Posted on 02/20/2003 12:30:46 PM PST by votelife
BYRON YORK This is how the filibuster will fall to pieces
Right now the Senate debate over the appeals court nomination of Miguel Estrada seems hopelessly deadlocked. When Democrat Harry Reid of Nevada says, It doesn't matter if there is one cloture vote or 50 cloture votes, we will all be together, and when Republican Orrin Hatch or Utah says, I'll stay here til hell freezes over -- well, things don't look good.
But beneath all the tough rhetoric -- and the lobbying campaigns of interest groups on both sides -- there's a relatively simple solution to the standoff. And it might emerge soon after lawmakers come back from the Presidents Day recess.
The two main Democratic objections to Estrada are that he has not fully answered questions about his legal views and that the Bush administration has refused to release internal Justice Department memos he wrote while he served in the Solicitor Generals office -- memos that Democrats contend might contain insights into Estrada's legal thinking.
For the Senate to make an informed decision about Mr. Estrada's nomination, it is essential that we receive the information requested and answers to these basic legal questions, Minority Leader Tom Daschle (S.D.) and ranking Judiciary Committee Democrat Patrick Leahy (Vt.) wrote in a Feb. 11 letter to the president.
The White House responded the next day with a 15-page, single-spaced letter from counsel Alberto Gonzales. Most news reports characterized it as a refusal of Daschle and Leahy's request which it was but missed the letter's between-the-lines suggestions for compromise.
On the issue of questions for Estrada, Gonzales noted that Daschle and Leahy cited just one inquiry that Estrada did not answer -- a question about his judicial role models. Gonzales wrote that Estrada in fact discussed that very issue in response to a written question from Sen. Richard Durbin (Ill.).
Beyond this one query, your letter does not pose any additional questions to [Estrada], Gonzales said. Additionally, neither of you has posed any written questions to Mr. Estrada in the more than three months since his all-day committee hearing.
In that sentence is what appears to be a White House message to Democrats: You can ask more questions. Theres nothing in Gonzaless letter to suggest that Estrada would not answer them.
On the second issue, the White House is standing firm against giving the internal Justice Department papers to the Senate. But Gonzales went out of his way to point out that some high-level Democrats have already seen the documents. The papers were, after all, written by Estrada during his time in the Clinton Justice Department. It also is important to recognize that [Clinton] political appointees have read virtually all of the memoranda in question, Gonzales wrote, namely, the Democrat Solicitors General Drew Days, Walter Dellinger, and Seth Waxman.
Gonzales also points out that none of those former officials have objected to Estrada's nomination. Thats another unspoken suggestion to Democrats: If you want to know more about the memos, ask the Democrats who have seen them. Days, Dellinger, and Waxman would most likely cite the same confidentiality concerns that led them to join other former Solicitors General in declaring release of the memos to be a bad idea, but they might be able say there was nothing in the papers that they found disturbing.
Republicans know there are some moderate Democrats who do not passionately oppose Estrada but who have so far stuck with the party in upholding the filibuster. Republicans also realize that, since hard-line Democratic leaders have made specific demands and vowed Estrada would not be confirmed unless the White House met those demands, those moderate Democrats will need some sort of Republican gesture they can use as cover to change their minds and stop supporting the filibuster.
That might already be happening. It has not been widely reported, but while the filibuster has been going on, Estrada has met with several Democratic senators, among them Mary Landrieu (La.), Blanche Lincoln (Ark.), Bill Nelson (Neb.), Herb Kohl (Wis.), and Thomas Carper (Del.). Presumably he has been answering some questions.
A few more such meetings, along with some reassuring words about the content of the Justice Department memos, and some moderate Democratic minds might change.
And in the end, there won't be 50 cloture votes, as Harry Reid suggested. There might not even be one. With four or five more moderate Democrats on board, Republicans will request, as they have several times already, that the Senate unanimously agree to end debate and give Estrada an up-or-down vote. So far, Democrats have refused every such request. But that might change soon.
Byron York is White House correspondent for National Review.
I believe this is why the DEMS are having such a hard time with this. If Estrada was in the Justice Dept during the impeachment, he could have gotten a reputation as someone who had "differing" opinions than the other political hacks that were there.
The solicitors general would not object perhaps, but a certain Senator who resided in the White House during the impeachment may have some inside knowledge. She is the reason this is being filibustered.
There was some specific talk about some senators' being targeted for assasination. That's why Frist let them go. Let's wait to see what happens when they reconvene.
The only controversy regarding Miguel Estrada is his race.
Senators have supported other non-Hispanic judicial nominees with less qualifications and experience. So the only difference here is that they cant support an independent minded and well qualified Hispanic.
Not qualified? ABA disagrees.
The American Bar Association, which Democrat Senators referred to as the gold standard for judicial nominees unanimously rated Estrada well qualified, their highest possible rating.
Not enough experience? A double standard for Hispanics.
Five of the eight judges currently serving on the D.C. Circuit had no previous judicial experience when appointed. That includes two of President Clintons nominees, Merrick Garland, whose Justice Department record was quite similar to that of Miguel Estrada, and David Tatel. In addition, Judge Harry Edwards had no prior judicial experience when he was nominated by President Carter in 1979, and he was younger and had less experience than Estrada.
A conservative ideologue? Tell that to Clintons appointees.
Prominent Democrats including Ron Klain, the former Chief of Staff of Vice President Gore; Clintons Solicitor Generals Seth Waxman and Drew Days III; Robert Litt, Associate Deputy Attorney General in the Criminal Division; and Randolph Moss, Assistant Attorney General in the Office of Legal Counsel have all praised Miguel Estrada for his brilliance, compassion, fairness and respect for precedent. Would these prominent Democrats support a conservative ideologue? Of course not.
Not Hispanic enough? Thats news to the Hispanic community.
Why then would the overwhelming majority of national Hispanic organizations enthusiastically support his nomination? Thats not only absurd, its insulting. It would be an ironic travesty of justice for any member of the US Senate a body without a single Hispanic member to vote against Mr. Estrada with the excuse that he is a Hispanic in name only or that he does not understand or represent the values of our community. Not a single membership-based Hispanic organization has opposed Estrada.
(Partial List of Hispanic Organizations Supporting Miguel Estrada) League of United Latin Americans Citizens, Hispanic National Bar Association, U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, Association for the Advancement of Mexican Americans, The Latino Coalition, Mexican American Grocers Association, Hispanic Contractors Association, Interamerican College of Physicians & Surgeons, American G.I. Forum, Federation of Mayors of Puerto Rico, Casa De Sinaloense, Cuban American National Foundation, Hispanic Business Roundtable, Cuban Liberty Council, Congregacion Cristiana y Misionera Fe y Alabanza, MANA - a National Latina Organization, Nueva Esperanza, Cuban American Voters National Community, Puerto Rican American Foundations
Paid for by The Latino Coalition. For more information please visit www.TheLatinoCoalition.com.
. . .we must match the Dems determination and more. Estrada must be confirmed and the Repubs must preservere.
We can hope that is the case. . .
It was Reagan and Nixon "conservative" appointees who, along with the liberals, created judicial rules of judicial review of agency action that have placed federal agencies essentially beyond the rule of law, particularly in "scientific" (environmental) matters. Thus here in the Northwest, we live under bogus Endangered Species Act listings that, for all practical purposes, are immune from judicial review.
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