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To Bork or Not to Bork? The Old Fight That Shows Democrats Why, and How, to Stop Gorsuch
The Daily Beast ^ | February 13, 2017 | Julian Zelizer

Posted on 02/13/2017 2:29:49 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet

Trump, like Reagan, squandered his chance to offer a unifying pick to satisfy his most conservative supporters.

Thirty years ago, Democrats gave the Supreme Court confirmation process a bad name. When they killed the nomination of President Ronald Reagan’s first nominee to fill a vacancy, a new term was invented: “To Bork.” The term meant to kill a nomination through character assassination, slander, and ideological attacks regardless of the competence of the person who was being considered.

Today Judge Neil Gorsuch’s supporters are warning that the Democrats should not “Bork” President Trump’s nominee. Given Gorsuch’s stellar professional record, his competence does not seem to be in question. At least from the leaked remarks about his meeting with Connecticut Senator Richard Blumenthal, he appears to have a healthy unease with President Trump’s aggressive statements about the judiciary.

But there are many reasons for Democrats to consider using their power to filibuster his nomination. After Republicans refused to confirm former President Obama’s nominee Merrick Garland—leaving many Democrats to feel like this is a “stolen seat”—the president could have sent a consensus nominee. After having lost the popular election by large numbers and now stimulating fears that he won’t respect our system of checks and balances, this was the moment to demonstrate that he understands the tensions he’s helped create. Rather than a pick intended to please the right, he could have selected someone who Democrats could have felt good about supporting even if it came from this administration.

But he did not. With Gorsuch, Trump has put forward a nominee who comes from the most conservative part of the judicial spectrum. As an originalist who is a favorite of the Federalist Society, Gorsuch has a very conservative record on key issues like religious rights, reproductive rights, gay marriage, gun rights, criminal justice and more. There is good reason to believe that he would uphold the principles of the late Justice Antonin Scalia and pose a serious threat to a number of important public policies. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, writing in The New York Times, warned that Gorsuch refused in their closed-door interview to answer “rudimentary” questions about executive power, campaign finance, voting rights or the constitutionality of Trump’s refugee ban.

As Senate Democrats consider whether or not to filibuster this nominee, they should take another look at what went down when Senators were considering the case of Robert Bork. Rather than a model that they need to avoid, it in fact offers an important lesson about the legitimate reasons to to block a high court nominee.

In 1987, Senator Ted Kennedy led the Democratic opposition to defeat a candidate who was far to the right on core principles and would have posed a real threat, in their minds, to fundamental social rights achieved after many decades of social struggle. They also believed that it was wrong for the president to select such a rightwing nominee after Democrats had regained control of the upper chamber in the 1986 midterm elections.

The battle over Bork began after Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell, a swing vote on the court, announced on June 26, 1987, that he would be retiring from the court. With the president facing a major investigation into the Iran Contra scandal, this appointment could be his last chance at legacy building. Democrats warned the White House that they expected a nominee who could win broad support.

Reagan didn’t take their advice. On July 1, the president announced his pick was the 60-year-old Robert Bork, who had been on conservative Supreme Court shortlists for over a decade. A Yale professor, Richard Nixon’s former solicitor general, and a former federal appeals court judge who preached “originalism,” which calls for a strict adherence to the Constitution regardless of how social, legal and political norms have changed over time, Bork was seen as Reagan’s farewell gift to the right.

Kennedy, one of the leading liberal voices within the Democratic Party, would have none of it. Given that conservatives had pointed to Bork as a model nominee for his intellectual record, liberals in the Senate had been doing background work on him already and had a good feel for just how conservative his views were. Kennedy believed that placing Bork on the Court would result in huge risks to the major gains in social justice that had been achieved since the 1960s. He perceived Bork to be an extremely ideological figure, despite Bork’s own claim that he opposed activism, and predicted that the conservative drift of the Court with him on it would result in serious threats to abortion, voting rights, affirmative action, environmental regulation and much more.

Bork had written an article challenging the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and he opposed the Supreme Court’s one-man-one-vote ruling on legislative apportionment. He had been a major opponent of the Supreme Court’s Griswold v. Connecticut a landmark right to privacy decision in 1965 which was the basis for Roe v. Wade. “The court responds to the press and law school faculties,” he said. Replacing a moderate vote with a right-winger would fundamentally change the court.

Bork also had a major role in the “Saturday Night Massacre” under President Richard Nixon. This was the moment when Nixon fired special prosecutor Archibald Cox who was investigating Watergate. When Attorney General Elliot Richardson and Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus refused to carry out the order and resigned, Solicitor General Bork agreed to carry out the action. While conservatives praised Bork as a man of principle and integrity, Democrats remembered how he had carried out a corrupt president’s dirty work. His decision in 1973, argued one law school professor, “raise serious questions about the extent to which he, as a judge, would require the federal government to adhere to constitutional and other legal limitations.”

After Reagan announced the appointment, Kennedy took to the Senate floor 45 minutes later to make a dramatic speech intended to mobilize opponents against this confirmation. “Robert Bork’s America is a land in which women would be forced into back-alley abortions, blacks would sit at segregated lunch counters, rogue police could break down citizens’ doors in midnight raids, schoolchildren could not be taught about evolution, writers and artists could be censored at the whim of government, and the doors of the Federal courts would be shut on the fingers of millions of citizens.”

The charged rhetoric was no accident. “I knew my speech was red-hot even before I delivered it,” Kennedy recalled, “I wanted it that way—immediate and fiery—because I wanted to frame the debate. I knew I was making myself a target by being so heated in my rhetoric, but it was a price I was willing to pay to keep this man off the court.”

It worked. The People for the American Way broadcast television ads depicting Bork as a dangerous extremist who would undermine the rights of most Americans. In one ad, the actor Gregory Peck warned that if Bork “wins a seat on the Supreme Court it’ll be for life—his life and yours.” Ralph Neas, the executive director of the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights warned that “A Bork nomination, or the nomination of anyone who would jeopardize the civil rights accomplishments of the past 30 years, would most likely precipitate the most controversial and confrontational legislative battle of the Reagan years.” Women’s organizations announced that they could not stand for an Associate Justice who was hostile to the gains that women had made since the 1970s, including on reproductive rights. The ACLU, in a rare stand against a Supreme Court nominee, said no, calling Bork a “radical” not a conservative.

“Judge Bork’s writings make it crystal clear,” said the organization’s executive director Ira Glasser, “that he thinks the highest right in this society is the right of local majorities to make law and to impose their morality on the rest of society.”

Wyoming Senator Alan Simpson, a Republican, complained that these organizations “turned him into an absolute gargoyle, into a beast.”

Although conservatives expressed outrage, the truth is that confirmations were political long before 1987. As the historian David Greenberg has written, the Senate rejected George Washington’s nominee for Chief Justice in 1794 and the right worked hard to block Thurgood Marshall when Lyndon Johnson appointed him to be the first African American Justice in 1967. Liberals stopped Richard Nixon’s nominations of Clement Haynsworth in 1969 and G. Harrold Carswell in 1970. So despite the complains, the mobilization against Bork was nothing more than familiar for most senators.

Conservative organizations conducted a public relations campaign of their own. The right paid for their own ads, they lobbied senators, and they built public support for this important nomination.

Senator Joe Biden, the chairman of the Judiciary Committee who was running for the Democratic nomination in the 1988 presidential election, opposed Bork’s nomination but tried to conduct the hearings in a fair manner. Some Democrats were pretty hard hitting, but they focused on very important policies. Ohio Senator Howard Metzenbaum attacked Bork for having made a ruling on the appeals court that allowed a chemical company to provide a choice to female employees between being fired or being sterilized. During the hearings, most of Bork’s answers were unconvincing, and often tortured or totally contradicted his own record. He came off as arrogant and odd. Senators were upset when he said that serving on the Court would be an “intellectual feast,” which suggested to many that he would not consider the actual impact of his decisions. “He looked and talked like a man who would throw the book at you—and maybe the whole country,” observed Tom Shales, the television critic for the Washington Post.

The committee voted on Oct. 6 to reject the nomination by a vote of 9 to 5. Bork refused to withdraw his name while he blamed the process as partisan and unfair, laying the groundwork for the term that would bear his name. “A crucial principle is at stake in the way we select the men and women who guard the liberties of all the American people. That should not be done through public campaigns of distortion.”

On Oct. 23, the Senate rejected the nomination by a vote of 58 to 42. A few Democrats like David Boren and Ernest Hollings voted in in support of nominee, but most of the party went the other way. Six moderate Republicans voted against him. Kennedy’s campaign had worked. Bork was too radical.

Today, Senate Democrats have good reason to Bork Gorsuch. Since Republicans broke the confirmation process when they refused to even hold hearings on Garland, it is incumbent on their party, which controls the White House and Congress. The fix is for Republicans to send a moderate and a pragmatist who will move the divided court to the center, not to the right. As they did in 1987, though, Democrats face a nominee who comes from the far right and he symbolizes presidential choice that is clear statement of defiance. With this nomination, Trump proves again that he is a president whose power comes from dividing, not uniting.

Rather than remembering the Bork appointment as something that to avoid, this is a time to look back at Senator Kennedy’s campaign as a model for how to handle Gorsuch in the coming weeks.


TOPICS: Heated Discussion
KEYWORDS: gorsuch; scotus; supremecourt; trump
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1 posted on 02/13/2017 2:29:49 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Daily Beast?

Yikes!


2 posted on 02/13/2017 2:32:27 PM PST by heterosupremacist (Domine Iesu Christe, Filius Dei, miserere me peccatorem!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

They approved him before....unanimously!!!


3 posted on 02/13/2017 2:32:42 PM PST by Sacajaweau
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The “Pubbies control the Senate and should this mercilessly.
Just remember to clean up for elections, to keep the tools out the hands of Democrats...


4 posted on 02/13/2017 2:32:42 PM PST by Little Ray (Freedom Before Security!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Bork away, ‘cept the nuk-lee-er option is in play


5 posted on 02/13/2017 2:32:50 PM PST by stylin19a (Terrorists - "just because you don't see them doesn't mean they aren't there")
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“the president could have sent a consensus nominee.”

Like Obama?


6 posted on 02/13/2017 2:35:47 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

A small difference ... Senate was 55-44 Democratic in 1987.


7 posted on 02/13/2017 2:36:36 PM PST by TexasGator
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

OF COURSE they will “Bork”.
They’re LEFTISTS!!
They’re DHIMMOCRATS!!
It’s
What
They
Dooooooooooooooooooooo!!


8 posted on 02/13/2017 2:37:25 PM PST by Flintlock (The ballot box STOLEN, our soapbox taken away--the BULLET BOX is left to us.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
I still want to see where Gorsuch fits in a continuum like this:


9 posted on 02/13/2017 2:38:40 PM PST by Paladin2 (No spellcheck. It's too much work to undo the auto wrong word substitution on mobile devices.)
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To: Paladin2

10 posted on 02/13/2017 2:41:26 PM PST by Paladin2 (No spellcheck. It's too much work to undo the auto wrong word substitution on mobile devices.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Borking won’t work quite the same way again. In the age of alternative news sources they don’t control the news cycle the way they did before.

And frankly, people old enough to remember Bork have never forgiven it and won’t lay down for it again. Bork was one of the most qualified and decent men ever to serve on any bench.


11 posted on 02/13/2017 2:47:27 PM PST by marron
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The article is wrong about a fundamental premise. Replacing Scalia with Gorsuch would not change the composition of the Court. Now, if one of the liberal four leave, that nomination could change the Court. That’s when there will be a battle royal, the mother of all borks.


12 posted on 02/13/2017 2:47:38 PM PST by colorado tanker
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
Trump, like Reagan, squandered his "chance" to offer a unifying pick to satisfy his most conservative supporters. preemptively cave to leftist tyrants who LOST the election (as Republicants are required to do) and nominate some fascism-enabling judicial activist that Upchuck Schooooooomer would call "mainstream".

There, edited for accuracy. Also, "chance" typically refers to an opportunity for something positive, so here it should be in quotes. ;)

13 posted on 02/13/2017 2:47:52 PM PST by Still Thinking (Freedom is NOT a loophole!)
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To: Flintlock

At least we don’t have to contend with that horse’s ass Kennedy anymore.


14 posted on 02/13/2017 2:50:17 PM PST by beelzepug (Anybody I attack may rest assured it's personal!)
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To: marron
And frankly, people old enough to remember Bork have never forgiven it and won’t lay down for it again. Bork was one of the most qualified and decent men ever to serve on any bench.

Yes, although IIRC, he did say one thing during confirmation that pissed me off. He answered an abortion question that there was no right to privacy to be found in the Constitution. He's technically correct, but the whole paradigm of the question and the answer is flawed. It is not the rights of the individual that are enumerated in the Constitution, so that some explicit protection must be sought against some proposed government policy or action. It is the powers of the GOVERNMENT that are enumerated and THEIR actions and policies for which justification must be found. Anything on which it's silent, the government loses (and therefore the people win).

15 posted on 02/13/2017 2:53:21 PM PST by Still Thinking (Freedom is NOT a loophole!)
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To: marron

“people old enough to remember Bork have never forgiven it”
I watched it all as I was working second shift. I wanted to strangle that blonde reporter, Cokie Roberts?


16 posted on 02/13/2017 2:54:04 PM PST by Dr. Bogus Pachysandra (Don't touch that thing Don't let anybody touch that thing!I'm a Doctor and I won't touch that thing!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

He will be confirmed on a simple Vote or they will force nuclear, which is a simple majority for the next three Supreme Court Justices.

That will become the standard.

You lost 100 years of Judicial activism.


17 posted on 02/13/2017 2:54:07 PM PST by Vendome (I've Gotta Be Me - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wH-pk2vZG2M)
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To: colorado tanker

Noticed that as well.

It is nothing but Democrat party propaganda.


18 posted on 02/13/2017 2:59:51 PM PST by TheDon (MAGA!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

The writer notes that Reagan lost the Senate majority in 1986 to the democrats.

Trump, on the other hand, is a Republican president with a Republican Senate.

Some may say such RINOs as Collins, McCain and Graham might vote against him—but I don’t think so. Gorsush will not be demagogued by democrats no matter how hard they try!

Importantly the head of the Senate Judiciary committee is Chuck Grassley, not Joe Biden.

And Ted Kennedy is currently in Hell begging Mary Jo to bring him some water. All she has is some sea water from Chappaquiddick Bay. Sorry Ted!


19 posted on 02/13/2017 3:00:43 PM PST by Alas Babylon! (Keep fighting the Left and their Fake News!)
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To: heterosupremacist

This is the kind of tripe one might expect from the DB, and a man by the name of Julian Zelizer-—a thoroughly dishonest rehashing and repackaging of the “debate” that surrounded the Bork nomination. I have always thought that Kennedy’s ludicrous during those hearings would set a tone and template for what would come to be seen as the acceptable Democrat “style” for presenting itself to the Repubicans and the country at large. And I was right—it is now THE style for everything connected to the Dems as a Party.


20 posted on 02/13/2017 3:01:42 PM PST by supremedoctrine ("If you want to be able to predict the future, first you have to create it"---Lincoln)
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