Other Articles in this Category
Most Viewed Stories
Most Commented Stories
Most Recommended Stories
Save & Share this Article
Burris denied seat in U.S. Senate to succeed Obama
Comments 0 | Recommend 0WASHINGTON - Roland Burris failed in his bid to take
President-elect Barack Obama's Illinois Senate seat today in a
scripted piece of political theater staged just before the opening of
the 111th Congress.
"My credentials were not in order, I will not
be accepted, I will not be seated," Burris, 71, told a mob of reporters
who had followed him across the street for a news conference in a cold
and steady rain outside the Capitol.
The former Illinois attorney
general said he was "not seeking to have any type of confrontation"
over taking the seat that he was appointed to by embattled Gov. Rod
Blagojevich. But Burris, who would be the Senate's only black member,
also said he was considering a federal lawsuit to force Senate
Democrats to seat him.
It was a major distraction for majority
Democrats eager to project an image of progress with Obama on an
economic stimulus package that could cost up to $1 trillion.
Democrats
and Obama have said that the corruption charges against Blagojevich
would strip credibility from anyone he appoints to the seat. Burris and
many of his supporters have suggested that the real reason for the
rejection involved race.
Blagojevich denies federal accusations
that he tried to sell Obama's seat. Democrats, for their part, deny
that race has anything to do with Burris' rejection and say that it's a
reflection on Blagojevich.
That Secretary of the Senate Nancy
Erickson turned away Burris was no surprise; Senate Democrats had
warned for weeks that if Burris showed up to be sworn in on Tuesday
without the signature of the Illinois secretary of state, he would be
turned away. That's just what happened.
But if what Burris really wanted a circus, he got one.
A
mob of reporters awaited him outside the Senate's North Door, where
Sergeant at Arms Terrance Gainer and a throng of officers escorted him
through security and up to Erickson's office on the third floor.
There,
more reporters waited. Once again Burris went through a metal detector
and into Erickson's office, nestled between the elevators and the press
gallery.
Twenty-one minutes later, Burris left; a spokesman for
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid confirmed that Burris had been
rejected.
Burris left the building, escorted by Gainer and his officers.
And soon, a noisy throng of reporters followed him across the street, and Burris confirmed that he'd been turned away.
An
attorney for Burris, Timothy W. Wright III, said that "our credentials
were rejected by the secretary of the Senate. We were not allowed to be
placed in the record books. We were not allowed to proceed to the floor
for purposes of taking oath. All of which we think was improperly done
and is against the law of this land. We will consider our options and
we will certainly let you know what our decisions will be soon
thereafter."
Asked what his options were, Wright said there
possibly could be a court challenge and he said that Burris also would
continue to talk to the Senate leadership.
There had been earlier
indications that the Senate would disallow Burris to take his seat, at
least in part because his letter of appointment from Blagojevich was
not co-signed by Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White.
Some of
Burris' supporters have bemoaned the fact that Democrats would stand in
the way of the Senate gaining its only black member. Burris himself
downplayed the issue of race, telling reporters: "I cannot control my
supporters. I have never in my life, in all my years of being elected
to office, thought anything about race."
Earlier Tuesday, Burris had tense negotiations with Terrence Gainer, the Senate's sergeant at arms.
"I'm
presenting myself as the legally appointed senator from the state of
Illinois. It is my hope and prayer that they recognize that the
appointment is legal," he said earlier in a nationally broadcast
interview.
Burris dismissed the Senate Democratic leadership's
position that he cannot be seated because he was appointed by a
governor accused in a criminal complaint of trying to benefit
financially from his authority to fill the seat that Obama vacated
after winning the presidential election.
Burriss said his belief
is that his appointment is constitutional and that "I have no knowledge
of where a secretary of state has veto power over a governor carrying
out his constitutional duties."
Burris also maintained that the
announcement by Blagojevich Monday of a date for an election for a
successor to Rep. Rahm Emanuel, D-Ill., proves the governor still has
legal authority to carry out his duties. Emanuel will be Obama's White
House chief of staff.
"There's nothing wrong with Roland Burris and there's nothing wrong with the appointment," Burris said.
Burris has found little support among fellow Democrats.
Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., had said Monday that Burris would
not be permitted to take his seat because Burris "has not been
certified by the state of Illinois," a reference to incomplete
paperwork that only touches on the dispute. Senate Democrats maintain
that Burris' appointment is tainted because of the charges against
Blagojevich.
While Blagojevich has signed formal appointment
papers, White has not, and Senate rules require that signature. Burris,
in turn, has gone to court hoping to win an order for White to sign the
necessary paperwork, and he has also threatened to sue to take his seat
in the Senate.






