Posted on 02/09/2003 7:35:21 AM PST by nwrep
Justice Janice Brown
Supreme Court: Moving On, Moving In, Moving Up
A vacancy could open up in the U.S. Supreme Court soon
By Daniel Klaidman, Debra Rosenberg and Tamara Lipper NEWSWEEK
Feb. 17 issue: It's been nine years since the last vacancy opened up on the U.S. Supreme Court. That historically long drought could end this year with at least one resignation. Eager White House aides are stepping up preparation efforts, vetting candidates and contemplating a special media operation to deal with a potential confirmation battle.
Other observers think Bush could take another approach, appointing California Supreme Court Justice Janice Rogers Brown instead. Brown is a conservative African-American who's ruled against affirmative action and abortion rights. Her nomination would let Bush add the court's third woman and second African-American in one swoop. And White House lawyers have already interviewed her. Tom Goldstein, a Washington lawyer who argues cases before the court, believes Brown could even get the nod for chief justice. "An African-American female nominee is not going to be filibustered," he says. She doesn't have a record that will stop Democrats in their tracks. And after months of bitter Senate fights over nominations to lower courts, that could have an appeal all its own.
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.com ...
What makes this man think so, after the media lynching of Clarence Thomas?
Thanks, he says, whilst trying to hide his red cheeks.
Normally, I pride myself on my spelling and grammar(at least whilst writing!), but amendment is one of those words I can never seem to get right.
I like that. If she does the same thing at the Federal level she will be a great pick.
As always, ol' buddy, dead on target.
The problem with our courts is ideology and activism....not that they all can't be made to think like us, because that will never happen.
Judical activism, accepted, condoned and permitted to be acceptable...that is the disease. Brown is an enenmy of activism and a friend to the old stricture bound rules of judical behavior. Hip-Hip Horray
Here is what Thomas Sowell had to say about Justice Brown:
The Democrats cannot filibuster everything, and they certainly cannot filibuster each of the Bush administration's many judicial nominees that they kept bottled up when there was a Democratic majority in the Senate. But Democrats may well save a filibuster as a sort of political version of a nuclear threat, in order to prevent President Bush from nominating a strong candidate for the Supreme Court -- someone who is in favor of enforcing the laws as written and who has the fortitude to stick to that position, despite all the pressures and temptations to "grow."Now, I don't put a lot of stock in political commentators, tv pundits, or politicians in general, but Thomas Sowell is about as solid a mind as I've come across in the last twenty years. I'm going to support Justice Brown if she is nominated....tooth and nail / hammer and tongs !The administration may well find itself under great pressure to avoid a political bloodletting by not nominating someone who will rile up the Democrats. The voices of compromise are always seductive -- and too often over the years the Republicans have heeded those voices.
Democratic administrations have put some truly awful people on the federal courts, including the Supreme Court, but Republicans have also appointed some of the worst judicial activists, both during the flamboyant Earl Warren era and in later years, when they appointed such justices as John Paul Stevens and David Souter, who have been more low key but have developed just about as much disregard of the written law.
Republicans have also put some wobbly "moderates" on the Supreme Court, like Justices Sandra Day O'Connor and Anthony Kennedy, who tend to try to finesse tough issues and split the difference. This turns the law into a guessing game for those who want to be law-abiding citizens and into an instrument of extortion for those who are litigious.
After decades of shameless judicial activism, the very concept of the rule of law can erode away unless there are people on the Supreme Court with the courage and the clarity to call a halt, and even consider overturning some of the more outrageously lawless Supreme Court decisions of the past.
Believers in judicial restraint face a major dilemma because such restraint applies both to following the laws as written and respecting legal precedents. Both these things make the law predictable -- without which it is not really law but just a set of arbitrary edicts, and courts are just places from which lightning can strike anyone without warning at any time.
Democrats do not have to worry about such considerations. What they want are judges who will produce the kinds of results that their political base wants -- especially on such issues as abortion and affirmative action. The next best thing is to be able to scare off the Bush administration by threatening a filibuster if the president nominates someone whose top priority is upholding the law, someone in the mold of Antonin Scalia or Clarence Thomas.
When the next vacancy occurs on the Supreme Court, the Bush administration will face the choice between nominating someone who believes in the rule of law or nominating another "moderate" to avoid a filibuster by the Democrats. But there may be a way out of that dilemma.
What if the administration could find someone who is not merely an advocate of judicial restraint but someone with a strong record of having unabashedly practiced it? And what if it would be someone who would present real political problems to the Democrats if they filibustered or launched a smear campaign?
California Supreme Court Justice Janice Rogers Brown has been a very tough advocate of applying the law as it is written. When her fellow justices have gone the judicial activism route, her scathing and brilliant dissents have punctured their pretenses without mercy. Moreover, she has shown herself to be as knowledgeable as she is tough-minded.
Why would the Democrats have to hesitate before launching a filibuster against her nomination? Because Janice Rogers Brown is a black woman. That shouldn't matter but the Democrats are the ones who have always made such things matter. Now they would be hoist by their own petard.
It seems that Brown is pro-states rights. It also seems like she is, at least most of the time, a stict constructionist. And I think her judicial record may be significantly more diverse than Judge Souter's in NH. California, being the largest state, and one of the wackiest legislatures and many wacked out town councils, is going to give the state supreme court lots to rule on. In a way, it's almost better than a justice come from California than NH. In NH, people aren't as wacky, and they don't pass wacky laws, so you never really know if a justice is going to vote the right way. In California, the supreme court is going to have to rule on all kinds of things.
Her ruling on the assault weapons ban is a bit questionable, but we don't know all the issues involved. We don't know what the briefs argued, as I'm sure no one here has read them yet. In particular, we don't know if the briefs challenged the law on second amendment grounds, or on state constitutional grounds.
In any event, before she's nominated, I'm sure that there are volumes that Bush's staff would be able to read to get a clear idea of how she really thinks. Because someone's ideology can't hide in California the way it could in New Hampshire. There's way too many nuts passing laws in California.
FreeGards From The Socialist Republic of Noo Yawk,
Karen AKA KLT
The powers not granted to the United States by the Constitution, nor forbidden by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the People.
I'd say that infringing on the RKBA is one of the things the Constitution forbids.
Whereas the Republican Party is the party of Colin and Condi.
Some snippets:
Curiously, in the current dialectic, the right to keep and bear arms a right expressly guaranteed by the Bill of Rights is deemed less fundamental than implicit protections the court purports to find in the penumbras of other express provisions. . . . But surely, the right to preserve ones life is at least as fundamental as the right to preserve ones privacy.
The founding generation certainly viewed bearing arms as an individual right based upon both English common law and natural law, a right logically linked to the natural right of self-defense. Blackstone described self-defense as the primary law of nature, which could not be taken away by the law of society
. . . . Extant political writings of the period repeatedly expressed a dual concern: facilitating the natural right of self-defense and assuring an armed citizenry capable of repelling foreign invaders and quelling tyrannical leaders.After the Civil War a series of enactments, culminating with the Fourteenth Amendment, acknowledged the correlation between self-defense, citizenship, and freedom. Section 14 of the Freedmans Bureau Act, which the 39th Congress passed over the Presidents veto, provided: That in every State or district where the ordinary course of judicial proceedings has been interrupted by the rebellion,
. . . the right to. . . have full and equal benefit of all laws and proceedings concerning personal liberty, personal security, and the acquisition, enjoyment, and disposition of estate, real and personal, including the constitutional right to bear arms, shall be secured to and enjoyed by all the citizens of such State or district without respect to race or color or previous condition of slavery. . . . (Freedmans Bureau Act (July 16, 1866) 14 Stat. 176, italics added; see Halbrook, Second Class Citizenship and the Second Amendment in the District of Columbia (1995) 5 Geo. Mason U. Civ. Rts. L.J. 105, 141-150 (Second Class Citizenship).)Halbrook concludes the Freedmans Bureau Act, the Civil Rights Act of 1866, and the Fourteenth Amendment leave no doubt that the constitutional right to bear arms is included among the laws and proceedings concerning personal liberty, personal security, and property, and that the free enjoyment of such immunities and rights is to be protected (Second Class Citizenship, supra, 5 Geo. Mason U. Civ. Rts. L.J. at p. 150) under the Fourteenth Amendment, which would confer citizenship on all persons born in the United States and imbue them with every right of citizenship, including the right to keep and bear arms. (Ibid.)
. . . The media keep the horrific visions of gun violence ever before our eyes. These acts of individual madness are undeniably tragic and totally unacceptable in a civilized society. But there are other horrific visions the victims of which number in the millions perpetrated by governments against unarmed populations
. . . . The framers could have had no conception of the massive scale on which government-sanctioned murder would be committed in the twentieth century, but they had a keen appreciation of the peril of being defenseless. That wariness is reflected in the Constitution.
I agree with you ultima....but....I still think they'll manage to do some kind of BORK.....
The demoncrats will publicly villify her for being "anti-choice." So why don't conservatives villify the pro-death crowd? Why are we supposed to tolerate their intolerance of pro-lifers? Why are we supposed to keep our mouths shut while the pro-death crowd Borks a pro-lifer?
I say we go get them. I say we get loud and in their faces for a change. Let's hold up pictures of aborted babies and make them defend "choice."
Yup,and yet they are still going to insist on calling her a conservative. Then again,these same drooling fools keep insisting Ali Bubba is a conservative.
I will say that judging her STRICTLY from her photo alone,I can see why Ali Bubba thinks she is highly qualified.
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