Posted on 09/15/2005 6:20:03 AM PDT by wcdukenfield
Conservative strategists are drafting a letter to Democratic members of the Senate Judiciary Committee demanding the release of hundreds of internal memos detailing contacts between the lawmakers and liberal interest groups opposing John Roberts nomination to the Supreme Court.
By planning to press Democrats on the sensitive subject, conservatives seem to be pulling a page from the Democrats own political playbook. In the weeks leading up to the confirmation hearings, Senate Democrats have repeatedly called on the White House to give them memos Roberts penned while he was deputy solicitor general in President George H.W. Bushs administration.
Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), the ranking member on the Judiciary Committee, raised the issue again yesterday by releasing a letter dated Sept. 9 from William Moschella, the assistant attorney general. In the letter, Moschella declined to disclose legal memos from Roberts tenure in the Office of the Solicitor General.
It is regrettable that the Bush administration persists in keeping this information from the Senate, Leahy said. These documents, from the period of Judge Roberts most substantive work experience in the executive branch, would help illuminate his views and earlier decisions on a wide range of key issues that are of vital importance to the American people and to the Senate.
In their letter, conservatives quote Leahys argument that the Senate should have access to the withheld documents. In the letter, they assert that the public is equally entitled to know what is motivating and directing Senate Democratic scrutiny of Roberts, according to a verbal summary given to The Hill.
Given your demand that the Justice Department hand over John Roberts work documents during his time as deputy solicitor general, you should have no reservations about approving the release of the full complement of documents that make up all of the Memogate papers, conservatives wrote in a draft of the letter, which will be circulated for signatures starting today. About 30 conservative leaders or more are expected to sign it.
A spokeswoman for the Democrats on the Senate Judiciary Committee declined to comment without first seeing a copy of the letter.
Specifically, conservatives want access to what they estimate may be as many as 4,000 Democratic memos that are in Senate Sergeant at Arms William Pickles possession. Last year, Pickle seized Senate Judiciary Committee computers during an investigation. Democrats on the committee called for the probe after internal memos written by aides to Sens. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) were made available to the press without Kennedys or Durbins consent.
The publicized memos detailed contacts between leading liberal members on the committee and groups that lobbied them on President Bushs judicial nominees.
In their letter to Democrats, conservatives plan to argue that the memos are not protected by attorney-client privilege, giving them a stronger claim to the documents, they assert, than the Democrats have to the solicitor generals documents. Roberts defenders have argued that a solicitor generals relationship to a president is akin to an attorney-client relationship and deserves special privilege.
Mark Levin, president of the Landmark Legal Foundation, a conservative public-interest-litigation firm, said that he was familiar with the letter and plans to circulate it.
I fully support it, he said. Ive always thought that the Congress and the Senate Judiciary Committee in particular gets away with a hypocritical standard. They demand that the executive branch produce everything, and yet on the other hand they refuse to make anything public.
Kay Daly, president of Coalition for a Fair Judiciary, a conservative group defending Roberts, said she was aware of the letter.
There are some 4,000 memos locked away in the sergeant at arms office that the public has a right to know about, she said.
Daly said that the since the taxpayers fund the salaries of lawmakers and their aides they have a right to know about their work.
Conservatives said their case is bolstered by a memo sent by the Senate archivist to all Judiciary Committee staff members instructing them to preserve all documents and e-mails related to Roberts confirmation proceedings, including correspondence with outside groups. Conservatives cite the archivists message to support their claim that the internal memos held by the sergeant at arms should be made part of the public domain.
Jeff Lord, who served as associate political director in the Reagan administration from 1985 to 1988 and is working with Progress for America, a pro-Roberts advocacy group, has called for the Democratic memos to be made public during recent trips to Washington state and North Dakota. He traveled to those states to promote a new book he has written about the contentious 2002 Senate confirmation battle over Judge Brooks Smithss appointment to the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Lord called the memos some of the most revealing things Ive ever seen while in government, adding that the evidence of coordination between Democratic senators and third-party groups in the memos made public was eye-opening.
One of the publicized memos, by a former aide to Kennedy and dated April 2002, reported that Elaine Jones of the NAACP Legal Defense Fund had asked Democrats to postpone the nomination of Judge Julia Gibbons to the 6th Circuit court until a key case on affirmative action had been decided. Conservatives consider it one of the most damning of the publicized batch.
The memo was downloaded from the Judiciary Committee server and made public in 2003.
If Mark Levin is in on it, you can bet it has legs and is not just some partisan attempt at payback.
They're just setting the stage for the next nominee. Hard to argue "extreme circumstances" when you've been working back door deals with NARAL and the Sierra Club.
It's about effing time.
I don't think it has to be Estrada. There are a number of good conservatives on his short list that could be heart-unhealthy for dems.
Spread across America. Oh the HUMANITY! That would be awesome. Let the mainstream Americans see how corrupt the Dims truly are and that will be that (hopefully).
This is true. However, the memos that were circulated by the Dems to their special interests particularly named Estrada, because like Roberts, he has no paper trail.
I find it interesting for a different reason. Maybe they realize or think Roberts isn't quite as conservative as everyone would like you to believe. Why conservatives have to nominate "conservatives in disguise" is beyond me.
Could there be souter in the soup?
Not likely
Agreed. It should be a day-to-day principle -- forget timing -- that 'Rats are made to pay the price for their over-the-top tactics. If they're going to demand documents they know damn well they have no right to, and which wouldn't be released by any 'Rat executive either, then demand their documents and expose their hypocrisy.
The decision of Pubbies on the Judiciary to forgo further questioning of Roberts is part of the same strategy: If 'Rats are going to pile on Roberts, and attempt to force him to answer political questions, then stand back and give the public an unobstructed view of their behavior.
Kindly speak for yourself Grandma. I, personally, tend to let my mouth run off at full speed when I am around these liberal socialist democrats. I stay on the edge of the line between getting fired and telling them they can kiss mine here at this liberal law office where I work. They spout their anti-American, anti-conservative, anti-republican, pro-abortion, pro-homosexual crap all day long. When I speak up, you can hear the pins drop. They cannot believe I have the audacity to speak against their liberal views. It just burns their @$$e$ up. Makes my day. Basically, I don't care. If they fire me for my views, after they spout their crap, I will simply sue them for a hostile work environment. I have threatened it before when I had to put up with their crap back during the elections. They know that, so they cannot fire me for my views.
Wrong. Guess you missed hearing Lindsay Graham a short 10 minutes ago?
Well well well!
read later bump
That's about the only time our side has played hardball. It was very surprising.
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