Posted on 10/06/2005 5:17:35 PM PDT by freedomdefender
Harriet Miers is unfazed by the criticism and questioning of her qualifications as she seeks to become the next Supreme Court justice, a longtime friend said Thursday.
"She's excited. She's working hard at it. The criticism, I think, is rolling off her back as it usually does," said Justice Nathan Hecht of the Texas Supreme Court.
Hecht, who has known Miers for 30 years, said he has visited her several times since she was nominated by President Bush on Monday.
A new poll indicates people are uncertain about Miers. In an AP-Ipsos poll taken this week, two thirds of those surveyed didn't know enough about Miers to have an opinion of her. Just 41 percent said the Senate should confirm her, lower than similar ratings for Roberts after his nomination; 27 percent said she should not be confirmed and 32 percent weren't sure.
The White House said that former Indiana Republican Sen. Dan Coats, who has most recently served as ambassador to Germany, will serve as Miers' escort through the confirmation process, much as former Sen. Fred Thompson did for Chief Justice John Roberts.
"Senator Coats will be working closely with the nominee and serving as a public advocate for her," White House press secretary Scott McClellan said. "He will help advise her throughout the process. Senator Coats' role will be to attend meetings with senators on Harriet's courtesy visits."
The choice of Miers, a veteran lawyer and White House aide who has never been a judge _ and therefore has no record of judicial decisions _ has worried some Republican senators, anti-abortion activists and others who question the depth of her conservative views. Democrats, meanwhile, worry that she will prove too conservative.
"I don't have any doubt that she'll be conservative," Hecht said in an interview on NBC"s "Today" show. "Whether she'll move the court to the right I don't know."
Hecht said he was confident that Miers is "pro-life" but can't predict whether she would vote to overturn the Roe v. Wade decision that legalized abortion.
Miers' commitment to her evangelical church in Dallas "shapes the kind of person that she is," Hecht said. "It doesn't shape her view on cases. In fact, almost the opposite."
"Someone who is very committed to their faith is also going to be committed to the oath that they take as a judge, and is going to judge cases fairly and is not going to let personal or religious views or any other kind of views influence the decisions in actual cases," he told CBS' "The Early Show."
You have travelled to the future and seen her judgments??
"hiding behind the cross"? Is that the new description of being a professing Christian?
"You have travelled to the future and seen her judgments??"
I guess that means you have. Whys doesn't Space Cadet Protest1 tell us how she rules in the future. Oh wait, she has no paper trail, so the time machine can only babble for you.
It's open season on Christians. That is the number one reason so many people hate George W. Bush and his cronies.
If they are not Jews, they are Christians ...
Either way they are the objects of hatred and scorn.
They started with Roberts but pulled back because he was brilliant, and also a Catholic.
They see her as one of Bush's Christian cronies and thus they despise her. I suppose it's the equivalent of a NeoCon in terms of the violation ...
Oh boy.... That is NOT encouraging.
By the way, what does being "pro life" or "pro choice" have to do with whether or not Roe v. Wade was a proper Constitutional ruling?
Does anyone else think Harriet Miers looks like Rachel Dratch?
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