporters.

[center]

Rosenkrantz and Rosatti [/center]

I am glad Cristina won't have to deal with these monstrosities again. They have attacked her wildly from the moment her husband so unexpectedly died. Even Hillary Clinton pitched in and took a kick at her, trying to shake her, by speculating publicly about whether or not she might be having mental/emotional problems. That was so low it could take a human being's breath away. No one could expect that kind of dirty attack, but they are always right around the next corner as long as fascists are running loose.

Thank you for taking the time to keep DU progressives aware of what's happening in Argentina. We don't get a lot of real news here, as you've known already.

forest444

(5,902 posts)
2. To be perfectly fair to them, Rosenkrantz and Rosatti are pretty moderate.
Tue Dec 15, 2015, 10:38 PM
Dec 2015

Rosenkrantz is the Director of the University of San Andrés (one of the few prestigious private colleges in Argentina, i.e. not Opus Dei controlled) where he also teaches Legal Theory.

Rosatti actually served as Justice Minister for a year (2004-05) during the Néstor Kirchner administration. He later served as Solicitor General for the Economy Ministry (he defended Economy Ministry decisions against lawsuits by lobbyists and political hacks).

My conclusions are therefore these: that Macri negotiated these appointments with the Senate a priori (the Kirchnerist majority may have actually suggested these two names to him themselves); and that Macri is using them as Trojan horses - two very reasonable picks meant to put the Senate at ease for the next time he makes recess appointments to the Supreme Court.

And that may be as soon as next year, because by law these two guys can't stay on as Justices any longer than next November 30 (the end of the next Congress). That's when Macri's Opus Dei freaks will most likely come out of the woodwork.

Either way, this is no way to govern.

Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
3. Truly diabolical! The Kirshner supporters wouldn't be likely to go wild over this,
Tue Dec 15, 2015, 11:05 PM
Dec 2015

but the door is opened now and can't be closed without redoing the entire Constitution?

Wow. How could it fail, when it has been so carefully plotted?

Latest Discussions»Region Forums»Latin America»Macri bypasses Congress t...