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Careful
What You Wish For
The Political Peril of Withdrawing the Miers Nomination...
[Carol
Platt Liebau] 10/24/05
In the aftermath
of President Bush’s nomination of Harriet Miers to the
Supreme Court, most conservatives are united on only one point:
She wasn’t their first (or even, perhaps, their tenth)
choice. Indeed, some of the right’s most prominent pundits
and intellectuals have expressed full-throated and unqualified
opposition to the President's pick.
Although
some Miers opponents have based their objections on the nominee's
alleged “underqualification” or on “cronyism” concerns,
at the heart of their hostility are misgivings about Ms. Miers’ ideology
and judicial philosophy. Understandably, Miers’ conservative
opponents want to ensure that the vacant Supreme Court seat
goes to a jurist who will, as the phrase goes, “interpret
the law, not make it.”
Contributor
Carol Platt Liebau - Senior
Columnist
Carol
Platt Liebau is editorial director and a senior member of tOR and CRO editorial
boards. She is an attorney, political analyst and commentator
based in San Marino, CA, and has appeared on the Fox News
Channel, MSNBC, CNN, Orange County News Channel, Cox Cable
and a variety of radio programs throughout the United States.
A graduate of Princeton University and Harvard Law School,
Carol Platt Liebau also served as the first female managing
editor of the Harvard Law Review. Her web log can be found
at CarolLiebau.blogspot.com
[go to Liebau index] |
But some have gone so far as to demand that President Bush withdraw
the Miers nomination before hearings begin. That's a deeply misguided
strategy, for several reasons.
First, recall that
at the conclusion of the Roberts hearings, Republicans gleefully
pointed out that 22 Democrats, led by Senator
Charles Schumer (D-NY), had voted against a clearly qualified
and truly outstanding nominee at the behest of far-left special
interest groups. Forcing the President to withdraw the Miers
nomination likewise would open Republicans to charges that the
President is toeing a line laid down by a highly energized and
vocal interest within his own party. That, in turn, would position
the Democrats to argue, wrongly but credibly, that judicial selections
are being dictated by an elite cadre of "scary extremists." Hardly
the impression that Republicans want lingering in a voter’s
mind on Election Day.
Moreover, for the
past five years, Republicans have, quite rightly, faulted Senate
liberals for imposing an ideological litmus test
on judicial nominees. Noting that Ruth Bader Ginsburg was confirmed
with a vote of 96-3 and that Antonin Scalia ascended the court
on a 98-0 vote, Republicans have repeatedly invoked the days
when nominees were evaluated on their qualifications and competence – not
on their ideology. By opposing Ms. Miers on the basis of their
worst (but yet unproven) fears about her political preferences
or philosophy, conservative critics lend credibility to the argument
that both judging itself and the evaluation of judicial nominations
are irreducibly political exercises.
Finally, a premature
withdrawal of the Miers nomination would create other political
problems. Outside-the-beltway Republicans,
along with evangelical leaders like Dr. James Dobson and Richard
Land, look favorably on the Miers nomination. Anti-Miers rationales – ranging
from "we're afraid she's not an originalist" to "she's
not the best qualified candidate" to "the President
should have picked someone else" – simply don't resonate
with a significant portion of the Republican base. They see nothing
amiss with Ms. Miers' credentials, and are inclined to trust
the President's judgment on the nominee given his record on appellate
judges, tax cuts, the war on terror and social security reform.
Seeking to sabotage the Miers nomination before a hearing creates
the misimpression within the party (and without) that some prominent
Republicans disdain the achievements of a woman who is, at the
very least, an accomplished legal practitioner and trailblazer.
One commentator has
quipped that the President would pull out of Iraq before he’d pull the Miers nomination. That’s
probably true. And even Miers’ fiercest opponents suspect
it. So they are faced with a choice: The critics can either continue
to insist on the withdrawal of the nomination, thereby exacerbating
whatever political damage the Miers pick has already created – or
they can give Harriet Miers a chance to defend herself and outline
her judicial philosophy. After that, if they choose to oppose
her, at least it will be based on facts, rather than foreboding.
Doesn’t seem like a tough decision, does it? tOR
This
piece first appeared at Human Events
Columnist
Carol Platt Liebau is a political analyst, commentator and tOR / CRO editorial
director based in San Marino, CA. Ms. Liebau also served
as the first female managing editor of the Harvard Law
Review. Her web log can be found at CarolLiebau.blogspot.com
copyright
2005
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