Sen. Nia Gill on Thursday remained the only senator to vote against Stuart Rabner, both in committee and in the senate as a whole, on a day when the rest of the senate enthusiastically embraced the outgoing attorney general as chief justice for the state Supreme Court.
The final vote was 35-1.
Gill said she was unhappy with the rushed atmosphere surrounding Rabner’s nomination, which reached a fever pitch when U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie got in front of a microphone last week and bashed elected officials in the halls of government for failing to act swiftly in confirming Rabner for the office of chief justice.
Gill retreated from her initial entrenchment of senatorial courtesy, but today was consistent in arguing for the need for more time to make a “deliberate and responsible decision... this is chief justice.”
After Rabner’s question and answer session with judiciary committee members, Gill said she could not affirm his nomination because in her view Rabner lacks experience, and comes out of an attorney general’s office that has been unstable in recent years.
“I rarely agree with her, but Nia Gill is right,:” said John Tomzicki of the conservative League of American Families, who was unhappy that Judiciary Committee Chairman John Adler didn’t let him testify.
“The process could have gone a little longer,” Tomzicki said.
Tomzicki conceded that the Ivy League Rabner was an excellent candidate, an opinion other committee members shared, including Sen. Tom Kean, Jr., who later before the full senate publicly commended Gov. Jon Corzine on his selections for chief justice and the attorney general’s office.
Adler acknowledged Rabner hadn’t been attorney general for a long period of time (since September of last year) but, “Over the course of a few months he restored prestige to a tattered and battered office,” the chairman said.
The conservative Sen. Gerald Cardinale was equally unabashed in heaping praise on Rabner and Rabner’s replacement as attorney general, Anne Milgram, who went before the committee immediately after Rabner on Thursday, and who was also later approved by the senate, 36-0.
“Rare is the occasion when I can enthusiastically vote in favor of the nominees of a Democratic governor,” said Cardinale, who liked what he saw as Rabner’s and Milgram’s no nonsense, non-activist approach to the law.
In Milgram’s case, the resume didn’t hurt, either, particularly when it came to a certain assignment that caught the playful side of Cardinale’s attention.
“Some training came through (former U.S.) Attorney General (John) Ashcroft,” said Cardinale. “That’s one of the reasons I’m going to vote yes.”
“You were supposed to save that until after the votes had been cast,” said Sen. Joseph Kyrillos.
Ashcroft and all, there was no fight beyond Gill’s reservations in the case of Rabner.
“The state is in the best of hands for quite a few years,” Senate President Richard Codey said when the senate approved Rabner and Milgram.
If Paul Sarlo becomes the new Senate Judiciary Chairman when John Adler leaves for Washington in January, Senate President Richard Codey will ... >
There's nothing more difficult to see than the history before your eyes. It sometimes takes generations to understand the significance of ... >
OK, he didn't say precisely that, but when the Chairman of the Budget Committee informs us that governmental spending is the key to prosperity, ... >
Score one for the Governor’s public relations team. For the last few weeks, they have been working overtime to fuel speculation Corzine was being ... >
The sub prime mortgage melt down and its ensuing financial “crisis” has tested the mettle of all of us who believe in and support the free ... >
I am pleased to report the results from the first national poll conducted by Environmental Studies Program in the College of Arts and Sciences at ... >
To view a larger version of this cartoon, click here. >
The media, which loves headlines and knows little history, is trying to sell President Elect Obama as another Franklin Delano Roosevelt. But that ... >
Whenever I get the chance to visit my parents in Florida when working a comedy gig down there, it’s like living in a “Seinfeld” episode. They ... >
In an election year driven by a hemorrhaging economy and an electorate hungry for an end to divisive politics, 7th Congressional District candidate ... >
A couple of weeks ago, my mother, Angelina Katz, did her second debate on behalf of Barack Obama. A debate? My mother? If you knew her, you’d be ... >
Former State Senator Wayne Bryant got a smack on the back of the head from a jury of his peers today when they found him guilty of all eleven charges ... >
Comments