Posted on 10/23/2005 9:15:28 PM PDT by gpapa
Monday, October 24, 2005 12:01 a.m. EDT
President Bush has returned from a weekend in Camp David, where much of the discussion centered on the beleaguered nomination of Harriet Miers. While the president is determined to press forward, the prognosis he received was grim. Her visits with senators have gone poorly. Her written answers to questions from the Senate were sent back as if they were incomplete homework. The nominee herself has stumbled frequently in the tutorials in which government lawyers are grilling her in preparation for her Nov. 7 hearings.
(Excerpt) Read more at opinionjournal.com ...
JRB in 2005 = GOP in 2006
SCOTUS interruptus - withdraw Miers before she blows it
He also forgot the misspelled words. Talk about busted.
She was my hope from the very beginning. So, does that make me:
a. sexist
b. elitist
c. racist
d. all of the above
Age: 54
Graduated from: University of South Carolina Law Center
She used to be: A lawyer in private practice in Orangeburg, S.C.
She's now: a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit (appointed 1992)
Her confirmation battle:
Williams is a solid conservative without a smoking-gun abortion decision to her credit or debit. She came to the attention of the right when she wrote a decision in 1999 scrapping the Miranda warning for criminal suspects (the Supreme Court reversed her 7 to 2). Since then, she has urged the courts to show broad deference to the president's war powers and rejected the notion that the phrase "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance means that the pledge shouldn't be recited in public school. Both stances are sure to please Bush's base. Not much here for anyone else.
Civil rights and civil liberties
In a 2004 appeal in the case of Zacharias Moussaoui, allegedly the 20th Sept. 11 hijacker, Williams dissented from a ruling giving the trial court the power to order the government to produce witnesses to testify on Moussaoui's behalf. The majority held that Moussaoui's right to a fair trial outweighed the government's interest in withholding the witnesses to protect national security. Williams' dissent said this approach prevents "the Executive from accomplishing its war-making, military, and foreign relations duties."
Over a dissent, in 2005 she rejected the asylum petition of a Chinese woman who said her government had required her to insert an IUD after she had a child without permission. Williams emphasized that the woman had left the IUD in place while in the United States, though the woman testified she had done so for fear that the Chinese authorities would punish her for removing it were she to return. Williams also distinguished between "insertion" of the IUD, which did not involve physical abuse, and "compelled IUD usage." The latter might rise to the level of persecution, she wrote. But because the woman (who did not have a lawyer) didn't directly raise IUD use in her petition, it was irrelevant to the court's decision.
In 1998, Williams dissented from a decision affirming a $60,000 jury award for a prisoner who suffered permanent damage to his jaw after his prison doctor did not make sure that he got follow-up treatment. Williams acknowledged that the doctor could have given instructions that the prisoner needed to go to an oral surgery clinic outside the prison as soon as possible. But it was reasonable that he didn't do so, she argued, because other prison doctors testified that they had been discouraged from calling the clinic.
Separation of church and state
In 2005, Williams voted to reject a 2005 challenge to the recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance in public schools by a father who objected to the phrase "under God." Williams said that the pledge is a patriotic exercise, not a prayer. She also relied on "the history surrounding our nation's founding," noting references to God in the Declaration of Independence and by the Constitution's framers.
Criminal Law
In 1999, Williams attacked the Miranda warning. Miranda v. Arizona is the storied 1966 decision of the Warren Court that requires the police to read criminal suspects their rights. ("You have the right to remain silent ...") If the police screw up Miranda, a suspect's confession often gets thrown out of court. Two years after the Supreme Court made Miranda warnings the law of the land, Congress passed a statute expressly to get rid of them. (The law said that a confession would be admitted into court "if it is voluntarily given" and gave trial judges the job of making case-by-case calls about voluntariness.) But over the next 30 years, the Department of Justice never tried to use the law to prosecute a criminal case. In 1998, Miranda critic Paul Cassell filed a friend-of-the-court brief urging the Fourth Circuit to recognize Congress' power to override the 1966 decision. Williams took the bait.
Over a dissent, she ruled for herself and a second judge that Congress had the authority to get rid of Miranda because the warnings were not required by the Constitution. The third judge on the appellate panel pointed out in dissent that Williams wrote her opinion without any briefing in opposition, saying "the majority takes on more than any court should." The Supreme Court reversed Williams' ruling 7 to 2, with Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas in dissent.
Free Speech
Williams voted in 2002 to strike down a Virginia law that prevented the Sons of Confederate Veterans from putting the Confederate flag on the group's customized license plates. Williams said the license plates were private rather than government speech.* In singling out the SCV by exercising special editorial control over the plates, she wrote, the state was discriminating against the group based on its viewpoint.
Habeas Corpus
Over a dissent, Williams in 2003 wrote an opinion for a majority of the Fourth Circuit rejecting the habeas petition of an inmate who filed his appeal one day late because of an error by his lawyer. She said the fact that the inmate was on death row was irrelevant to whether his late petition should be heard. She found that there were no extraordinary circumstances beyond the inmate's control that prevented him from filing on time.
http://www.slate.com/id/2127241/
The point is that Janice Rogers Brown would make a great SCOTUS judge not because she is black and female, but REGARDLESS of her gender and race, based on her judicial philosophy, and gutsyness of making it known what her opinions are, which should be the basis of the nomination.
Her being black and female are "icing on the cake", in that it would make it harder for the Dems to attack her.
"JRB in 2005 = GOP in 2006"
I agree. It would reenergize the base.
A good article from a great media presence (I cheerlead shamelessly for JWR)
Yes, I agree with you absolutely; this was the point of my post ;)
Ed Rollins, the GOP consultant who at the time headed the House Republican Campaign Committee and who was Mr. Card's boss in the Reagan White House, remembers it differently. "Of course Andy played a role," he told me. "He was Sununu's top aide." Two other aides who served with Mr. Card in the White House told me he was an enthusiastic backer of the Souter selection. "Now that he's brought us Miers we worry that 15 years later Andy is playing the role of a Serial Souterizer," one said."
Could the above red flag BE any bigger?
Another good article on this nomination by Mr. Fund.
So--going exclusively from this--basically she's a bit right of Rehnquist in her judicial activism for the authoritarian right when it comes to federal police powers, and a stickler for legalism to reduce docket size. On the other hand, that sort of judge would be infinitely preferable to O'Connor (with her #@$!%#@!%@! multi-tiers juggling acts, er, "balancing tests").
So it'd be at least marginally better to have Williams than a get-along-ist tabula rasa, which is what we seem to have in Miers from the minimal public statements she's made on constitional topics (affirmative action--for it, gays--agin' it, abortion--probably agin it, suppression of free speech for Klansman--for it). I'd still rather have JRBrown or Alex Kozinski. But two Rehnquist-maybes are better than one Rehnquist-maybe and an All-over-the-place-gamble.
I am looking forward to Roberts' votes trickling out soon.
"Rewriting the history of Ms. Miers's selection. After political pushback by conservatives became clear, the White House apparently engaged in spurious spin to explain the logic of the selection. Dr. James Dobson, the head of Focus on the Family, says he was told by White House aide Karl Rove that other female candidates had withdrawn from consideration because "the process had become so vicious and so vitriolic and so bitter that they didn't want to subject themselves or their families to it." White House aides have told others the same story, but will mention names only privately. Many now feel they were misled.
After making several calls to White House and Senate staffers as well as conservative activists who unofficially advised the White House, I have grave doubts about the White House storyline, as do others. One potential nominee did want the White House to know she had some family problems that could bear on the selection process but she did not withdraw her name. Three whose names the White House has privately mentioned as having dropped out say they are angry at any suggestion they did."
Just as many of us suspected.
I resemble THAT remark!!!!!
The most urgent thing they need to learn is how to wave a magic wand and turn Senate RhINOs into Elephants with a spine. If (probably when) one or more screaming liberals on the Court bite the big one while Bush is still in office, we will long for the days of how "easy" it was to get Miers in.
Thank you for posting this. I urge all conservatives of good faith and integrity to read the entire article. The combination of folly and deceit that went into this nomination and its defense is staggering.
hmmm, lessons to be learned?
1) Never nominate an inexperienced crony and expect supporters to automatically fall down in prostration at your colossal intellect.
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