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Looking Toward the Next Four Years – and What Should Arlen Specter’s Role Be?
self | 07 November, 2004 | joanie-f

Posted on 11/07/2004 3:55:20 PM PST by joanie-f

I believe the three most overpowering crusades that this administration, and the next congress, have to initiate with historically unprecedented passion and resolve are:

(1) containing the threat of terrorism, no matter the financial and (unfortunate) human cost, and no matter the time commitment

(2) seeing to it that Supreme Court and federal judgeship vacancies are filled with justices who have a resolute reverence for the original intent of the Constitution

(3) crushing the massive, unconstitutional power over every aspect of our lives held trial lawyers, by instituting major, unrelenting tort reform measures

There are other, generally economic, issues – major overhaul of Social Security, major revamping of the tax code, and regaining sanity in federal spending and monetary policy -- that need addressing. But the three issues above affect the very lives of every American (and every American in utero), and the minimal acceptable quality of life that every prosperous, free people should be willing to endure.

I do not recall in my lifetime the Republican party enjoying such positive odds for genuine conservative, Constitution-respecting governance. When was the last time a Republican President enjoyed a majority of this size in both houses of Congress? Not during any of our lifetimes, for sure.

There has been no better time in our history for a President and congress to ‘spend their political capital’ to do what is right for this republic. There has been no better time to turn a deaf ear to calls for bipartisanship (from a party that only practices such when it is to their own partisan advantage), calls for healing (from a party whose ideological credo thrives on class/racial/social division), and calls for societal compassion (from a party that employs that altruistic tool only in order to increase the socialist, nanny-state power of government).

In virtually every campaign speech that this President has made over the past year, he stated that he would nominate federal judges who revere the original intent of the US Constitution. With the prospect of one, and maybe two or three, Supreme Court justices retiring within the next four years, there is no greater calling than for him, and senate Republicans, to do all that is within their executive/legislative power to see to it that newly-appointed members of the Supreme Court, and federal judgeships, faithfully adhere to their Constitutional job description.

There is nothing in the Constitution that requires that the chair of the senate Judiciary Committee to be elected on a seniority basis. The senate may elect anyone from among its membership to chair that all-important committee. It is now time to discard dangerous and liberty-erosive tradition and political protocol and, instead, elect as chairman of the judiciary committee a Constitutional scholar who reveres the genuine Constitutional definition of the judicial branch of government.

Under such a common sense, preserve-America definition, Alren Specter does not qualify.

More than half a million Pennsylvanians foresaw the current major crisis that is facing us regarding the potential appointment of Arlen Specter as chair of the senate Judiciary Committee. That’s why, despite big money/strong-arm tactics/profligate lies/temporary democrat primary registration crossovers (all committed by the Specter forces alone), Pat Toomey, a virtual unknown, came within 1.5% of winning the Pennsylvania Republican senate nomination in April. The four-term incumbent Specter won by a mere 16,000 votes, with more than one million votes cast. And Toomey would have won by a comfortable margin, had the President and our junior senator placed principle before political protocol and endorsed him rather than his unworthy opponent, who sports a long history of deceit and betrayal.

I am also certain that Toomey would have won the senate seat handily on Tuesday, and not only would we not be faced with the specter of a Specter chairmanship of Judiciary, but we would have a junior senator with major Reagan-esque leanings sitting in one of Pennsylvania’s senate seats. But, as they say, that’s water under the bridge. I simply hope that President Bush now has a new, and exquisitely personal, understanding of the phrase biting the hand that feeds you. Arlen Specter has one mean and powerful bite.

To those Pennsylvanians who have followed Specter’s infamous four-term career, it reads like an immutable script: (1) enter, stage right, having counted on moderates and conservatives to return you to the stage to begin with; (2) spend about five and a half years moving consistently stage left, while arrogantly defending yourself against those who, dutifully and sincerely, remind you that you are not playing the role you were cast to play; and then (3) half-heartedly meander back toward the right for the six months preceding your next re-election bid, hoping that the move right will eclipse the previous five and a half years of leftist role-playing. It always worked … until Pat Toomey shined a spotlight on the shenanigans. We’re wise to you now, Arlen. And it’s a good thing for you this is most likely your last term. Toomey would defeat you resoundingly in 2010.

Specter’s duplicity dates back to the mid-1960s, when he sat on the Warren Commission and formulated the ‘single-bullet theory’ to explain Oswald’s assassination of JFK. There are many right-minded people who believe he is responsible for a major cover-up of that crime, and its ramifications.

Around twenty years later, when Ronald Reagan nominated Jeff Sessions (who now providentially/coincidentally sits on the Judiciary Committee with Arlen) for a federal judgeship, Specter betrayed his constituents by voting with the democrats in killing the nomination. This betrayal marked the beginning of the now entirely too common act of killing the nominations of those with whom you don’t share a political ideology … and the Constitution be damned. Before Sessions’ defeat, a federal judicial nominee had only been turned down once in the four decades since the Roosevelt administration. So Arlen Specter effectively set the stage for politicized judicial confirmations – a mighty arrogant, and toxic, unconstitutional precedent that laid the groundwork for the awarding of judgeships based on leftist political ideology. And the liberty-eroding effect of this perversion of power on every aspect of American society has been monumental.

And Arlen continued wielding his leftist-agenda-driven power the following year, when Reagan nominated Robert Bork to sit on the Supreme Court. Bork had a sterling resume as a judge, and a Yale law professor (one needs only read his Slouching Towards Gomorrah to comprehend the sheer genius, judicial purity, and uncompromising allegiance to the Constitution that this giant of a man represents). Specter played a major role in Bork’s defeat, and I, for one, will never forgive him for his vicious character assassination of a man whose shoes he isn’t fit to shine.

Some believe that Specter regained his principles (although it’s difficult to regain that which one never possessed to begin with) when he defended Clarence Thomas against the left’s attacks in 1991. But one only needs to look at the timing of the Thomas hearings to understand Specter’s newfound fairness. The hearings occurred less than a year before Specter’s next re-election bid. Too little time to erase from the memory of conservative Pennsylvanians yet another betrayal. So he was forced to do what was right … simply because of the timing of the hearings.

Specter’s final betrayal occurred during the Clinton senate impeachment trial in 1998, during which he could have played a major role in ridding us of the most immoral, treasonous, criminal President we have ever known. Instead, he effectively ignored the US Constitution, and instead relied on (purported) ‘Scottish Law’ to allow the President to continue his reign of horror. He asserted that under the venerable ‘Scottish Law’ (which appears to trump the American Constitution), there are three possible verdicts in an impeachment trial: guilty, not guilty, and not proven. Voting ‘not proven’ (and enjoying the dubious distinction of being the only senator to do so) allowed him a cowardly retreat from alienating either his genuine leftist base, or the conservative/moderate supporters he needed to fool, yet again.

Chief Justice Rehnquist was so taken aback by the stupidity of Specter’s argument that he ordered Specter’s verdict to be recorded as ‘not guilty’.

And Arlen Specter’s probable lame duck status in this, his fifth term, means that, without concern for re-election for the first time in a quarter of a cerntury, he can move left over the next four years … and remain there.

Arlen Specter’s crimes against our republic have been many. But I believe the four above are the most grievous. He should not even be sitting in the US Senate, much less chairing the committee that will have enormous impact on the seating of federal judges, in an era in which activist judges have assumed the arrogant role of declaring the Constitution irrelevant when it comes to matters of leftist societal engineering.

There has never been a more opportune, or more urgent, time in our history for a President and congress to remain true to the conservative base that placed them in office. As regards (1) through (3) above, any compromises with leftist ideologues, and their barking cohorts in the media and academia, to which this administration and congress agree will amount to a betrayal of the populations of that overwhelming number of red states that sent a resounding message on Tuesday that they want American back on track.

The forty-third President, and members of the 109th congress, must govern like the conservative leaders they purport to be. The red states, and many inhabitants of the blue, believe it’s a matter of now or never.

Senate Majority Leader:

Bill Frist 202-224-3135

Republican Members of the Senate Judiciary Committee:

Orrin Hatch 202-224-5251
Charles Grassley 202-224-3744
John Kyl 202-224-4521
Jeff Sessions 202-224-4124
LindseyGraham 202-224-5972
John Cornyn 202-224-2934
Mike DeWine 202-224-2315
Larry Craig 202-224-2752
Saxby Chambliss 202-224-3521

~ joanie


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections; Your Opinion/Questions
KEYWORDS: bork; bush; frist; judiciarycommittee; justice; reagan; specter; supremecourt
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To: Cedar
I'm not entirely sure, but I don't believe the Majority Leader is generally elected on a seniority basis, while the committee chairmanships are usually chosen in that way. It seems to me that 'candidates' for Majority Leader effectively campaign (if you want to call it that) for the position, and seniority has very little to do with their selection.

It's an interesting question, and I'd like to do a little research on that myself. It may even prove helpful with the Specter situation.

21 posted on 11/07/2004 4:20:34 PM PST by joanie-f (I've been called a princess, right down to my glass sneakers and enchanted sweatpants.)
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To: joanie-f

I agree with your 3 crusades, If you include the democrat party and the MSM into number one.. because literally not figureably they are in league with the enemy(s) of this country.. How to do that?.. make them(MSM) persona non grata at press conferences generally.. at least seated in another room watching on a monitor.. bring Ari Fleicher back..


22 posted on 11/07/2004 4:24:53 PM PST by hosepipe (This propaganda has been edited to included some fully orbed hyperbole....)
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To: joanie-f

Head Pooper Scooper for Barney and Miss Beazley.


23 posted on 11/07/2004 4:25:30 PM PST by elizabetty
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To: joanie-f

This is something that should be printed on the editorial page of every newspaper in the country.

I am going to send it to my local newspapers, with your permission, of course?


24 posted on 11/07/2004 4:26:06 PM PST by downwithsocialism
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To: hosepipe
make them(MSM) persona non grata at press conferences generally.. at least seated in another room watching on a monitor.. bring Ari Fleicher back.

A rather 'radical' solution, if you ask me. And one with which I wholeheartedly agree. :)

25 posted on 11/07/2004 4:29:00 PM PST by joanie-f (I've been called a princess, right down to my glass sneakers and enchanted sweatpants.)
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To: downwithsocialism

Feel free to use it in whatever way you like. But calling Senator Frist, the Republican members of the Judiciary Committee, and your own senators, will have a much more immediate and powerful effect. Please do that first. (Thanks for the kind words. :)


26 posted on 11/07/2004 4:30:51 PM PST by joanie-f (I've been called a princess, right down to my glass sneakers and enchanted sweatpants.)
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To: joanie-f

Specter has SO many job opportunities just waiting for him! (Jelly donut filler, pizza delivery boy, restroom toilet paper refiller, or maybe golf course golf ball retreiver) The Senate Judiciary Chair, however, is not one of them.

I hear there are plenty of positions available at local D.C. used auto lots.


27 posted on 11/07/2004 4:32:54 PM PST by pkp1184
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To: joanie-f

Well, I've emailed and *written* Frist. Living in MA, that is about all I can do really.

Overall though, I voted, and worked, for the Republicans to continue the WoT and to get strict constructionist judges appointed.

Any other issue is secondary, but the Reps had better not compromise on these two. They have political capital, and they better spend it on these issues.

It looks like Bush is already starting in on the terrorists in Fallujah, and the Reps better be prepared to follow through on judges. I don't see how Specter on the SJC helps the latter at all...


28 posted on 11/07/2004 4:36:12 PM PST by swilhelm73 (I voted for Bush. You're welcome.)
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To: Tulsa Brian

No, no, no Brian..........keeper of the key to the men's executive washroom! *~*


29 posted on 11/07/2004 4:39:39 PM PST by Dawgreg (Happiness is not having what you want, but wanting what you have.)
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To: joanie-f

Another Freeper suggested the Specter be named Chairman of the Senate Dessert Selection Committee.


30 posted on 11/07/2004 4:41:31 PM PST by cyclotic (Cub Scouts-Teach 'em young to be men, and politically incorrect in the process)
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To: joanie-f

joanie-f, very good post. Alot of common sense there. I applaud you.


31 posted on 11/07/2004 4:42:21 PM PST by Dawgreg (Happiness is not having what you want, but wanting what you have.)
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To: joanie-f

Thanks for the reply on my question. It would be an interesting possible point to make.

I've already sent emails and will be calling Frist and others tomorrow.

BTW, people seem to think Frist has aspirations of running for President in 2008. If he wants any kind of support from pro-lifers, he better respond to this today and not let Specter have the chairmanship.


32 posted on 11/07/2004 4:42:36 PM PST by Cedar
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To: Dawgreg

Thanks for the kind words. :)


33 posted on 11/07/2004 4:45:34 PM PST by joanie-f (I've been called a princess, right down to my glass sneakers and enchanted sweatpants.)
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To: joanie-f

WOW! GWB's plate is full.


34 posted on 11/07/2004 4:46:19 PM PST by skinkinthegrass (Just because you're paranoid, doesn't mean they aren't out to get you :)
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To: Tulsa Brian

Ambassador to France.


35 posted on 11/07/2004 4:48:02 PM PST by eno_ (Freedom Lite, it's almost worth defending.)
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To: Cedar
If he wants any kind of support from pro-lifers, he better respond to this today and not let Specter have the chairmanship.

I agree. And genuine pro-lifers have to make sure that their memories, four years from now, retain what he does over the next few months. We sometimes tend to be too forgiving in that respect.

36 posted on 11/07/2004 4:48:11 PM PST by joanie-f (I've been called a princess, right down to my glass sneakers and enchanted sweatpants.)
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To: joanie-f

Also, have you seen this thread on Specter dealing with a campaign letter he sent back in '95?

If this letter is verified as true, this should be reason enough for him not to get the chair. This is unbelievable!

Link: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1272203/posts


37 posted on 11/07/2004 4:48:59 PM PST by Cedar
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To: joanie-f

RINO pooper-scooper (both his and all the other Congressional RINOs)!


38 posted on 11/07/2004 4:50:28 PM PST by Lurking2Long
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To: joanie-f; 2nd amendment mama; A2J; Agitate; Alouette; Annie03; aposiopetic; Askel5; attagirl; ...

ProLife Ping!

If anyone wants on or off my ProLife Ping List, please notify me here or by freepmail.

39 posted on 11/07/2004 4:55:02 PM PST by Mr. Silverback (President Bush got 51 percent of the vote, a figure higher than that of any Democrat in 40 years.)
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To: Cedar
I had not seen the letter (or known of its existence). Thanks for the steer. I will add it to my ever-growing file of Specter evidence of incompetence/leftist ideology.

The only reason Arlen is a Republican at all is that, when he originally ran for political office (District Attorney in Philadelphia, back in the 60s), he couldn't get the democrat nomination, so switched his registration and ran as a Republican. He never bothered to switch back.

40 posted on 11/07/2004 4:56:32 PM PST by joanie-f (I've been called a princess, right down to my glass sneakers and enchanted sweatpants.)
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