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Garza or Alito next: The Supreme Court do-over
Renew America ^ | October 30, 2005 | Chris Knight

Posted on 10/30/2005 1:17:40 PM PST by Giant Conservative

The White House decided to employ a politically-palatable, pundit-prescribed exit strategy with the withdrawal of Harriet Miers. Because of that, Miss Miers is no longer a nominee to the United States Supreme Court, and much of America may believe the Bush Administration's contention that she withdrew over a request for documents. In actuality, she withdrew because her 1993 pro-abortion speech came to light, and that was the straw that broke the camel's back for the great Dr. James Dobson, Senator Sam Brownback, Senator John Thune, and any members of the conservative base who had reserved judgment up to that point.

In ways, the whole fiasco was a great learning experience for all involved:

We learned that the Administration really needs to stop parroting the Leahy-originated line about looking for Supreme Court nominees "outside the judicial monastery". Every nominee to the USSC should have prior experience on the bench, and a track record that illustrates how they reason through legal issues, and what biases/predispositions they have.

We learned that group-identity politics should not figure into appointments to the Supreme Court. No seat on the USSC should be reserved on the basis of sex or race; those seats should be reserved for Justices who will rule on the basis of what the text of the Constitution actually says.

No more.

No less.

Finally, we learned that any "stealth" nominee inevitably is going to be bad for the conservative base of America. We should have learned that when Andy Card's other favorite nominee, David "Sununu says he's a home run" Souter, proved to be a consistent liberal after having been put onto the Supreme Court by the first President Bush. From now on, there needs to be no such thing as "stealth" nominees: the definition of insanity is trying the same thing twice and expecting different results.

Every future nominee to the Supreme Court should have a clear judicial track record, one that clearly illustrates how they will rule on cases like Casey and Kelo. Of course, that means no longer letting socially liberal oligarchs like Senator Kennedy and Senator Schumer set the rules. For years, conservatives have swallowed the preposition that nominees to our United States Supreme Court aren't supposed to proactively disclaim the reasoning and results of decisions like Roe vs. Wade. Yet, that preposition is fallacious, and the acceptance of it by conservatives is tantamount to pre-emptive surrender:

Surrender is inimical to conservatism, which at its core deeply loves free-market competition. Conservatives have no interest in surrendering, conservatives want to stake out pure and principled positions and fight through the night for them, confident in the strength that carries them and in the sun rising over a victorious morning for our country.

Thus, every future nominee should proudly stand up for a true, accurate reading of the U.S. Constitution. Such a reading includes acknowledgement that failure to overturn decisions like Roe and Danforth and Casey and Kelo would be a failure to follow the Constitution, since those decisions were all completely un-Constitutional in the first place.

Judge Janice Rogers Brown is a very high-impact personality, and it is hard to not feel an affection for the passion she shows. Certainly, she fully recognizes private-property rights, and would undoubtedly vote to overturn Kelo. Kelo, by the way, is the recent United States Supreme Court decision which gives local governments the authority to take anyone's family home, anyone's farm, anyone's land, and give the property to someone who will use it to generate more tax revenue for the government. In the near-33 years since Roe was mis-decided, only the Kelo decision has aroused as much lasting and fruitful passion with the home-and-family social conservatives that make up the voting base of this nation.

Janice Rogers Brown would make the right decision on private property rights. With regards to Roe vs. Wade however, the jury is still out. She ruled in favor of parental notification laws, and spoke eloquently in favor of parental rights, and appears to have a pro-morality bent. She also shows strong libertarian inclinations which may be in too-serious conflict with the three good things just mentioned. So, with regards to Roe et al, it is uncertain that she would rule to fully overturn it. Because it needs to be fully overturned in order for pro-life folks to succeed state-by-state in instituting right-to-life laws, I can't endorse her now. She has a lot of potential, and I hope that her views with regards to Roe are publicly clarified before Stevens and Ginsberg retire in the 2009-2013 Presidential term.

And then there are the two Ediths. Edith Clement seems to be Harriet Miers Version 2, and I doubt that she would make any conservative happy were she added to the Supreme Court. Edith Jones, on the other hand, has made a strong case against Roe vs. Wade. However, I still can't support her because of her double-standard bias against unmarried fathers.

Judge Michael Luttig is supported by infamous RINO pundit Hugh Hewitt, which should send up a red flag right there. He has employed the phrase "fundamental right to choose" in referring to abortion of pre-born infants. Anyone employing leftist terminology of that nature in reference to what is in fact the death of innocents is a RINO. Luttig would never overturn Roe vs. Wade, for in his words, Roe (by way of the pro-abortion Casey decision) is "super-stare decisis". What that means is that he considers Roe/Casey to be super-precedents which cannot be overturned. Luttig, in fact, is where Super-RINO Arlen Specter got the term "super-precedent".

After a very temporary flirtation with doing the right thing, Luttig reverted to Souteresque form and wrote a court decision (in his own words) "summarily affirming the unconstitutionality" of a state law banning partial-birth abortion. No one who could sign their name to such a pronouncement would ever vote to overturn Roe/Casey, and his nomination to the United States Supreme Court would be a lasting political disaster of epic proportions that would make the Harriet Miers Debacle look like a rose garden stroll in comparison.

Judge Harvie Wilkinson is much like Sandra Day O'Connor: all over the place, all at once, sans any sense of consistency. The last thing the United States Supreme Court needs is anyone who is anything like O'Connor.

So, with the future of this Constitutional Republic at stake, who should be nominated to be the next Justice of the Supreme Court?

One of two men with the experience, gravitas, intelligence, and pro-Constitution character to be another Antonin Scalia:

Those two men are Emilio Garza and Samuel Alito.

Judge Emilio Garza is a true conservative, and has bravely referred to the pro-abortion Casey decision of 1992 as "inimical to the Constitution". He's right, and he should be put on the United States Supreme Court right away.

Speaking of the Casey decision, before it got to the USSC, it was heard by a lower court. That court included Judge Samuel Alito. He upheld the husband-notification provision of the abortion law in contention, and his profoundly impactful reasoning was later referenced and agreed with by the late, great USSC Chief Justice William Rehnquist. Unfortunately, the interminably anti-fatherhood Sandra Day O'Connor shot down the husband-notification provision in the Supreme Court's decision on Casey. Men in particular should be big supporters of Alito's appointment to the United States Supreme Court.

I am.

Copyright by Chris Knight

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TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: abort; abortion; alito; babies; brown; brownback; bush; bush43; canneverbehappy; casey; clement; conservatism; conservative; conservatives; constitution; constitutioninexile; court; courts; dobson; fatherhood; fathers; fathersrights; garza; harrietmiers; infants; jmichaelluttig; jones; judgealito; kelo; luttig; michaelluttig; miers; morality; presidentbush; prochoice; prolife; renewamerica; righttolife; roe; roevswade; roevwade; samalito; samuelalito; scotus; senate; supremecourt; thune; unitedstatessenate; ussc
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Call your United States Senators today!
1 posted on 10/30/2005 1:17:42 PM PST by Giant Conservative
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To: Giant Conservative

Here we go again!


2 posted on 10/30/2005 1:18:58 PM PST by Andy from Beaverton (I only vote Republican to stop the Democrats)
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To: Giant Conservative

give me a break. Luttig is as good a choice as any.


3 posted on 10/30/2005 1:20:11 PM PST by rs79bm
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To: Giant Conservative

Luttig...pro-aborton?

FORGET HIM!!!!


4 posted on 10/30/2005 1:20:57 PM PST by Palladin (America! America! God shed His grace on Thee.)
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To: Giant Conservative

Isn't this Alan Keyes organization?


5 posted on 10/30/2005 1:20:59 PM PST by PhiKapMom (AOII MOM -- Istook for OK Governor in 2006! Allen in 2008!)
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To: Giant Conservative
Judge Michael Luttig is supported by infamous RINO pundit Hugh Hewitt, which should send up a red flag right there.

In the wake of his weeks-long pro-Miers tantrum/meltdown: this can never, ever be too emphatically stated.

6 posted on 10/30/2005 1:22:23 PM PST by KentTrappedInLiberalSeattle ("It'sTime for Republicans to Start Toeing the Conservative Line, NOT the Other Way Around!")
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To: Giant Conservative
Someone can be pro-abortion and anti-Roe. I have no knowledge of Luttig's stance.

But Roe is just bad law.

7 posted on 10/30/2005 1:22:31 PM PST by ClearCase_guy
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To: Giant Conservative

Please use original titles.
Thanks.


8 posted on 10/30/2005 1:24:50 PM PST by Admin Moderator
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To: Palladin
Luttig...pro-aborton?

I expect Bush will probably nominate him then to please Ted Kennedy.

9 posted on 10/30/2005 1:28:33 PM PST by nosofar
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To: rs79bm
give me a break. Luttig is as good a choice as any.

Please refute the arguments put forth in the original post, rather than just stating your opinion with no supporting references.

This post reveals the first serious negative charge of Luttig to appear on FR, and deserves more than a "Me too" posting.

10 posted on 10/30/2005 1:28:44 PM PST by adamsjas
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To: Giant Conservative
Newsflash: you will always be able to cherry pick a nominees life to find proof that he/she is a "RINO".

You ain't gonna get Jesus.

11 posted on 10/30/2005 1:30:36 PM PST by Siena Dreaming
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To: ClearCase_guy
Someone can be pro-abortion and anti-Roe.

But such a person has no moral compass other then the dotted I and the crossed T of the law. There are a whole host of things that are not explicitly forbidden in our constitution which are bad for the country.

Actually if you were to read the Federalist Papers you would be shocked at all the things that Publius assured us could never happen which have indeed become the law of the land, simply because they were not forbidden in the constitution and were subsequently enacted by a congress and approved by a court with no moral input.

12 posted on 10/30/2005 1:38:24 PM PST by adamsjas
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To: Palladin

He is not pro-abortion according to the pro-life blogs. Keyes outfit once again cherry-picked info to make the guy look bad. They want people to rule their way even if it goes against the law.


13 posted on 10/30/2005 1:39:19 PM PST by PhiKapMom (AOII MOM -- Istook for OK Governor in 2006! Allen in 2008!)
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To: Giant Conservative

I was opposed to Miers, but this is absurd. If you can't be happy with Luttig, you are not going to be happy. The choice is most likely going to be Luttig or Alito.

And there are WAY more issues more important than abortion.


14 posted on 10/30/2005 1:39:19 PM PST by NapkinUser ("It is a damn poor mind indeed which can think of only one way to spell a word." -Andrew Jackson)
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To: Giant Conservative

She withdrew because she would have been shot down in the Senate.

She did not have the votes.


15 posted on 10/30/2005 1:40:55 PM PST by Sometimes A River ("Oh yeah? Well if you do it again, I'm gonna have only one word for you: 'Outta here.'" - Paul Sr.)
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To: NapkinUser
I was leaning toward Miers, although waiting for the hearings for final judgment.

Get ready for more nit-picking over the nominees. It's not over.

16 posted on 10/30/2005 1:42:06 PM PST by Siena Dreaming
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To: quidnunc
Check it out; now they're after Luttig ...
17 posted on 10/30/2005 1:44:30 PM PST by MrNatural ("...You want the truth!?...")
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To: PhiKapMom

I will have to read up on Luttig from several sources.

I really don't know anything about him other than what I read in this article.

That quote in BOLD looks pretty damning, though.


18 posted on 10/30/2005 1:45:30 PM PST by Palladin (America! America! God shed His grace on Thee.)
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To: All

Could you guys freep this poll, the Seattle PI is so biased... they're gunning for Bush and Cheney.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1512005/posts


19 posted on 10/30/2005 1:45:35 PM PST by AliVeritas (Weldon Ops, Earle Fatwa Team, Pork Jihadi, MOOSEMUSS, Stick & Bucket Brigade)
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To: Giant Conservative

I understand that he is pro-life, and I believe he would have never vote for Roe or Casey. However, a lower court cannot rule against a higher court. So to a judge in his position, he had to rule with the Supremes. That doesn't mean anything if he becomes a Supreme himself. Only Supremes can overturn Supremes. Well, in theory the people can do it through the amendment or impeachment process, and Congress can limit their jurisdiction. But reality seems to be another matter.


20 posted on 10/30/2005 1:47:48 PM PST by The Ghost of FReepers Past (Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a disgrace to any people. Ps. 14:34)
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