Posted on 10/07/2005 1:34:08 PM PDT by hinterlander
WASHINGTON - An anguished James Dobson prayed Wednesday for a sign from God, telling his Christian radio listeners he was questioning his early endorsement of Supreme Court nominee Harriet Miers.
Dobson, founder of Colorado Springs-based Focus on the Family, is one of the most prominent religious conservatives to back Miers, citing his trust in President Bush and a confidential briefing he received about her from the White House.
But in his regular radio broadcast Wednesday, Dobson prayed he was not making a mistake.
"Lord, you know I don't have the wisdom to make this decision," Dobson said. "You know that what I feel now and what I think is right may be dead wrong."
He added that he worried that his position "could do something to hurt the cause of Christ, and I'd rather sacrifice my life than do that."
Dobson's "agonized heart," as he called it, is a sign of continuing turmoil in the religious conservative movement over the selection of Miers, a longtime confidante of Bush who has never been a judge and therefore has no paper trail detailing her views.
Many evangelicals, including Dobson, see the pick to replace retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor as critical because O'Connor was viewed as a swing vote on contentious issues like abortion.
For more than 30 years, Dobson has waged a crusade to overturn the landmark 1973 Roe vs. Wade decision that legalized abortion. He said he believes Miers is against abortion, based on talks with her longtime friends and other information.
He also confirmed reports that he received a special briefing from Bush's political adviser, Karl Rove, but still will not discuss the talks in detail.
"When you know some of the things I know - that I probably shouldn't know - that take me in this direction, you'll know why I've said with fear and trepidation (that) I believe Harriet Miers will be a good justice," Dobson said in a broadcast with co-host John Fuller.
"And John, if I have made a mistake here, I will never forget it. The blood of those babies who will die will be on my hands to a degree. Lord, if I am right, confirm it, and if I am wrong, chastise me and I will repent of it and come before these microphones."
In a press conference Tuesday, Sen. Ken Salazar, D-Denver, demanded that the White House give senators whatever information it gave Dobson.
He's not the only one who wants to know the secret.
Dobson said his phone has been ringing off the hook from congressional allies and fellow conservatives seeking reassurance heading into Miers' upcoming confirmation hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Some are wary because Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, a Nevada Democrat, suggested her name to the president, and because of other hints that have emerged from her record.
Although she contributed funds to President Bush's election, she also has given to Democrats, including Al Gore in 1988.
When she ran for Dallas City Council in 1989, she signed a questionnaire for a gay rights group saying she supported equal civil rights for lesbians and gays. But she also said she was not seeking the group's endorsement and that she opposed a repeal of a law banning sodomy.
On Wednesday, conservative columnist George Will said if 100 capable legal analysts each listed 100 people worthy of being nominated, "Miers' name probably would not have appeared in any of the 10,000 places on those lists."
And the Web site of the Dobson- founded Family Research Council showed a question mark alongside Miers' picture.
Meanwhile, some Republican lawmakers were taking a wait-and-see approach to Miers.
"I just don't know her," Sen. Trent Lott, R-Miss., said Wednesday. "I'm not going to jump out there and say this is a wonderful choice."
Dobson, who heads one of the largest Christian media empires, said he doesn't want to overestimate his own influence, although countless national media outlets already have quoted him as being in Miers' corner.
I can understand Hank if you do not share the Christian faith. But don't mock those of us who do. It isn't needed here.
What relevance? Because our God tells us to pray, and that God the Father listens.
"Be careful for nothing; but in every thing by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known unto God."
Phil 4:6
"Pray without ceasing."
Phil 4:6
This one is especially powerful:
"Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened. "Which of you, if his son asks for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a snake? If you, then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him."
Matthew 7: 7-11
So you see Hank, there is power in individual prayer. He is quite a God to give us this privilege.
Also, I am strongly opposed to this nomination of Miers.
1Thes 5:17
I have no desire to vote for a Democrat.
I just want our current President to make smarter more logical picks for the highest court in the land.
Don't worry Hank - the apologists are already telling me he'll nominate a JRB type for the next opening. Just keep those donations flowing - it's all strategery! He plays chess, not checkers! All hail our fearless leader!
Be serious. If we had 66 GOP senators, we'd still be hearing that the 7 RINO Senators can't assure us of a filibuster-proof majority, and thus only moderate-to-liberal policy will do. The Bush apologists on this site will never admit that Bush actually made an error, and will continue to move the goalposts to make excuses for these awful decisions.
I second that. There were only 43 Republicans in the Senate when Thomas was confirmed, and he had to overcome all that Anita Hill b.s. The American people are not happy with activist judges or the Democrats judicial obstructionism (ask Tom Daschle).
There's NO way to know what the 2006 election is going to leave us with. I've always believed in striking while the iron is hot... and this goes completely against my better instincts.
What do you mean by that?
And was right in doing so.
The lousy Republican picks on SCOTUS all came about by appointing (a) judges with a conservative track-record (Kennedy for example) or (b) judges recommended by a "vetting process" (Souter and O'Connor, for example). And let's not forget that it was the (on the whole, rightly) sainted Ronald Reagan who appointed a woman he didn't know very well to the Court so that he could say that he appointed the first woman.
What Bush has concluded from this is obvious. He believes that the most important qualification of a justice is not intellectual accomplishments or a long track-record: it's character. So he has appointed someone whose character he knows very well, through years of working together, and in whom he has confidence. The claim that we don't know that she is a strict constructionist is just wrong: her best friend is the most conservative justice on the Texas State Supreme Court, the Lone Star Scalia, and he has said flatly that she believes in reading the Constitution the way evangelicals read the Bible: straight and literally.
So we have a smart woman, a very talented lawyer, of strong character, who comes to the court with originalist beliefs, and one whom the President knows extremely well. It's surely a better recipe for a conservative justice than listening to Warren Rudman; it may be a better recipe than listening to Ann Coulter or Bill Kristol.
I agree with you that constitutional law is not nuclear physics and isn't meant to be. Unless you're a liberal, the principles of interpretation are essentially straightforward. The only thing she lacks is familiarity with the detailed history of constitutional jurisprudence, but you know what? A Supreme Court Justice hasn't got much else to do besides study that history, and she will have four smart clerks to help her do it. I can't see any reason why she wouldn't be writing exemplary and memorable opinions very soon.
She will be confirmed unless conservative Republican Senators and pundits decide that this is the time to destroy a Republican president just for the hell of it.
I think that part of the problem is that we have a generation of younger conservative pundits who are children of the Clinton era. They were formed in the Maureen Dowd school of political journalism and still tend to think that the point of politics is to score clever points on the other side. They've all been saying for five years that it's a matter of constitutional principle that the President should get the benefit of the doubt when he appoints judges. If they refuse to give Bush the benefit of the doubt here, then they are a crowd of grandstanding hypocrites. To play these games in wartime is inexcusable.
It's NOT "obvious" -- therein lies the problem.
If "character" is so important, then Dubya wouldn't have had the disgraced Bubba Clinton and GHB parading around on their Magic Mystical Mystery Tour;
CFR would have been vetoed;
The Border would have been sealed and enforced after 9/11;
He would not have embarrassed American patriots (the Minutemen) by referring to them as "vigilantes.";
Teddy Kennedy's Education Bill would have been vetoed...
Dubya has NOT demonstrated the conviction to fight unequivocally for something other than the nebulous "International War on Terror." Something more important -- SC justices.
Just trust George W. Bush, eh?
Sorry, the resume doesn't warrant it.
Thanks for the response. Yes, it is true that some Palestinians and some Arabs are terrorists. I am not of the opinion that all Palestinians and Arabs are terrorists as you suggest. Perhaps you have a dog in that fight and I don't.
Naturally, if you are Jewish, you see all Arabs as mortal enemies and terrorists. Understandable. They want to kill you. The US or Bush isn't going to change that, no matter what.
If you think US policy or Bush is supporting terrorism against Israel, then perhaps you think it best we withdraw our support financially and militarily from israel and do nothing?
Again, I believe Bush has done more to resolve the Palestinian/Israeli conflict than any other President. . But our first and only mission is to protect the US, not Israel.
I am really waffling on this. Part of me really wanted to see a fight, EVEN THOUGH it would have probably ended with John McCain and company coming in with his band of 8, 10 or 14 to undermine the process again. Maybe looking at everything, Pres. Bush figured, I'll take the heat and appoint someone who has been white house council for 5 years equating that with the same pre-SC accomplishments of someone like, say, William Renquist.
We have 7-8 Rinos in the Senate. Exactly, how is President Bush going to get a 'real conservative ' confirmed. I believe this woman is conservative, and she has no paper trail. Therefore, she can be confirmed. The GOP wants a fight I guess, but they have no Senate Army to lead.
If we had 66 Repubs and 8 are Rinos...if they voted against a judge and allowed a filibuster then the GOP would lose...58 votes are not enought to stop a filibuster. This is political reality. The GOP does not have a super majority as the Dems did during most of the last 40 years.
Well, I hope down the road because of total misery you don't consider that maybe a McCain or Frist presidency would have been preferable to a Clinton presidency.
As I've said before, I will never vote for McCain or Frist. I doubt I will be faced with that choice in the election itself.
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