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Ill. Supreme Court on Burris: No Signature Required Durbin: Senate Should Wait, Let Next Governor Fill Seat

By  ZACH CHRISTMAN and CHARLIE WOJCIECHOWSKI

Updated 9:55 PM PDT, Fri, Jan 9, 2009

Related Topics: U.S. Senate | Roland Burris

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Roland Burris' fate now lies with the U.S. Senate Rules Committee.

 

The Illinois Supreme Court has ruled that the secretary of state need not sign the document appointing Roland Burris' to the U.S. Senate.  [Read the court's ruling]

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Burris had asked the court to issue a writ of mandamus, which would force Secretary of State Jesse White to sign Burris' appointment document.   White has refused to sign the appointment issued by scandal-plagued Gov. Rod Blagojevich, saying any appointment made by the governor is tainted.

The court wrote: "The only issue before us is whether the Secretary of State, an official of this state, failed to perform an act required of him by the law of Illinois. He did not."

With the ruling, the fate of Burris' appointment falls to the Senate, which says its rules require the signature of both the governor and the secretary of state for any appointment.  Sen. Dick Durbin said earlier this week that the Senate has never waived that rule. 

Durbin reiterated that point Friday, saying the court's decision "creates an impasse."  He said the best course of action for the Senate should be to wait for the impeachment process to conclude, and let the new governor fill Barack Obama's Senate seat.

However, in its ruling, the Supreme Court said it found nothing in the rules of the Senate that require the secretary of state's signature. 

"Moreover, no explanation has been given as to how any rule of the Senate, whether it be formal or merely a matter of tradition, could supercede the authority to fill vacancies conferred on the states by the federal constitution," the court states.

The 17th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution allows states the power to appoint senators when there is a vacancy.

White Reacts

White opened his post-ruling news conference with a joke, which is quite out of character for the usually straightforward secretary of state.

"Ladies and gentlemen, don't ask me to sign anything, OK?" he said, chuckling.
 
White went on more seriously: "I could not and would not in good conscience sign my name to any appointment made by Gov. Rod Blagojevich to fill the Senate seat. 
 
"The ultimate decision to seat or not to seat the Senate appointee is left up to the United States Senate," he said.

Burris Reacts

Following the ruling, Burris seemed optimistic, choosing to focus on the part of the court's ruling that spoke about Senate rules, even though the court denied his motion.  Here's his statement:

Today the Illinois Supreme Court ruled that the Secretary of State's signature is not needed to validate my appointment to the U. S. Senate by the Governor. I am very happy that the Supreme Court ruled supporting our argument that everything surrounding this appointment was legal and complete. This appointment meets the qualifications required by the U.S. Senate of all Gubernatorial appointees to fill vacated seats. After addressing the Illinois House Special Investigative Committee yesterday affirming that there was nothing questionable surrounding my appointment by the Governor, I am confident I have cooperated with all the requests of the U. S. Senate and I expect they will validate my credentials and seat me in a timely manner. I am humbled by all the support I have received and look forward to getting to work addressing the important issues our state and nation are facing.

Comments (19)

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  • Anfernee Hardaway Saturday, Jan 10 at 6:29 PM FLAG COMMENT Roland Burris wil never be seated inside sources say that the Roland and his cause will be buried in committee until Gov Hair Helmet is impeached. Then the Senate will look to the Lt. Gov for the next appointment ....someone everyone can agree on...perhaps Jesse Jr. or Bobby Rush???or John Quarters Boyle or Bozo the clown...well at least it will be somebody the "people of Illinois can rely on"
  • Tired of Politicians Saturday, Jan 10 at 9:51 AM FLAG COMMENT The next time your local school takes a trip to Springfield so your child can visit and see the inner workings of the state capital we better be sure they have protective clothing, to ensure the stench and garbage from the chamber does not contaminate them. We must tell them if a politician shakes your hand , check your wallet and purses to ensure they have stolen anything from them. The most important word of advice is th ... MORE >
  • dd Saturday, Jan 10 at 9:15 AM FLAG COMMENT In response to your ques SHELL, The appointment is legal , when the do nothing politicians in Springfield held the(sham) special session and refused to have a special election it left the door open for the Governor to appoint Roland Burris.The US senate can complain, whine and posture all they want, but legally and constitutionally they can not refuse to sit him. This is a ashame because because the people of Illinois are be ... MORE >
  • Calamity Jane Friday, Jan 9 at 4:56 PM FLAG COMMENT Okay... I read the Illinois Supreme Court ruling in most part. What jumped out at me is that THIS IS A TEMPORARY APPOINTMENT until the next election term to fill that senate seat. Mr. Burris now has a document that indicates the appointment is "registered" with the Secretary of State and bears a copy seal. So what is all this schmischzz about??? The Senate may still not seat him because it seems that everybody these days i ... MORE >
  • Calamity Jane Friday, Jan 9 at 4:33 PM FLAG COMMENT Let's illustrate it this way for you MM 45 mins ago: The president of the company okayed your annual raise at 7%. It is due to take effect 3 months from now. The president of the company is suddenly fired for sticking his hands in the coffer. Now talk is you will not get your raise because he turned out to be a corrupt officer. Is that fair? At the time the Governor appointed Roland Burris to the vacant senate seat, ... MORE >

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