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The Power of 55 - Senatorial arithmetic is on Alito's Side
The Weekly Standard ^ | January 2, 2006 | Terry Eastland

Posted on 12/25/2005 2:22:07 PM PST by new yorker 77

Any assessment of the prospects for the Alito nomination must begin with the fact that Republicans hold the Senate. That matters-a lot. Under the Constitution the president and the Senate play the key roles in Supreme Court appointments. Simply put, the president nominates and the Senate approves-or fails to approve-the nominee. It makes sense to think that when members of the same party control both the White House and the Senate, a Supreme Court nomination is likely to succeed. And the history of Supreme Court nominations backs that up. David Brady, a professor of political science at Stanford and deputy director of the Hoover Institution, says that while two--thirds of all high court nominations have succeeded, the percentage goes up to 85 percent when senators of the same party as the president's are in the majority.

The Republican Senate is an obvious impediment for the liberal interest groups that have made judicial appointments a chief concern ever since Ronald Reagan nominated Robert Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987. It is hardly a news flash to report that those groups work intimately with Democratic senators and especially their staffs. When they succeeded in their effort to block the Bork nomination, it bears remembering, the Democrats controlled the Senate, 55 to 45.

Today, the Republicans are at 55. And so the influence of the anti--Alito groups stands to be limited. Earlier this year, only 22 senators-all Democrats-wound up voting against John Roberts, President Bush's choice to be chief justice. And among the Democrats who did vote for him was, surprisingly, Vermont's Patrick Leahy, the ranking minority member of the Senate Judiciary Committee.

Judge Samuel Alito will take his seat before that committee on January 9. But while it seems likely that more than 22 Democrats will oppose the judge, the nomination doesn't appear to be in trouble. The leading precedent for a failed nomination is, of course, Bork's. But in the run--up to the hearings, the Alito nomination has not tracked the same path as Bork's did.

Significantly, no Senate Democrat has followed the example of Ted Kennedy the day the Bork nomination was announced. Kennedy, you'll recall, made a short speech about "Robert Bork's America." It contained distortions and outright lies, and was thought at the time to be a tactical mistake. But it inspired the groups opposed to Bork, which totaled more than 300. Soon the Judiciary Committee chairman, Joseph Biden, joined Kennedy in opposing Bork. That was pivotal. With the advice and consent of senators who mattered, the groups carried out an intense political campaign against the nominee. As the hearings drew near, the presumption in favor of confirmation that exists even when the party opposite the president's controls the Senate was largely eroded.

But that presumption still holds in Alito's case. To be sure-and notwithstanding their weaker position in the Senate-the liberal groups have swung often and hard at Alito. And as in past confirmation battles, they have had help from the press. Yet survey data show that Alito draws the same levels of public support now as he did in November.

A new Washington Post--ABC survey conducted in mid--December found that 54 percent of respondents say the Senate should confirm Alito while 28 percent say it shouldn't. In the November Post--ABC poll, those numbers were 49 and 29, respectively. According to the Post's analysis of its surveys on both Alito and Roberts, Alito "is now about as popular as . . . Roberts was on the eve of his Senate confirmation hearings."

The fundamental reason that the liberal groups seem to have found no traction with their attacks is also the reason the Senate is now Republican. The simple fact is, the people who elect senators, not to mention House members and presidents, are more Republican now than they were in previous decades. The Harris Interactive data show that the Democrats' lead in party identification, which averaged 21 percentage points in the 1970s, has been steadily shrinking. In the 1980s the average was 11 percentage points, and then 7 points in the 1990s and just 5 points so far in this decade. Meanwhile, substantially more Americans say they are "conservative" than "liberal."

The political leaning of the electorate means that the liberal groups have a tougher sell. Nor do they have the field to themselves, as was the case when they smeared Bork. Indeed, a key lesson of the failed Bork nomination was that a political campaign against a nominee must be answered in kind-that politics must be fought by politics. Conservative groups now engaged include Progress for America, the Judicial Confirmation Network, and the Committee for Justice, among others.

The conservative groups have used paid and earned media to extol Alito's legal qualifications and character. And they have played defense, responding (rapidly) to criticisms of Alito's record as a Justice Department attorney and also of his opinions during his 15 years as a judge on the federal appeals court for the Third Circuit. But the conservative groups have done something else, too-they have made an issue of the political and legal agenda of the groups attacking Alito.

Last week, for example, the Committee for Justice released its study of the positions held by groups forming the anti--Alito coalition. Titled "Who's Out of the Mainstream?" the report concluded that "the views of mainstream America" are "exactly the ones coalition members are trying to circumvent in the courts."

The committee also has sponsored a television ad, which says of the anti--Alito activists: "They want to take God out of the Pledge of Allegiance and are fighting to redefine traditional marriage. They support partial--birth abortion, sanction the burning of the American flag." The groups, not accustomed to such engagement, have fired back-a "reprehensible scare tactic usually saved for gutter--style political campaigns, not for a Supreme Court nomination," the director of the Human Rights Campaign told the Washington Post, apparently without irony.

Alito's confirmation obviously is not a certainty. Judiciary Committee Democrats will try to create (ex nihilo) a "credibility" issue, and Ted Kennedy can be expected to argue that Alito should be disqualified by virtue of his conservative beliefs and associations. Alito, whose excellence as a lawyer is undenied, will be asked many more questions about his judicial record than was Roberts, who served on the bench just two years.

And the liberal groups working with Kennedy and his colleagues can be counted on to go into overdrive as the hearings progress, especially since they have more at stake with this nomination than they did with Roberts's. Roberts for Rehnquist was widely regarded as an even trade, jurisprudentially speaking. But if Alito, who would replace Sandra Day O'Connor, is confirmed, that will probably shift the court to the judicial right.

Still, remember the number 55, which also means the Republicans likely have a sufficient majority to change the Senate's filibuster rule (should the Democrats filibuster) and move to an up--or--down vote-one surely in Alito's favor. If the Democrats had a 55--to--45 edge, would Alito be likely to be confirmed?

Terry Eastland is publisher of The Weekly Standard.

© Copyright 2005, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 109th; alito; terryeastland

1 posted on 12/25/2005 2:22:08 PM PST by new yorker 77
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To: new yorker 77

Never underestimate the stupidity of GOP Senate 'leadership' or the ego of John McCain.


2 posted on 12/25/2005 2:28:50 PM PST by peyton randolph (<a href="http://clinton.senate.gov/">shrew</a>)
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To: peyton randolph

Amen.


3 posted on 12/25/2005 2:29:58 PM PST by RedBeaconNY (Vous parlez trop, mais vous ne dites rien.)
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To: new yorker 77
Eastland leaves out the filibuster and the Democrats may well use it if they calculate they will pay no political price for killing the Alito nomination in November. If they can persuade the RINOs to back them up, there may not even be a vote much less than a filibuster in the works.

(Denny Crane: "I Don't Want To Socialize With A Pinko Liberal Democrat Commie. Say What You Like About Republicans. We Stick To Our Convictions. Even When We Know We're Dead Wrong.")

4 posted on 12/25/2005 2:32:24 PM PST by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: new yorker 77
The Dems will filibuster... and I have NO confidence in seven of our own.

-- Issue in Doubt --

5 posted on 12/25/2005 2:35:38 PM PST by johnny7 (“Check out the big brain on Brett!”)
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To: johnny7

I don't think the Rats will filibuster because they know they will lose. Alito wins confirmation easily.


6 posted on 12/25/2005 2:40:27 PM PST by Dog Gone
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: new yorker 77
"It contained distortions and outright lies."

Which is what one might expect from the likes of the senior balloon from Massive2sh!tts.

But that was in the days before Free Republic and Fox News, Rush Limbaugh and Laura Ingraham, et al.

8 posted on 12/25/2005 2:44:36 PM PST by Past Your Eyes (We're just sitting here on the Group W bench.)
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To: peyton randolph
There are at least seven lame RINOs in the Senate who are unreliable: Chafee, McCain, Voinovich, Dewine, Snowe, Collins, and Specter.

There are others who, at times, are unreliable pains in the @rse: Graham, Sununu and Hagel come to mind.

I know Craig is balking on the Patriot Act, but that is the only issue where he's off the reservation. I respect Craig and understand where he's coming from.

Murkowski, too, isn't the sharpest knife in the drawer but I'm not about to call her a RINO.

I can't really see these people fighting a conservative fight. Bush isn't always to blame for this crap; he's trying to govern with a pretty freakin' lame majority.

The ALTERNATIVE is not acceptable: we must fight to keep Democrats from controlling the Senate! Half a loaf is truly better than none--but we don't have to sit and be beaten up by the RINOs. Let's fight 'em in the primaries....or fund only the best conservative candidates. That is what I've determined to do with my donations this election cycle.

9 posted on 12/25/2005 2:48:41 PM PST by Recovering_Democrat (I am SO glad to no longer be associated with the party of Dependence on Government!)
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To: new yorker 77

bttt


10 posted on 12/25/2005 2:52:03 PM PST by Christian4Bush ("The only 'new tone' we hear should be that of the Left's telephone being disconnected. " dogcaller)
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To: goldstategop
If they can persuade the RINOs to back them up

The "rinos" will never "back them up". The rinos may not want to change the current Senate rules. Your spin is inappropriate.

11 posted on 12/25/2005 2:56:31 PM PST by staytrue (MOONBAT conservatives are those who would rather lose to a liberal than support a moderate)
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To: new yorker 77

Alito will be confirmed if Bush puts his authority on the line and starts twisting arms. Otherwise, the Democrats will delay, and delay, and delay, and the Republicans will back down in the end as they always do.

This would be fatal to the Republican party. They absolutely have to confirm Alito, or they will lose seats in the midterm elections. The momentum from last November stalled, sputtered, got going again, stalled, and is now at a critical point. They simply can't afford to show weakness again.

I am in hopes that Bush and Rove understand the critical importance of this vote.


12 posted on 12/25/2005 3:15:54 PM PST by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: peyton randolph

It's an election year.

For certain DeWine is up for re-election and thanks to his going left has managed to put his chances to return to the Senate in doubt. If he's feeling suicidal he'll sabotage it again. I already want him gone, but people in Ohio might be willing to return him if he doesn't betray them again on the issue.

I think the RINO's will want to sabotage Alito. I also think given the 2002/2004 results partly because of the Courts, Reaction to the Judas Fourteen, DeWine's son coming in 4th? in the primaries after leading the race, and Miers where a President genuinely liked by the base with typically high support got savaged pretty strongly from his own...that the RINO's will think twice.

They are used to getting skewered by us for being RINO's. But witnessing G.W.B. take a beating rolled them to the core. IMO, they've gotten the message we're not playing games w/the Courts.

Factor in "red state" Dems up for re-election in '06 that remember Daschle losing on this issue in 2004 and it's unlikely they'll be able to mount a filibuster. I'm actually putting a little more faith in the "red state" Dems urge to survive being more of a factor than the RINO's.

However, the GOP has a way of shooting itself in the foot so we'll see. They've been known to take a win and default.


13 posted on 12/25/2005 3:43:08 PM PST by Soul Seeker (Mr. President: It is now time to turn over the money changers' tables.)
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To: Past Your Eyes
"...what one might expect from the likes of the senior balloon from Massive2sh!tts."

LOL!

14 posted on 12/25/2005 3:44:49 PM PST by FormerACLUmember
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To: new yorker 77

Has this idiot been paying attention


15 posted on 12/25/2005 5:04:44 PM PST by skaterboy (My candy cane is so yummy and delicious)
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To: peyton randolph
Good points. Stinking RINOs.
16 posted on 12/25/2005 7:54:53 PM PST by Ninian Dryhope ("Bush lied, people dyed. Their fingers." The inestimable Mark Steyn)
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To: new yorker 77
I remember reading in one of former Georgia Senator Zell Millers books the following:

41 BEATS 59-THAT STRANGE SENATE MATH. The United States Senate is the only place on the planet where 59 votes out of 100 cannot pass anything because 41 votes out of 100 can defeat it. Try explaining that at your local Rotary Club or to someone in the Wal-Mart parking lot or, for that matter, to the college freshman in Political Science 101. You can't, because this strange Senate math stands democracy on its head.

Frankly I though this winner of a deal that was given to the Democrats when the lost the majority and several years ago was, for some unfathomable reason, agreed to by the present Republican leadership in the Senate.

Is it still in place? This deal to me to appease losers is another "straw on the camels back" to break it. RINO is a name attributable to all of them who not only allow this but do not oppose it vigorously and loudly.
17 posted on 12/25/2005 8:27:38 PM PST by K-oneTexas (I'm not a judge and there ain't enough of me to be a jury. (Zell Miller, A National Party No More))
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To: johnny7

Frist is the problem, can you imagine say some of the true senate leaders allowing members to break ranks like frist does?
Hell the minority in the senate run the place while frist is in a closet somewhere pining to be president. Idiot.


18 posted on 12/26/2005 3:41:17 AM PST by Joe Boucher (an enemy of islam)
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To: Joe Boucher
Frist is milquetoast.
19 posted on 12/26/2005 4:40:09 AM PST by johnny7 (“Check out the big brain on Brett!”)
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