For the recipients of the JSMP/Coalition for Judicial Restraint e-mail
update:

http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20010625-94696460.htm
<http://www.washtimes.com/commentary/20010625-94696460.htm>

THE WASHINGTON TIMES

Slash and Burn Tactics

BY DAVID LIMBAUGH
Monday, June 25, 2001

It is becoming increasingly clear that conservative fears that the recent
power shift in the Senate would have profound consequences, especially in
judicial appointments, were well-founded.

National Review Online's Byron York reports that Democrats in the Senate
Judiciary Committee are preparing for a series of hearings concerning the
judicial-confirmation process. Don't be fooled. While packaged as
high-minded inquiries, their real purpose is to lay the groundwork for
rejecting judicial nominees on the basis of their conservative ideology
alone.

On June 26, Sen. Charles Schumer, New York Democrat, the new chairman of the
committee responsible for screening federal judicial appointments, will
conduct the first hearing, "Should Ideology Matter? Judicial Nominations
2001."
Then next month, new Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy,
Vermont Democrat, will begin hearings on the Rehnquist court, federal
jurisprudence and conservative judicial activism. Hearings on conservative
judicial activism? That's too much.

Mr. York tells us, "The Schumer session will establish that it is acceptable
to oppose nominees solely on ideological grounds, and the Leahy hearing will
suggest that Mr. Bush's nominees hold views that are dangerously out of
touch with those of most Americans." How valid are these twin premises?
Let's take a look:

Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution vests power in the president to
appoint federal judges, subject to the Senate's advice and consent. How much
power did the Framers intend to confer upon the Senate over these
appointments?

It is clear that the Senate's power is not coequal with the president's,
because only the president has the power to nominate. The Senate can only
accept or reject his nominees; it cannot substitute nominees of its own. But
on what basis may the Senate refuse to confirm the president's nominees?

Alexander Hamilton, in Federalist No. 76, wrote, "To what purpose then
require the cooperation of the Senate? . . . It would be an excellent check
upon the spirit of favoritism in the president, and would tend greatly to
prevent the appointment of unfit characters from state prejudice, from
family connection, from personal attachment, or from a view to popularity."

You see, there's nothing mentioned about partisanship or ideology. The
Framers were trying to avoid cronyism and the appointment of unfit
characters that the president might be tempted to install primarily for
personal or familial reasons.

Even Democrats didn't used to take the absurd position that nominees could
be resisted on the basis of their ideology alone otherwise, for example,
they wouldn't have had to fabricate stories against Clarence Thomas bearing
on his character and fitness.

But that was about a decade ago. Today it's different. The Democratic
leadership is now openly engaged in a war against Republicans, especially
conservative ones. They mean to eradicate this evil known as conservatism,
and the judiciary is a great place to start given their manifest
difficulties at the ballot box. This brings us to consideration of the
second premise.

What about Mr. Leahy's assertion that most of Mr. Bush's nominees hold views
that are dangerously out of touch with those of most Americans? Answer: It
is dangerously out of touch with reality. Also, it's significantly ironic
that Democrats are openly opposing nominees on ideological grounds. They are
the ones who initiated the practice of legislating ideologically based
policy from the bench.

Besides, don't most political commentators agree that presently, at least,
the nation is almost evenly divided along ideological lines? Haven't we all
been hearing about the red states vs. the blue states? The two Americas?

But Mr. Schumer and Mr. Leahy say their opposition is not to conservatives,
but extremists. Yet these two men, much closer to leftist extremism than the
conservative appointees they oppose are to right-wing extremism, obviously
believe that conservatism itself is extreme. Need proof? OK, Mr. Schumer
said, "No more of these right-wing judges getting through."

Senate Democrats are not interested in according the president
constitutional deference for judicial appointments. They are determined to
usurp his appointment authority. In the process they will pave the way for
further usurpation by way of the courts' continuing encroachment on the
prerogative of the executive and legislative branches, through liberal
judicial activism.

These Senate hearings are another step in the process of denying President
Bush's legitimacy and authority. The Democrats have telegraphed their
planned offensive. President Bush and Senate Republicans must draw a line in
the sand and vigorously defend Mr. Bush's judicial appointments. Timidity
and compromise in the face of this extraconstitutional assault will be
devastating to the Bush presidency and to the interests of judicial
restraint.


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