Posted on 07/20/2005 7:06:32 PM PDT by Salvation
IF NOTHING ELSE, REPORTS THAT ROBERTS IS PRACTICING CATHOLIC MAY INTENSIFY FIGHT
It's unclear how intense the battle over Supreme Court nominee John Roberts will be. "Easy time seen for judicial nominee," said The Washington Times. "Battle Looms," headlined MSNBC. "Confirmation battle looms," added CBS almost identically.
"This should be a straightforward confirmation," said Senator Jeff Sessions, Alabama Republican and member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which will hold hearings on the nomination.
"The president has chosen someone with suitable legal credentials, but that is not the end of our inquiry," Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, opined.
And so we see how unclear, as yet, that the battle lines are.
Predictably, radical groups like the NARAL Pro-Choice America and Move On quickly denounced the selection. Conservatives were generally pleased -- very pleased -- although some fretted that because so little is known about Judge Roberts -- because there is a thin "paper trail" on his views -- he could turn out to be another David Souter, who President Bush's father placed on the Court and who turned out to be pro-choice despite contrary expectations.
While Roberts has argued against Roe versus Wade -- the landmark 1973 decision that allowed abortion -- he has also stated that Roe is the "settled law of the land."
Which views are his and which are those of the clients he had represented?
The reports are that Judge Roberts' wife, Jane Sullivan Roberts, once served as vice president for a group called Feminists for Life. We know that she attended the College of The Holy Cross and is a member of the board of governors of the John Carroll Society, a Catholic lay organization that sponsors the annual Washington archdiocesan Red Mass before the opening of the Supreme Court term. Judge Roberts is himself -- reportedly -- a practicing Catholic. He grew up in Long Beach, Indiana, where he attended Catholic elementary and high schools. He was captain of the football team and class president at La Lumiere, a Catholic college prep school, before going on to earn undergraduate and law degrees from Harvard.
If confirmed, Roberts would be the eleventh Catholic to serve on the court.
And that alone greatly increases the chance of conflict.
Look at two of the Catholics on the current bench. They are the lightning rods: Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas.
"Judge Robert's confirmation hearings are ripe for anti- religious bigotry," said Fidelis President Joseph Cella. "Judge Roberts is a faithful Catholic, who is devoted to his wife and children. With the history of Catholic and Christian judicial nominees attacked because of their religious faith and family life in past Senate confirmation hearings, we call on Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, ranking member Senator Patrick Leahy, Senators Charles Schumer, Dick Durbin and Russ Feingold to prevent this vile brand of hate politics from entering this important process. Judge Roberts is an eminently qualified jurist, and his outstanding legal credentials and temperament should enable his confirmation prior to the Supreme Court reconvening on October 3."
**why do the majority of Catholics vote for them?**
That is becoming an old wives' tale.
This year more Catholics voted for Bush than for Kerry -- and Kerry was the Catholic in Name Only! [for abortion, however1] The younger voters are having their say! Horray!
Torie, you may think it is irrelevant. But the pro-lifers care a lot!
Let me help you with some of this. The personal beliefs of Justices about abortion as a religious matter, or public policy matter, should be totally irrelevant to how they interpret the Constitution. As I said, it is irrelevant, totally irrelevant.
Service | Birth | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name, state | Term | Yrs | Place | Date | Died | Religion |
Chief Justices | ||||||
John Jay, N.Y. | 1789-1795 | 5 | N.Y. | 1745 | 1829 | Episcopal |
John Rutledge, S.C. | 1795 | 0 | S.C. | 1739 | 1800 | Church of England |
Oliver Ellsworth, Conn. | 1796-1800 | 4 | Conn. | 1745 | 1807 | Congregational |
John Marshall, Va. | 1801-1835 | 34 | Va. | 1755 | 1835 | Episcopal |
Roger B. Taney, Md. | 1836-1864 | 28 | Md. | 1777 | 1864 | Catholic |
Salmon P. Chase, Ohio | 1864-1873 | 8 | N.H. | 1808 | 1873 | Episcopal |
Morrison R. Waite, Ohio | 1874-1888 | 14 | Conn. | 1816 | 1888 | Episcopal |
Melville W. Fuller, Ill. | 1888-1910 | 21 | Maine | 1833 | 1910 | Episcopal |
Edward D. White, La. | 1910-1921 | 10 | La. | 1845 | 1921 | Catholic |
William H. Taft, Conn. | 1921-1930 | 8 | Ohio | 1857 | 1930 | Unitarian |
Charles E. Hughes, N.Y. | 1930-1941 | 11 | N.Y. | 1862 | 1948 | Baptist |
Harlan F. Stone, N.Y. | 1941-1946 | 4 | N.H. | 1872 | 1946 | Episcopal |
Frederick M. Vinson, Ky. | 1946-1953 | 7 | Ky. | 1890 | 1953 | Methodist |
Earl Warren, Calif. | 1953-1969 | 15 | Calif. | 1891 | 1974 | Protestant |
Warren E. Burger, Va. | 1969-1986 | 17 | Minn. | 1907 | 1995 | Presbyterian |
William H. Rehnquist, Ariz. | 1986- | | Wis. | 1924 | | Lutheran |
Associate Justices | ||||||
James Wilson, Pa. | 1789-1798 | 8 | Scotland | 1742 | 1798 | Episcopal |
John Rutledge, S.C. | 1790-1791 | 1 | S.C. | 1739 | 1800 | Church of England |
William Cushing, Mass. | 1790-1810 | 20 | Mass. | 1732 | 1810 | Unitarian |
John Blair, Va. | 1790-1796 | 5 | Va. | 1732 | 1800 | Presbyterian |
James Iredell, N.C. | 1790-1799 | 9 | England | 1751 | 1799 | Episcopal |
Thomas Johnson, Md. | 1792-1793 | 0 | Md. | 1732 | 1819 | Episcopal |
William Paterson, N.J. | 1793-1806 | 13 | Ireland | 1745 | 1806 | Protestant |
Samuel Chase, Md. | 1796-1811 | 15 | Md. | 1741 | 1811 | Episcopal |
Bushrod Washington, Va. | 1799-1829 | 30 | Va. | 1762 | 1829 | Episcopal |
Alfred Moore, N.C. | 1800-1804 | 3 | N.C. | 1755 | 1810 | Episcopal |
William Johnson, S.C. | 1804-1834 | 30 | S.C. | 1771 | 1834 | Presbyterian |
Brockholst Livingston, N.Y. | 1807-1823 | 16 | N.Y. | 1757 | 1823 | Presbyterian |
Thomas Todd, Ky. | 1807-1826 | 18 | Va. | 1765 | 1826 | Presbyterian |
Gabriel Duval, Md. | 1811-1835 | 23 | Md. | 1752 | 1844 | French Protestant |
Joseph Story, Mass. | 1812-1845 | 33 | Mass. | 1779 | 1845 | Unitarian |
Smith Thompson, N.Y. | 1823-1843 | 20 | N.Y. | 1768 | 1843 | Presbyterian |
Robert Trimble, Ky. | 1826-1828 | 2 | Va. | 1777 | 1828 | Protestant |
John McLean, Ohio | 1830-1861 | 31 | N.J. | 1785 | 1861 | Methodist-Epis. |
Henry Baldwin, Pa. | 1830-1844 | 14 | Conn. | 1780 | 1844 | Trinity Church |
James M. Wayne, Ga. | 1835-1867 | 32 | Ga. | 1790 | 1867 | Protestant |
Philip P. Barbour, Va. | 1836-1841 | 4 | Va. | 1783 | 1841 | Episcopal |
John Catron, Tenn. | 1837-1865 | 28 | Pa. | 1786 | 1865 | Presbyterian |
John McKinley, Ala. | 1837-1852 | 14 | Va. | 1780 | 1852 | Protestant |
Peter V. Daniel, Va. | 1841-1860 | 18 | Va. | 1784 | 1860 | Episcopal |
Samuel Nelson, N.Y. | 1845-1872 | 27 | N.Y. | 1792 | 1873 | Protestant |
Levi Woodbury, N.H. | 1845-1851 | 5 | N.H. | 1789 | 1851 | Protestant |
Robert C. Grier, Pa. | 1846-1870 | 23 | Pa. | 1794 | 1870 | Presbyterian |
Benjamin R. Curtis, Mass. | 1851-1857 | 5 | Mass. | 1809 | 1874 | (2) |
John A. Campbell, Ala. | 1853-1861 | 8 | Ga. | 1811 | 1889 | Episcopal |
Nathan Clifford, Maine | 1858-1881 | 23 | N.H. | 1803 | 1881 | (1) |
Noah H. Swayne, Ohio | 1862-1881 | 18 | Va. | 1804 | 1884 | Quaker |
Samuel F. Miller, Iowa | 1862-1890 | 28 | Ky. | 1816 | 1890 | Unitarian |
David Davis, Ill. | 1862-1877 | 14 | Md. | 1815 | 1886 | (4) |
Stephen J. Field, Calif. | 1863-1897 | 34 | Conn. | 1816 | 1899 | Episcopal |
William Strong, Pa. | 1870-1880 | 10 | Conn. | 1808 | 1895 | Presbyterian |
Joseph P. Bradley, N.J. | 1870-1892 | 21 | N.Y. | 1813 | 1892 | Presbyterian |
Ward Hunt, N.Y. | 1872-1882 | 9 | N.Y. | 1810 | 1886 | Episcopal |
John M. Harlan, Ky. | 1877-1911 | 33 | Ky. | 1833 | 1911 | Presbyterian |
William B. Woods, Ga. | 1880-1887 | 6 | Ohio | 1824 | 1887 | Protestant |
Stanley Matthews, Ohio | 1881-1889 | 7 | Ohio | 1824 | 1889 | Presbyterian |
Horace Gray, Mass. | 1882-1902 | 20 | Mass. | 1828 | 1902 | (3) |
Samuel Blatchford, N.Y. | 1882-1893 | 11 | N.Y. | 1820 | 1893 | Presbyterian |
Lucius Q. C. Lamar, Miss. | 1888-1893 | 5 | Ga. | 1825 | 1893 | Methodist |
David J. Brewer, Kan. | 1889-1910 | 20 | Asia Minor | 1837 | 1910 | Protestant |
Henry B. Brown, Mich. | 1890-1906 | 15 | Mass. | 1836 | 1913 | Protestant |
George Shiras, Jr., Pa. | 1892-1903 | 10 | Pa. | 1832 | 1924 | Presbyterian |
Howell E. Jackson, Tenn. | 1893-1895 | 2 | Tenn. | 1832 | 1895 | Baptist |
Edward D. White, La.* | 1894-1910 | 16 | La. | 1845 | 1921 | Catholic |
Rufus W. Peckham, N.Y. | 1895-1909 | 13 | N.Y. | 1838 | 1909 | Episcopal |
Joseph McKenna, Calif. | 1898-1925 | 26 | Pa. | 1843 | 1926 | Catholic |
Oliver W. Holmes, Mass. | 1902-1932 | 29 | Mass. | 1841 | 1935 | Unitarian |
William R. Day, Ohio | 1903-1922 | 19 | Ohio | 1849 | 1923 | Protestant |
William H. Moody, Mass. | 1906-1910 | 3 | Mass. | 1853 | 1917 | Episcopal |
Horace H. Lurton, Tenn. | 1909-1914 | 4 | Ky. | 1844 | 1914 | Episcopal |
Charles E. Hughes, N.Y.* | 1910-1916 | 5 | N.Y. | 1862 | 1948 | Baptist |
Willis Van Devanter, Wyo. | 1910-1937 | 26 | Ind. | 1859 | 1941 | Episcopal |
Joseph R. Lamar, Ga. | 1910-1916 | 4 | Ga. | 1857 | 1916 | Ch. of Disciples |
Mahlon Pitney, N.J. | 1912-1922 | 10 | N.J. | 1858 | 1924 | Presbyterian |
James C. McReynolds, Tenn. | 1914-1941 | 26 | Ky. | 1862 | 1946 | Disciples of Christ |
Louis D. Brandeis, Mass. | 1916-1939 | 22 | Ky. | 1856 | 1941 | Jewish |
John H. Clarke, Ohio | 1916-1922 | 5 | Ohio | 1857 | 1945 | Protestant |
George Sutherland, Utah | 1922-1938 | 15 | England | 1862 | 1942 | Episcopal |
Pierce Butler, Minn. | 1923-1939 | 16 | Minn. | 1866 | 1939 | Catholic |
Edward T. Sanford, Tenn. | 1923-1930 | 7 | Tenn. | 1865 | 1930 | Episcopal |
Harlan F. Stone, N.Y.* | 1925-1941 | 16 | N.H. | 1872 | 1946 | Episcopal |
Owen J. Roberts, Pa. | 1930-1945 | 15 | Pa. | 1875 | 1955 | Episcopal |
Benjamin N. Cardozo, N.Y. | 1932-1938 | 6 | N.Y. | 1870 | 1938 | Jewish |
Hugo L. Black, Ala. | 1937-1971 | 34 | Ala. | 1886 | 1971 | Baptist |
Stanley F. Reed, Ky. | 1938-1957 | 19 | Ky. | 1884 | 1980 | Protestant |
Felix Frankfurter, Mass. | 1939-1962 | 23 | Austria | 1882 | 1965 | Jewish |
William O. Douglas, Conn. | 1939-1975 | 36 | Minn. | 1898 | 1980 | Presbyterian |
Frank Murphy, Mich. | 1940-1949 | 9 | Mich. | 1890 | 1949 | Catholic |
James F. Byrnes, S.C. | 1941-1942 | 1 | S.C. | 1879 | 1972 | Episcopal |
Robert H. Jackson, Pa. | 1941-1954 | 13 | N.Y. | 1892 | 1954 | Episcopal |
Wiley B. Rutledge, Iowa | 1943-1949 | 6 | Ky. | 1894 | 1949 | Unitarian |
Harold H. Burton, Ohio | 1945-1958 | 13 | Mass. | 1888 | 1964 | Unitarian |
Tom C. Clark, Tex. | 1949-1967 | 17 | Tex. | 1899 | 1977 | Presbyterian |
Sherman Minton, Ind. | 1949-1956 | 7 | Ind. | 1890 | 1965 | Catholic |
John M. Harlan, N.Y. | 1955-1971 | 16 | Ill. | 1899 | 1971 | Presbyterian |
William J. Brennan, Jr., N.J. | 1956-1990 | 33 | N.J. | 1906 | 1997 | Catholic |
Charles E. Whittaker, Mo. | 1957-1962 | 5 | Kan. | 1901 | 1973 | Methodist |
Potter Stewart, Ohio | 1958-1981 | 23 | Mich. | 1915 | 1985 | Episcopal |
Byron R. White, Colo. | 1962-1993 | 31 | Colo. | 1917 | 2002 | Episcopal |
Arthur J. Goldberg, Ill. | 1962-1965 | 2 | Ill. | 1908 | 1990 | Jewish |
Abe Fortas, Tenn. | 1965-1969 | 3 | Tenn. | 1910 | 1982 | Jewish |
Thurgood Marshall, N.Y. | 1967-1991 | 24 | Md. | 1908 | 1993 | Episcopal |
Harry A. Blackmun, Minn. | 1970-1994 | 24 | Ill. | 1908 | 1999 | Methodist |
Lewis F. Powell, Jr., Va. | 1972-1987 | 15 | Va. | 1907 | 1998 | Presbyterian |
William H. Rehnquist, Ariz.* | 1972-1986 | 14 | Wis. | 1924 | | Lutheran |
John Paul Stevens, Ill. | 1975- | | Ill. | 1920 | | Protestant |
Sandra Day O'Connor, Ariz. | 1981- | | Tex. | 1930 | | Episcopal |
Antonin Scalia, D.C. | 1986- | | N.J. | 1936 | | Catholic |
Anthony M. Kennedy, Calif. | 1988- | | Calif. | 1936 | | Catholic |
David H. Souter, N.H. | 1990- | | Mass. | 1939 | | Episcopal |
Clarence Thomas, D.C. | 1991- | | Ga. | 1948 | | Catholic |
Ruth Bader Ginsburg, D.C. | 1993- | | N.Y. | 1933 | | Jewish |
Stephen G. Breyer, Mass. | 1994- | | Calif. | 1938 | | n.a. |
1. Congregational; later Unitarian.
2. Unitarian; then Episcopal.
3. Unitarian or Congregational.
4. Not a member of any church
Damn, not a near atheist in the bunch. I have NEVER had "representation." I ain't getting no equal protection. I'm gonna sue!
I agree with you 100%. Religious affiliation should have no place in determining a Supreme Court nominee. The key focus should be the nominee's judicial philosophy (which their religion may or may not influence...just like any other life experience).
He's deceased !!! That's what they like about him!!
Oh, stop being level headed and sensible. You will just bore everyone like I do. :)
I stand corrected. I did a little more research and you are corect.
Let me rephrase my comment. Why do *any* real, church going Catholics vote democrat? And I know some of them. The ersatz ones do not count.
Please notify me via FReepmail if you would like to be added to or taken off the Catholic Discussion Ping List.
On the John G. Roberts nomination...
"Senate Democrats, especially those seeking re-election next year, should know that we will be watching them carefully. If they again attempt to attack a nominee's faith or pro-life convictions, their constituents will know about it and they will be held accountable." Father Frank Pavone, national director, Priests for Life.
I pray for God's will with Roberts.
Must be why "Allah" is so upset.
As far as pro-life being an issue, just ask the democrats that's all they're afraid of and talking about, just turn on the news, LOL. It's all about life since it's an unalienable right given to us by God and is the foundation of our republic as documented in the Declaration of Independence, the bill of rights especially in the 5th amendment. Those who engender certain catholic values understand the intent of our forefathers with respect to life, abortion, murder and morality and will interpret the US Constitution the proper way.
I have no problem with the font of the original thread and don't dwell on minutia.
FYI, Clarence Thomas is divorced and remarried and is now an Episcopalian.
Isn't Kofi Annan a Catholic, seems there is nothing written about it? Is the press trying to hide something
I wonder how that "staunch Catholic" (LOL!!!) Lard Ass Kennedy will react if Catholicism becomes an issue...
It is a non-issue to me if he is a Catholic. However, he should remember his loyalty lies to the Constitution, not the Pope.
I do get irriatable from time to time, when annoyed. I admit it. So is, or is not, Thomas now an Episcopalean (sp) or a Catholic? I have read that he returned to Catholcism on this very site a couple of years ago. This is really, really, very, very, important to me.
Stevens is a nomial Christian, beloging to no denomination or church.
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