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IF I WERE HARRIET MIERS
National Review Online ^ | 10/14/2005 | David Frum

Posted on 10/14/2005 11:47:23 AM PDT by Maynerd

OCT. 14, 2005: IF I WERE HARRIET MIERS ...

I really would ask my friends to keep their mouths closed. Every time they speak up, they only remind the country of what is wrong with this unwise nomination. My friend Matthew Scully's oped in the New York Times today perfectly exemplifies the problem.

Throughout this debate, critics of the nomination have raised important and valid points about the record of this nominee, her qualifications, and the political dangers post-Katrina of offering up high-profile nominees to important jobs solely on the basis of their personal closeness to the president.

Defenders by contrast have offered ... nothing much. They urge us to trust the president rather than the evidence. And when we hesitate, they produce not arguments but insults. I fear that not even gentle, decent Matt Scully has proven immune to this last.

"Her qualities are disappointing only in comparison, of course, to all those perfectly credentialed lions of the law we keep hearing about. Her critics couldn't run to the TV studio and expertly discourse about her. Therefore, she must be a nobody.

"My friend David Frum expresses the general complaint when he asks, in his blog, when did Harriet Miers 'ever take a risk on behalf of conservative principle? Can you see any indication of intellectual excellence? Did she ever do anything brave, anything that took backbone?' To translate: When all the big-thinkers were persevering year after year at policy institutes and conferences at the Mayflower Hotel, or risking all for principle in stirring op-ed essays and $20,000 lectures, where was Little Miss Southern Methodist University?

"If four years observing the woman is any guide, the answer is she was probably doing something useful. But whatever she was up to, it's not good enough."

If you pierce the (uncharacteristic) sarcasm, you will notice I think that Scully has just confirmed everything that the critics of Miers have said.

He concedes that she never has taken those risks I spoke of, never demonstrated that backbone and courage.

He concedes that she was never much of an intellectual force, and that the case for her rests entirely on her pleasantness of manner.

More than that, he confirms - and more than confirms - that something has gone very seriously wrong inside the Bush White House.

1) Notice first that the loyalties of people inside the Bush White House are felt primarily toward each other.

"When it was Mr. Kristol's charming friend John Bolton whose fate was in question, that was family business, and for the president no price was too high for loyalty. But Harriet Miers, who is only the president's friend, is now to be led away like Carlo in 'The Godfather' with his 'ticket to Vegas.'"

But we who supported John Bolton did not support him because he was our friend. I think I've met him maybe twice in my life. We who supported Bolton supported him not because he was "charming," but because we shared his principles and believed they were in the American interest.

As Scully's oped makes clear, the Bush White House has ceased to think in such terms, if indeed it ever did.

2) Notice next the antipathy to ideas, the little curl of the lip about those opeds and policy conferences. Notice the refusal even to acknowledge let alone rebut the concern that Miers has shunned ideas her whole career. It is no reply to say that Harriet Miers is a very nice person. Nobody ever denied that Harriet Miers was a very nice woman, capable of generous acts. We all know about her work for Meals on Wheels. It's just that niceness alone is enough to qualify one for the Supreme Court. There are a lot of nice people in America. There are a lot of nice people at Valley View Christian Church. They cannot all be appointed to the Supreme Court.

The first and most famous slogan of the American conservative movement was: "Ideas have consequences." But if Matt fairly represents the state of mind inside the Bush White House, and on this I fear he does, then the main consequence of ideas seems to be ineligibility for service on the nation's highest court.

3) Note next the implied hostility to the larger American conservative movement. The ideas that are disparaged in this oped are not any old ideas. They are the ideas that moved millions of people to sacrifice time and money to build the movement championed by for example this magazine - and the ideas that (at least theoretically) led American conservatives to overcome their reservations about the son of George HW Bush and support the candidacy of Governor George W. Bush. The promise to appoint judges in the mold of Scalia and Thomas was the "Read my lips, no new taxes" pledge of the younger Bush's candidacy. But even Miers' strongest senatorial supporter, John Cornyn, admits that Miers is no Scalia and no Thomas. The inability to read the conservative reaction to this betrayal as anything more than personal pique on the part of American conservatives bespeaks a very serious clouding of the vision at the Bush White House.

4) And speaking of the clouding of vision, there is a real problem here of the inability to see ourselves as others see us. That line about the critics of the Miers nomination and their $20,000 speaking fees - is that really, um, well-considered? Does Matt expect anyone to take seriously the claim that those of us who oppose Miers are self-serving cynics, while those who silence their doubts and say "yes sir" to an erring president are self-sacrificing idealists? We're supposed to believe that Robert Bork is in it for the cash, while Ed Gillespie fights for the principle of the thing?

Matt himself would never engage in such behavior, but all over Washington at this very moment administration representatives are quietly warning people: "Keep quiet on Miers - or else." The cynics, the cowards, and, yes, the check-seekers are all on the pro-Miers side of the argument. To reverse that reality is ... well I guess it is to reveal some of the upside-down thinking that produced the nomination in the first place.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: frum; harrietmiers; meirs; scotus; supremecourt
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Frum's response to Scully. Discuss amongst yourselves.
1 posted on 10/14/2005 11:47:25 AM PDT by Maynerd
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To: Maynerd

" ... I'd wear a perkier shade of lip gloss."


2 posted on 10/14/2005 11:49:20 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy
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To: ClearCase_guy

How do you know he doesn't?


3 posted on 10/14/2005 11:50:44 AM PDT by My2Cents (Dead people voting is the closest thing the Democrats come to believing in eternal life.)
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To: ClearCase_guy

Mike Meyers would be a more entertaining choice than Hariet Miers.


4 posted on 10/14/2005 11:52:03 AM PDT by Maynerd
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To: Maynerd

Without the occasional Meirs, no one would know who Frum is.


5 posted on 10/14/2005 11:53:24 AM PDT by bkepley
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To: Maynerd

I agree with Frum. He may be a little over-the-top, and at times he seems mean-spirited, but his stance is sound. The more this nomination has sunk in, the more I oppose it. Wouldn't it be nice to be unified now behind a Luttig or Brown or Batchelder or ... (OK, let me say it first so that others do not have to: I am not a Senator and therefore do not have a vote.)
I have loved this administration and have supported the President with my whole heart and mind. But appointments to the Supreme Court are so important that I'll oppose the President on this if I must.


6 posted on 10/14/2005 11:54:44 AM PDT by dinoparty
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To: bkepley

The Frum petition drive is up to....2600. That should settle the debate.


7 posted on 10/14/2005 11:55:11 AM PDT by Pondman88
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To: bkepley
Without the occasional Meirs, no one would know who Frum is.

I guess only elitist know who Frum is? You haven't seen his books at Walmart?

8 posted on 10/14/2005 11:55:48 AM PDT by Maynerd
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To: bkepley

I guess nobody would know George Will, or Rush Limbaugh, or Mark Levin, or William Kristol, or Tony Snow either?


9 posted on 10/14/2005 11:56:36 AM PDT by dinoparty
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To: Maynerd

I'm starting to wonder if Frum thought HE was supposed to get picked or something...

otherwise why would he go so far out of his way to make a fool of himself???

Even if I am sorry Bush didn't pick JRB, I can't stand in the same camp with the likes of Kristol, Frum, Coulter...they are MUCH to hateful.


10 posted on 10/14/2005 12:00:16 PM PDT by Txsleuth
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To: Maynerd

I imagine he will be damned to the deepest pits of hell for this, but it is, in fact, a very restrained and rational piece of writing. I have felt badly about opposing the Miers nomination, because I seriously doubt that it will be withdrawn, so I don't know where principled objections will lead.

But I think we MUST speak out. The more I look at her record, the less I can get myself to believe that she might prove to be a qualified candidate after all, or that she will prove to be a conservative candidate. She is, on the evidence, a person who works hard, is loyal to her bosses, and is very stubborn and ambitious. Those are all good qualities, but they are not enough. She is a poor thinker, a poor writer, very likely a timeserver in her professional career if not her personal life, and very likely will prove to be a bleeding heart liberal on the court.

I would love to be proven wrong on this, and would be happy to confess it. But I am less and less hopeful that that will prove to be the case. No, she's not another Souter, but she is, most likely, a woman of small intellectual capacities and on the evidence of some of her writings someone who will happily twist the law in order to bring about some liberal ideal of social justice. The record suggests that she cannot distinguish between private charitable giving, which is admirable, and twisting the law to benefit whatever group is currently being pushed by the victimologists: minorities, the poor, women, sick people, gays and lesbians, and so forth. That's precisely the problem with SCOTUS that needs to be fixed--bending the law and the Constitution for one imagined cause after another.


11 posted on 10/14/2005 12:00:18 PM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Maynerd

"The cynics, the cowards, and, yes, the check-seekers are all on the pro-Miers side of the argument"

Waiting for my check. Hasn't arrived yet.


12 posted on 10/14/2005 12:01:01 PM PDT by Pondman88
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To: Maynerd

Dear Frumkin, Harriet Meiers is more of a man than you could hope to be.


13 posted on 10/14/2005 12:09:15 PM PDT by OldFriend (One Man With Courage Makes a Majority ~ Andrew Jackson)
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To: Maynerd
>>>>"My friend David Frum expresses the general complaint when he asks, in his blog, when did Harriet Miers 'ever take a risk on behalf of conservative principle?

When did David Frum 'ever take a risk on behalf of conservative principle? Frum wrote speeches for PresBush. Big deal. Lotsa people have been speech writers. Ship this bozo back to Canada.

14 posted on 10/14/2005 12:10:45 PM PDT by Reagan Man (Secure our borders;punish employers who hire illegals;stop all welfare to illegals)
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To: bkepley

" Note next the implied hostility to the larger American conservative movement."

Oh really? I guess since I graduated from a non-Ivy league university I'm unable to descern where Scully "implied" any hostility. Gosh, David, I'm sorry for that.

Note as well, like the other Axis of East Coast Elite Pundits wallowing in their self-annointed importance, Frum purports to speak for "the larger American conservative movement". He doesn't and the hubris he's exhibited with his little petition is sad and laughable at the same time.

Note to David: Don't pretend to speak for this American conservative, you dishonorable ankle-biter. Speak for yourself. Your having enough trouble doing that.


15 posted on 10/14/2005 12:11:08 PM PDT by Neville72 (uist)
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To: Maynerd
...administration representatives are quietly warning people: "Keep quiet on Miers - or else." The cynics, the cowards, and, yes, the check-seekers are all on the pro-Miers side of the argument.

True.

16 posted on 10/14/2005 12:13:16 PM PDT by GOPJ (The enemy is never tired, never sated, never content with yesterday's brutality. -- President Bush)
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To: GOPJ

Sure, the strong arm of this adminisration has really silenced all the critics.

One wonders what all the fuss is about.


17 posted on 10/14/2005 12:17:30 PM PDT by Pondman88
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To: Maynerd
I guess only elitist know who Frum is? You haven't seen his books at Walmart?

He made a big splash predicting the "coming conservative crackup", about 20 years ago. I actually read the book which was pretty good but he seems like a one-book wonder to me.

18 posted on 10/14/2005 12:31:42 PM PDT by bkepley
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To: Maynerd

I'm going to start asking Fund for royalties, since the articles he wrote the past couple of days could have been lifted right from my posts.


19 posted on 10/14/2005 1:00:04 PM PDT by thoughtomator (Safety first! Fasten your kneepads securely before supporting Miers)
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To: Txsleuth

I think this nomination has really exposed the insider pundits as being insider pundits. Who was it that said, randomly selecting people from the phone book to run the country would result in better run government.

The more opposition I hear to this nomination, the more I hope she DOES get on.


20 posted on 10/14/2005 1:06:42 PM PDT by longtermmemmory (VOTE!)
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