Posted on 10/03/2005 7:10:27 AM PDT by NormsRevenge
WASHINGTON - President Bush on Monday nominated White House counsel Harriet Miers to replace retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor on the Supreme Court, reaching into his loyal inner circle for another pick that could reshape the nation's judiciary for years to come.
"She has devoted her life to the rule of law and the cause of justice," Bush said as his first Supreme Court pick, Chief Justice John Roberts, took the bench for the first time just a few blocks from the White House. "She will be an outstanding addition to the Supreme Court of the United States."
If confirmed by the Republican-controlled Senate, Miers, 60, would join Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg as the second woman on the nation's highest court and the third to serve there. Miers, who has never been a judge, was the first woman to serve as president of the Texas State Bar and the Dallas Bar Association.
Miers, whom Bush called a trailblazer for women in the legal profession, said she was humbled by the nod.
"If confirmed, I recognize I will have a tremendous responsibility to keep our judicial system strong and to help insure the court meets their obligations to strictly apply the laws and Constitution," she said.
Democratic and Republican special interests groups had been braced for a political brawl over the pick, but they may not get it. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., had urged the president to consider Miers, according to several officials familiar with Bush's consultations with Congress.
Miers has no judicial record, which may complicate any Democratic attempts to block her nomination. It is impossible to predict whether Miers and Roberts will shift the court to the right. She would replace O'Connor, a critical swing vote on the court who helped uphold the right to abortion and affirmative action. Rehnquist, the late chief justice being replaced by Roberts, was a consistent conservative vote.
"We know even less about Harriet Miers than we did about John Roberts and because this is the critical swing seat on the court, Americans will need to know a lot more about Mier's judicial philosophy and legal background before any vote for confirmation," said Sen. Charles Schumer (news, bio, voting record), D-N.Y., a member of the Judiciary Committee.
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., said: "With this selection, the president has chosen another outstanding nominee to sit on our nations highest court. Ms. Miers is honest and hard working and understands the importance of judicial restraint and the limited role of a judge to interpret the law and not legislate from the bench."
Bush, his approval rating falling in recent months, had been under intense pressure to nominate a woman or a minority.
Miers had helped push Roberts' nomination through the Senate, and Bush said that "she will strictly interpret our Constitution and laws. She will not legislate from the bench." Conservatives apparently agreed.
Initial reaction from conservatives was positive.
"She has been a forceful advocate of conservative legal principles and judicial restraint throughout her career," said Leonard Leo, executive vice president of the Federalist Society.
"Harriet Miers is a top-notch lawyer who understands the limited role that judges play in our society," said Noel Francisco, former assistant White House counsel and deputy assistant attorney general during the Bush administration.
The president offered the job to Miers Sunday night over dinner in the residence. He met with Miers on four occasions during the past couple weeks, officials said.
Rehnquist, whose death paved way for Roberts' nomination, had not served as a judge before President Nixon put him on the Supreme Court. Nineteen other justices previously had never served as judges before getting on the high court.
According to the White House, 10 of the 34 Justices appointed since 1933, including Rehnquist and the late Justice Byron White, were appointed from positions within the president's administration.
"Having never served as a judge, Ms. Miers has no `paper trail' of judicial opinions, and prospective opponents thus will have a hard time identifying positions to protest or complain about," said Supreme Court historian David Garrow. "What's more, Ms. Miers' professional record as an attorney in Texas is undeniably one of significant achievement and accomplishment, and her proponents will be able to present her as a female trail blazer whose life-record is at least arguably comparable to that of Justice O'Connor."
Known for thoroughness and her low-profile, Miers is one of the first staff members to arrive at the White House in the morning and among the last to leave.
When Bush named her White House counsel in November 2004, the president described Miers as a lawyer with keen judgment and discerning intellect "a trusted adviser on whom I have long relied for straightforward advice."
He also joked of Miers, "When it comes to a cross-examination, she can fillet better than Mrs. Paul."
With no record, liberals say the White House should be prepared for Miers to be peppered with questions during her Senate confirmation.
"Choosing somebody who is not a judge would put that much more of a premium on straight answers to questions because there would be that much less for senators and the public to go on when looking at such a nominee's judicial philosophy," says Elliot Mincberg, counsel with the liberal People for the American Way.
Formerly Bush's personal lawyer in Texas, Miers came with the president to the White House as his staff secretary, the person in charge of all the paperwork that crosses the Oval Office desk. Miers was promoted to deputy chief of staff in June 2003.
As an attorney in Dallas, Miers became president in 1996 of Locke Purnell, Rain & Harrell a firm with more than 200 lawyers where she worked starting in 1972. After it merged a few years later, she became co-manager of Locke Liddell & Sapp.
When Bush was governor of Texas, she represented him in a case involving a fishing house. In 1995, he appointed her to a six-year term on the Texas Lottery Commission. She also served as a member-at-large on the Dallas City Council and in 1992 became the first woman president of the Texas State Bar.
Bar Associations of most states usually represent the "mainstream" of lawyers, which is usually a very liberal segment of society. That gives me some concern. Then again, Texas being unique, it might be that its lawyer culture is more conservative than most of the country, so she might not be so bad.
What is "sleath" to YOU is not so for the President.
That's a PLUS, there is no such requirement.
In other words, it's his style to give them as much of what they demand as he can while vaguely pretending to be conservative.
It's really odd how conservatives' fear of the Left can lead them to cling ever more tightly to someone who sells them out to the Left time and again.
1987? Any word on who she's financially supported in more recent times? I remember that a lot of people were unhappy with Papa Bush "way back when," perhaps enough to write a check for some of those hacks. I think the Clinton years "re-educated" them. I'd like a more substantial reason than that one to join the anti's. So far, everything I'm reading about her (not counting the "she looks ugly" comments) looks pretty positive, but I'm still reading.
So what? Are we supposed to take it on faith that she has become a true believer? I am more than willing to give her the benefit of the doubt if there is reasonable evidence available to do so. Nothing more than her status as a long-time Bush crony doesn't constitute that evidence.
Take your own advice before you quote things as fact.
I always do. Refute away.
No argument there!
I'm waiting for the dust to settle and the confirmation hearings.
Thanks, I'll keep an eye out for it.
I think most of the anxiety here is generated from the selection of David Souter. Supreme Court picks are too rare and too important to take a chance on. It takes decades to overcome one bad move.
I heard she switched parties. So what.
There's a whole lot of pre-judging the judge around here this morning.
RE: the WH Kool-aid comment, these picks are more important to GWB than you or me.
Souter is his father's worst mistake(he says so).
I for one do NOT think GWB is willing to make that kind of mistake.
How about a little faith?
So in other words, she was supporting the Democrats during the height of Reagan's popularity? Has she ever denounced having done so as being a mistake on her part?
You must be under the false impression that the President should take a poll to decide who to nominate. Maybe you should review Article II, Section 2 paragraph 2 of the US Constitution.
Hate to be petty, but what's with the eye-liner?
No, Steve, you're not suppose to support anybody you don't personally know.
She's been with Bush since 1988; do you think she did that while believing in the liberal causes?
Quite a mature way to start your reply. It is indicative of the fact that you have nothing in the way of substance to say and are attempting to artificially prop up your response, and that is indeed what we find in the rest of your response:
A member of the Federalist Society made a comment.
What a ridiculous thing to say. Leonard Leo is not some obscure member from the local law school, he's the executive vice president of the organization.
By your logic, you are an official White House spokesman and everything you say should be taken as the official position of the White House. Right. Sure. Whatever.
No, my logic is that the Executive Vice President does speak for the organization. And as you could have seen, I want to know more about what he bases his statement on, I didn't just declare it to be the end of the discussion. I see that basic common sense and reading comprehension is lost on you - or perhaps you are just lying. In either case, you have no credibility.
I'm glad Tammy is on our side. I would rather he had nominated HER. Has he done ANYTHING to thank us for reelecting him?
Huh? We're not going to have to live with the consequences of these picks? He'll just go off into retirement.
I for one do NOT think GWB is willing to make that kind of mistake.
Based on what? His vague promises?
All Bush and GOP; even the Recount.
Who on earth said she looks ugly? Was it faithincowboys? She's trying to start a rumor that she's a lesbian, did you hear?
Picking through the background of newly minted Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers, there's some political activities that may irritate the president's conservative base -- she donated campaign cash to a handful of Democrats, including Al Gore.
In her defense, the donations date back to the 1980s. For example,Miers gave $1,000 to Gore, then a senator from Tennessee, during his 1988 bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, according to Political Moneyline -- the best site on the Web to track money and politics.
During that same cycle, Miers also donated $1,000 each to Democratic Texas Sen. Lloyd Bentsen and the Democratic National Committee. Miers's more recent donations less surprising. She gave $2,000 to President Bush's 2004 re-election effort and $5,000 to Bush's recount fund in the aftermath of the 2000 election....
http://blogs.washingtonpost.com/thefix/
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