IS JOHN ROBERTS REALLY ALL THAT BAD?
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There's been a lot of verbiage floating around-- not to mention expensive TV ads-- about the suitability, and lack thereof, of Bush's nominee to head the Supreme Court. Like I've said before, Democrats should have thought about this when they refused to join Barbara Boxer and a handful of patriotic congressmen in challenging George Bush's 2004 theft of the presidential election in Ohio. Now Bush occupies the White House and has enough support from reactionary senators to confirm every the most egregious of far right judges (as we've already seen). There's no doubt in my mind that, barring a miracle, John Roberts will become the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and will be every bit as horrible and reactionary as his contemptible, partisan, racist predecessor, William Rehnquist. But you'll be hearing a lot more about this over the next few weeks so I decided to post an advance of an extraordinary article in the next issue of THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS by William Taylor (October 6).
JOHN ROBERTS: THE NOMINEE
The most intriguing question about John Roberts is what led him as a young person whose success in life was virtually assured by family wealth and academic achievement to enlist in a political campaign designed to deny opportunities for success to those who lacked his advantages. It is a question of great relevance to Roberts's candidacy for the Supreme Court. As the late Charles Black has written, no serious person is under the illusion that "a judge's judicial work is not influenced...by his sense, sharp or vague, of where justice lies in respect to the great issues of his time."
After a privileged upbringing in an Indiana suburb, attendance at an exclusive, expensive private school, high ranking at the undergraduate and law schools of Harvard, and clerkships with Federal Appeals Judge Henry Friendly and Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist, John Roberts took a job in the Reagan administration. There he joined in its efforts to dismantle the civil rights gains of the 1960s and 1970s. His work as a young man in the 1980s established the pattern of his later public career.
Roberts was first employed in 1981 and 1982 as a special assistant to the attorney general, William French Smith. He went from there to the Reagan White House in November 1982, where he served as associate counsel to the President for three and a half years. During this period, Roberts played an important part in the administration's efforts to curtail the rights of African-Americans, to deny assistance to children with disabilities, and to prevent redress for women and girls who had suffered sex discrimination. He also justified attempts by the state of Texas to cut off opportunities for the children of poor Latino aliens to obtain an education. Roberts was in favor of limiting the progress of African-Americans in participating in the political process and of making far-reaching changes in the constitutional role of the courts in protecting rights.
In all of these efforts, which halted temporarily when Roberts left government for private practice in 1986, he was no mere functionary. Indeed, he often was prepared to go beyond his conservative superiors in the Reagan administration in mounting a counter-revolution in civil rights, expressing frustration with his conservative superior at the Justice Department, Theodore Olson, differing on a key constitutional issue with Robert Bork, and disagreeing on voting rights with Senator Strom Thurmond.
Court Stripping
The issue that has had the most far-reaching implications for civil rights was given the unilluminating name "court stripping." It was part of the continuing legal struggle over enforcing the Supreme Court's landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education to end mandated racial segregation in public schools. Efforts to implement Brown had stalled until 1964, when Congress passed the Civil Rights Act, which declared school desegregation to be national policy and provided the means for enforcing it. There followed Supreme Court decisions adding legal content to the act, which then led to widespread desegregation of public schools throughout the South.
In 1980, segregationists in Congress led by Senator Jesse Helms responded with bills to prohibit the Justice Department from bringing action in the courts to desegregate schools, and to bar the courts from issuing remedies that would require the busing of students for that purpose. Similar bills were proposed in cases involving school prayer and abortion rights.
A fierce debate followed at the Justice Department and in the Reagan White House. Some lawyers recognized that a great deal was at stake in these bills—that they were an assault on the Supreme Court's role as the final arbiter of what the Constitution means as well as an assault on the separation of powers. David Brink, then president of the American Bar Association, described the court-stripping bills as "a legislative threat to our nation that may lead to the most serious constitutional crisis since our great Civil War," and the ABA House of Delegates "strongly objected" to the bills because they "propose to change the constitutional law by simple legislation, instead of by the means provided in the constitution."
In addition, the Conference of Chief Justices of the States resolved unanimously that court-stripping bills were a "hazardous experiment with the vulnerable fabric of the nation's judicial system." Within the Department of Justice Theodore Olson, then Roberts's superior and a lawyer with impeccable conservative credentials, worried about the advisability of supporting the legislation. Other constitutional conservatives, such as Yale Law School professor Alex Bickel (an ardent opponent of busing), and moderate Republicans, such as former Attorney General Elliot Richardson, as well as Robert Bork (who was to become a model of extreme legal conservatism), expressed concern publicly about the constitutionality and wisdom of court stripping. John Roberts had no such reservations. In memos deriding Brink and others, he claimed that Congress had the power to eradicate busing as a "failed experiment."
Roberts believed he had lost the internal debate with Olson even though Attorney General William French Smith testified in 1982 that while Congress could not interfere with the "core powers" of the Supreme Court, it could establish limits to the remedies approved by the courts. Smith's distinction failed to recognize that the bill's authors were proposing to abolish what in many cases would be the only effective judicial remedy for unlawful segregation. And in the end, it was a near thing. In his most substantial legal writing on the subject, an undated twenty-seven-page memo, Roberts conceded that the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment could pose a formidable barrier to legislation intended to strip the federal courts of jurisdiction over cases involving school desegregation. But, he noted, the problem might be surmounted, since strict scrutiny would be applied only if there were "racial classification," and the legislation in question would only classify cases by type, i.e., not "race" but "school desegregation." Giving state courts the final say over school desegregation, he added, would not involve unequal treatment because white officials as well as black groups would lack the right to appeal. He did not suggest how likely he thought it would be for a state court to rule against the segregation practices of, say, Governor George Wallace.
Although the Senate passed the Helms-Johnston amendment to ban the use of busing to achieve desegregation, the House did not. Roberts did not give up easily, however. As late as 1984, from his office in the White House, he wrote his boss, Fred Fielding, a memo reiterating his views that Congress could legally bar the use of busing as a school desegregation remedy. But he concluded that given his lack of success "it would probably not be fruitful to reopen the issue at this point." Still, Roberts wavered on whether a ban on busing was good policy. In his 1984 memo to Fielding he wrote approvingly that the Department of Justice as a "matter of legislative policy" regularly argued in the courts that busing was "counter-productive." But later, in another memo to Fielding in 1985, Roberts, while repeating his position that stripping the Supreme Court of jurisdiction over school desegregation was constitutional, said that he had thought banning busing was a bad "policy idea."
Voting Rights
In his views on court stripping, Roberts revealed a striking lack of interest in contemporary events. He adopted the unsupported finding that Helms and the Dixiecrats had placed in the voting rights bill, which held that busing as a desegregation remedy was a failure and led to white flight. He omitted to mention the fact that desegregation had spread throughout the South after the Supreme Court's landmark 1971 "busing" decision in the Swann case, and that the first major report by the National Assessment for Educational Progress showed that the achievement gap between whites and African-Americans had been cut in half during the 1970s, with the greatest gains coming among third-grade black children, most of whom were bused in the now desegregated Southeast.
But it was in the second major civil rights battle of the early Reagan administration that Roberts, winner of an undergraduate history award at Harvard College, revealed a surprising ignorance of America's racial past. The issue in 1981 was whether Congress should renew key provisions of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and overturn a 1980 Supreme Court decision that threatened to undermine the gains that African-Americans were making in securing their right to vote.
The history of discrimination was unambiguous. Despite the guarantees of the Fifteenth Amendment, from the end of Reconstruction in the late nineteenth century through the early 1960s the states of the Old Confederacy kept black people from registering to vote by a variety of strategies. As the Supreme Court struck down one device after another for disenfranchis-ing blacks as violating the Fifteenth Amendment, states replaced them with others, finally resorting to primaries limited to white people. These practices were reinforced by racial violence. Many local black leaders who were organizing people to vote were murdered by members of the Klan.
The barriers were largely effective. In Mississippi in 1960, fewer than 6 percent of eligible black citizens were registered to vote. After federal laws protecting blacks' voting rights in 1957 and 1960 proved too weak to be effective, the civil rights movements of the 1960s helped to produce the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The new law contained special provisions allowing federal officials to take over the registration process if local officials continued to resist, and it called for a federal review of state laws that might limit black voting.
The 1965 Voting Rights Act brought about large gains in registration and voting by African-Americans. But they were still struggling with strategies designed to dilute the impact of their voting. This problem was compounded in 1980 by the Supreme Court's 5 to 4 decision, in Mobile v. Bolden, which upheld the election of members at large of the Mobile, Alabama, City Council rather than by district, even though it effectively prevented black voters from having representation on the council. Because blacks were entirely barred from voting in 1911, when Mobile had enacted the at-large plan, the Court reasoned that the plan had not been motivated by race. The current impact on race, the Court decided, was not sufficient to show a violation. Since the special provisions of the 1965 act were up for renewal in Congress in 1982, civil rights advocates were seeking a reversal of the Supreme Court's Mobile decision as well.
In the House in 1981 Republicans such as Henry Hyde of Illinois expressed their skepticism not only of the need to extend the special provisions of the Voting Rights Act, but of reversing Mobile v. Bolden as well. Meanwhile the Reagan administration equivocated, with the Justice Department apparently split. Documents show that John Roberts was one of the leading lawyers in the Justice Department fighting against any improvements in the Voting Rights Act. But something unexpected happened. As Henry Hyde listened to the testimony of black witnesses from the South who were suffering discrimination, he decided that something had to be done. At the end of July 1981, the House Judiciary Committee sent to the floor a strong bill for debate, including a reversal of Mobile, by a 25–1 vote. In October, with the help of other conservatives, the bill passed the House by a vote of 389–24.
John Roberts, who had joined the Justice Department in August and begun working on voting rights, did not share the views of these House Republicans. In November, Attorney General Smith argued against the House bill to extend the Voting Rights Act. When it was reported that the President would be announcing his readiness to sign the bill, Smith went to the White House and succeeded in talking Reagan out of his position. He then testified in the Senate in January that the administration did not support the bills.
While civil rights groups worked with Bob Dole to produce a draft that was essentially the same as the bill the House had passed, Roberts prepared a lengthy memo for Attorney General Smith to give to the President. It read that the bill's
effects test would likely lead to federal courts throughout the nation striking down any electoral system that is not neatly tailored to achieve proportional representation along racial lines. In other words, the effects test in the Act could lead to a quota system in electoral politics.
Throughout April, Roberts continued his campaign. He drafted a letter that was sent to Senator Strom Thurmond urging his support for striking down the House bill. On June 18, the Senate passed the bill by a vote of 85–8, with Thurmond joining the majority. Ten days later, Ronald Reagan signed the bill into law.
Nowhere in any of the memos that have been made available did John Roberts acknowledge the effect of the many years of disenfranchisement on black citizens. Instead his concern was about the effect of an imagined quota system on whites, a concern that twenty-five years later has proved to be groundless.
Roberts and the Poor
The indifference of John Roberts to people dealt a bad hand has not been limited to African-Americans. In 1982, the Supreme Court in Doe v. Plyler addressed the constitutionality of a Texas law that denied a free public education to school-age children who were not legally in the United States. The US did not participate in the case, in part because the argument did not include the claim that the statute could be considered an effort by Texas to help the federal government enforce its policy against illegal immigration. A divided court upheld the lower court rulings that struck down the Texas law. Justice Brennan wrote for the majority:
The inability to read and write will handicap the individual deprived of a basic education each and every day of his life. The stigma of illiteracy will mark them for the rest of their lives. By denying these children a basic education, we deny them the ability to live within the structure of our civic institutions, and foreclose any realistic possibility that they will contribute in even the smallest way to the progress of our nation.
The Court found that the Texas law did not further any substantial goal of the state. In a memorandum to the attorney general, written shortly after the decision was announced, Roberts lamented that the dissenters had not won the vote of Justice Lewis Powell. If the Justice Department had joined the Texas case, Roberts said, its arguments in favor of judicial restraint might have persuaded Powell and altered the outcome of the case. "This is a case," he said, "in which our supposed litigation program to encourage judicial restraint did not get off the ground and should have."
Roberts had also made clear his disagreement with Shapiro v. Thompson, a Supreme Court decision which struck down state residency requirements for welfare benefits, on the grounds that he was unable to find any right to travel in the Constitution. Presumably, he would have upheld a California law barring the entry of indigent Okies from the Dust Bowl, which the Supreme Court had invalidated in 1941 as an invasion of the constitutionally protected interest in allowing migration from state to state.
Limiting the Potentialof People with Disabilities
In 1982, during what appears to have been an extremely busy year, Roberts turned his attention to the claims of students with disabilities under the Education for All Handicapped Children Act. Amy Rowley was a deaf student with minimal residual hearing, who got by in school by virtue of excellent lip-reading skills and an FM hearing aid. Lower federal courts, finding that there was a considerable disparity between her achievement (which was described as about average) and her potential, held that under the act she was entitled to the classroom services of a sign-language interpreter. Reagan's solicitor general, Rex Lee, supported their view. Justice Rehnquist, writing for a divided Supreme Court in Board of Education v. Rowley, reversed that decision, holding that all Miss Rowley was entitled to was an adequate education. The statute, he said, did not clearly require that "states maximize the potential of handicapped children commensurate with the opportunity provided to other children." Justice White in dissent pointed to provisions in the law supporting the guarantee of a "free and appropriate education," including the act's definition of special education as "specifically designed instruction, at no cost to parents or guardians, to meet the unique needs of a handicapped child."
After the decision, John Roberts wrote to Attorney General Smith expressing his disagreement with the solicitor general's office for supporting Ms. Rowley's claim in the Supreme Court. He described the statute as "vague, mandating only a 'free appropriate education.'" He referred to Justices Brennan and Marshall as "the activist duo" who used the government's brief to support "an activist role for the courts," adding that it took a conservative majority of the Supreme Court to turn back an "effort by activist lower court judges...."
Several things are worth mentioning about this memo. Roberts calls the disability statute vague, while previously, in supporting the court-stripping legislation, he was willing to describe busing in sweeping and inaccurate terms as a "failed experiment." He did not take on the nuanced questions that faced the Court in the Rowley case. How does one balance the value of translators in improving a deaf student's skills against their potentially high costs? On what basis does one conclude that a disabled student is entitled to aid to help her reach an arbitrary level of proficiency but no more? Roberts deflects all of this, and tends to rely on labels. The word "activist" appears three times in two sentences.
Women and Discrimination
Roberts's campaign against remedies for sex discrimination also began in 1982. The issue was how to interpret Title IX of the Education Amendment of 1972, which had become invaluable for fighting sex discrimination on America's college campuses. The basic precept of Title IX was the same as that of Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which barred federal agencies from subsidizing racial discrimination. John Kennedy had stated the rationale eloquently:
Simple justice requires that public funds to which all races contribute not be spent in any fashion which encourages, subsidizes or results in racial discrimination.
Title VI had been indispensable in providing the legal instrument for dismantling racial segregation in schools, colleges, and hospitals. So, too, when Title IX was adopted it gave hope to women denied faculty positions because of their gender, for example, and offered new opportunities to girls and women in athletics.
Pragmatists in Congress and in the executive branch recognized that there was no practical way to limit the impact of federal funds to the particular departments or offices that received those funds. Money was fungible and to the extent that discrimination existed anywhere in an institution, federal funds could facilitate that discrimination. So for years federal administrators treated the entire public university or school system as the recipient of the federal funds. These could be withdrawn if discrimination against women was shown. When after years of wide acceptance a lower federal court rejected that view in 1982, John Roberts urged that the decision not be appealed. "Under Title IX federal investigations cannot rummage wily-nily [sic] through institutions," Roberts wrote to Attorney General Smith,
but can only go so far as the federal funds go.... The women's groups pressuring us to appeal would have regulatory agencies usurp power denied to them by Congress to achieve an anti-discrimination goal.
Roberts's view ultimately prevailed in the Supreme Court in Grove City v. Bell (1984). But Senator Ted Kennedy and other Democratic and Republican leaders, startled by the decision's crabbed interpretation of civil rights law, reinstituted the broader construction with the Civil Rights Restoration Act of 1988, which had the effect of increasing the powers of the government to penalize discrimination against women. Roberts was not done, however, with initiatives to limit redress for victims of sex discrimination and returned to the issue when he joined the solicitor general's office.
The Solicitor General Years
After three and a half years in private practice, Roberts returned to the federal government in 1989 as principal deputy solicitor general, under Kenneth Starr. In this new capacity, while he supported civil rights claims in one case before the court, arguing that desegregation obligations be strengthened at colleges and universities in Mississippi, his work was mostly a resumption of his campaign against extending remedies for civil rights violations.
Damages for Sexual Harassment
In 1991 a case involving a student's claim against a school district for its failure to prevent or redress her having been sexually harassed by one of its teachers reached the Supreme Court. The question was whether the student should have a right to recover compensatory damages for the violation of Title IX. The federal government argued that although the statute created an implied right of action for victims of discrimination to sue, there could be no implied right to recover damages.
The solicitor general's brief, signed by Roberts and others, said that although the United States was not a party in the case, it had a strong "interest in assuring that private remedies do not unduly interfere with...programs [funded by Title IX]." Of course, Title IX was designed specifically to "interfere" with such programs if they involved discrimination.
A unanimous Court, including Justices Scalia and Thomas, upheld the student's claim. Roberts was thus defeated for the second time in his efforts to limit protections against instances of sex discrimination that were federally subsidized, the first time by Congress and then by a unanimous Court.
Ending School Desegregation Decrees
Roberts had better luck in two efforts to persuade the Supreme Court to allow school districts to bring to an end their obligations under Brown v. Board of Education to establish and maintain desegregated school systems. In a case from Oklahoma City, Solicitor General Starr, while acknowledging the Supreme Court's previous ruling that school segregation practices had helped produce racially segregated housing, suggested that the relationship was too tenuous to justify continued court supervision. In the second case, involving DeKalb County, a suburb of Atlanta, the question was whether a school district could be freed from its obligations piecemeal, that is, if it complied with some but not all of the elements of a desegregation decree. The solicitor general's brief answered affirmatively, following Roberts's previous approach that it was possible to consider civil rights violations individually. In both cases, a divided Supreme Court agreed with the solicitor general. Thus the school district could satisfy its obligation to hire both black and white teachers but could be released from that obligation even if the school district was not fully desegregated.
Justice Thurgood Marshall said in dissent that the desegregation order should not be lifted "so long as conditions likely to inflict the stigmatic injury in Brown I persist and there remain feasible methods of eliminating such conditions." Nowhere in the government's brief is there a recognition of these conditions—of the isolation, humiliation, and denial of opportunity that segregation inflicted or the need to take practical steps to remedy them.
Some have said that Roberts's views expressed in government briefs during his time in the solicitor general's office should not be held against him because he was "just a lawyer representing a client." While that view may be persuasive when it involves lawyers who were civil servants in that office and were bound to follow government policy if they wanted to hold on to their jobs, it is unconvincing in the case of John Roberts. He held the number two position in the office—principal deputy solicitor, popularly known as the "political deputy." He was a policy maker, not a policy follower.
There is another reason why Roberts should be held accountable for his actions in the solicitor general's office. That office, while part of the executive branch, has a unique responsibility to guide the Supreme Court to the "right" result in cases before them (a responsibility that has led some to dub the office "the tenth justice"). At least three times in the past, solicitors general have refused to participate in cases where they believed the policies they were directed to follow by the administration were wrong. That was not a dilemma faced by John Roberts. Indeed in several civil rights cases his briefs were merely extensions of policies he had advocated in his previous stints at the Justice Department and the White House. Indeed, in the unlikely event that Roberts had changed his mind on a policy, and the expressed views in the case were dictated by Solicitor General Starr, Roberts could simply have refrained from signing the briefs.
The record made by John Roberts in his decade of public service clearly documents his single-minded focus on limiting legal protections and opportunities for African-Americans, Latinos, alien children, people with disabilities, women, and others. How is one to account for his hostility to civil rights?
"Judicial restraint," the usual explanation conservatives give for opposing court decisions that expand rights or remedies, is a phrase rarely used by Roberts except when he makes a favorable passing reference to it in his memos. One will search in vain in his writings for a thoughtful discussion of the kind Justice Felix Frankfurter frequently engaged in, seeking to balance the need for restraint against assertions of important interests and rights. The omission is particularly glaring since Roberts has supported the actions of the Supreme Court in striking down acts of Congress that provided remedies for violence against women, and that barred the sale of handguns near public schools as exceeding congressional power under the commerce clause.
Worse still, if Roberts believed in the need for the protection of civil and constitutional rights but thought the courts were the wrong place to argue for them, he was in a position that enabled him to urge new legislative measures in Congress. But Roberts opposed a law that would prevent the dilution of newly won minority voting rights. And his record is bare of any other constructive suggestions to protect those rights. Indeed, in a brief opposing policies of the Federal Communications Commission to increase minority ownership of radio and broadcast stations, Roberts and his colleagues in the solicitor general's office said Congress could mandate such policies only if it met rigorous standards in setting forth the facts to justify the policies. This was not an issue that troubled him when he was arguing for court-stripping bills. While the solicitor general's brief did not find an adequate congressional basis for appealing the FCC policies, a divided Court did.
Nowhere is there a statement of the values that animate Roberts's apparent belief that government should play only the most limited part in helping or protecting people. From the record we have,[*] we can only conclude that there is not a large space in his thinking for Madison's concerns about the dangers of dominant majorities or the concerns in the Bill of Rights for the rights of minorities to speak, assemble, and practice their religion.
It is doubtful that Justice Roberts will be guided by Justice Harlan Stone's famous footnote in the Carolene Products case:
Prejudice against discrete and insular minorities may be a special condition which tends seriously to curtail the operation of those political processes to be ordinarily relied upon to protect minorities and which may call for a correspondingly more searching judiciary inquiry.
It is possible of course to articulate a very different kind of vision of this country—one in which everyone fends for himself and government is limited to defending citizens against foreign enemies and crime. But that is not the vision contained in our founding documents or in our history over the past seventy-five years. To articulate such a vision, Roberts would have to find a persuasive response to an observation that Congressman Don Edwards made to Roberts's comrade-in-arms William Bradford Reynolds at a hearing in 1981:
You and I are white male attorneys. We come from families with some money and were educated in the right schools. Unless we behaved very stupidly, the family and institutional support systems guaranteed a place for us. We benefited from a racial spoils system.
One suspects that Roberts will avoid this portrayal during his confirmation hearings. But the question remains whether he can do so convincingly. Senator Arlen Specter said before the nomination that "it would be useful... to have somebody...who's been out in the world and has a more varied background" than just that of a career lawyer or jurist. Of course, there have been previous nominees who have led a fairly cloistered life and then turned out to be judges powerfully in touch with the world. Justice David Souter comes to mind.
David Broder noted of Judge Roberts, "You can search his record in vain for examples of his sensitivity to the impact of the law on people's lives." There can be no doubt that in the hearings Roberts will be a good advocate for himself as he has been for others. But in the end it is the record that counts, and the record is damning.
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WHY ARE CONSCIENTIOUS DEMOCRTATIC SENATORS DEMANDING THAT THE BUSH REGIME TURN OVER THE ROBERTS DOCUMENTS BEFORE THEY VOTE ON HIS NOMINATION?
It's hard to imagine we could be in so topsy-turvey a world that U.S. Senators-- of either party-- would accept a nomination, and for no less a position than for the lifetime appointment of the head of the 3rd branch of government-- WITHOUT a thorough examination of his background. But the far right Republican machine demands as much from its rubber stamp Senate. Last week THE WASHINGTON POST published a story, WORK ON RIGHTS MIGHT ILLUMINATE VIEWS-- DEMAOCRATS SEEK PAPERS, BUT ADMINISTRATION BALKS, by Jo Becker that illustrates the importance of these papers. It is clear that the Bush Regime doesn't want no stinkin' illumination. They just want to get their steath extremist candidate into the office from which he can wreak havoc on America for decades. Here's the POST story:
In 1990, the Federal Communications Commission asked the first Bush administration to defend a policy aimed at encouraging more minority ownership of broadcast stations. As the number two man in the solicitor general's office, John G. Roberts Jr. played a critical role in the government's decision to reject the request, according to documents that came to light yesterday.
The case was one of hundreds that Roberts, President Bush's pick to become chief justice of the United States, handled during his tenure from 1989 to 1993 as principal deputy solicitor general. It is also one of 16 cases that Democrats are demanding to learn more about as they prepare for next week's confirmation hearings, a request they renewed yesterday.
The documents offer a rare glimpse into a time in Roberts's life that has remained largely shrouded, on an issue that is likely to be central to next week's hearings: Roberts's civil rights record.
Under then-Solicitor General Kenneth W. Starr, Roberts tackled a host of controversial issues, questioning the legality of affirmative action programs and co-writing a brief arguing that Roe. v. Wade , the 1973 case that legalized abortion nationwide, should be overturned.
The White House, however, has refused to turn over memos and other documents Roberts wrote during that time frame, contending it would have a chilling effect on the advice the government receives from its lawyers. Meanwhile, Roberts has argued that the positions he took on behalf of the government were not necessarily his own.
But Roberts had an influential hand in shaping the government's arguments, at least in the case involving a challenge to the FCC's policy of giving minorities an edge when it came to the awarding of radio and television broadcast licenses, according to documents found at the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library in Texas and provided by a source opposed to his confirmation as chief justice.
The FCC's policy was adopted at the urging of Congress, and the solicitor general's office usually defends agencies such as the FCC against legal challenges. But a Jan. 9, 1990, handwritten memo found in the files of Associate White House Counsel Fred Nelson suggested that Roberts was behind the office's refusal to do so. "John Roberts at SG handling. Reluctant to defend commission's position," the memo said.
The case had the potential to sweep aside similar minority preference programs throughout the federal government. Three days later, the chairman of the FCC wrote to then-Attorney General Richard L. Thornburgh, asking that he persuade the solicitor general's office to reconsider. Because Starr had recused himself, Roberts was acting as solicitor general. His view prevailed in the administration, and he went on to argue that the FCC's policy violated the 14th Amendment's equal-protection clause because it unfairly discriminated based on race.
The Supreme Court did not agree, ruling 5 to 4 against him; five years later, however, the high court reversed course in another case that invalidated many minority contracting programs.
Unlike internal documents in the solicitor general's office, the memos in the FCC case come from files outside that office that are subject to public records law. Because the solicitor general files are not subject to the same laws, Roberts's reasoning on this and many other cases remains unknown, and it is impossible to know how vigorously he pressed his own views.
Ralph G. Neas, president of the People for the American Way Foundation, which opposes Roberts's nomination, said the FCC documents "underscore the need for the Bush administration to stop stonewalling and turn over the solicitor general's memos."
The solicitor general is often known as "the 10th justice" because the office so frequently argues before the Supreme Court, representing government agencies and intervening in cases in which the federal government has an interest. Roberts's position as principal deputy solicitor general was the highest appointment he held before he was nominated to his current post as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.
In a letter sent yesterday to Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales, the eight Democratic senators on the Judiciary Committee argued that Roberts's memos from that time frame are of "unparalleled relevance" to the Senate's constitutionally mandated duty to evaluate his fitness to serve on the Supreme Court. They chastised the Bush administration for what they called a "wholly inadequate response" to repeated requests to turn them over.
The documents, they argued, are all the more important now that Roberts has been chosen as a candidate to head the court, replacing the late Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist instead of retiring Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
When Rehnquist was nominated to become chief justice, some documents from his stint in the Justice Department that normally would have been shielded by attorney-client privilege were given to the Senate. When former solicitor general Robert H. Bork was nominated to the Supreme Court in 1987, he, too, turned over some of the same kind of material.
"President Bush should provide the information . . . rather than hiding behind a privilege that doesn't exist and encouraging Roberts to not answer questions," said Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.). "The American people deserve to know who John Roberts is and where he stands on the vital issues before the country."
But with Republicans in firm control of the Senate and Judiciary Committee Chairman Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) opposed to the request, all Democrats can do is urge the White House to reconsider.
While tens of thousands of pages from Roberts's days as a lawyer in the Reagan administration have been obtained under public records requests, the White House has said Roberts's memos from his tenure as principal deputy solicitor general are rightfully exempt. Administration officials argue that they are protecting an important principle: Lawyers in the solicitor general's office must be able to freely exchange ideas in cases in which they represent the American public, they say.
That position was supported by seven former solicitors general of both parties, who signed a letter objecting to a Senate request for similar memos written by Miguel A. Estrada, a Bush nominee to a federal appeals court slot.
Former solicitor general Walter E. Dellinger III, a Clinton appointee who co-signed the letter, said yesterday that there are key differences between Roberts and Estrada, not the least of which is that Roberts was a top political appointee to the solicitor general's office, while Estrada was not.
"There are legitimate arguments on both sides," Dellinger said. "But the fact that this is the Supreme Court makes it a closer question, although it is one I haven't taken a position on."
Former solicitor general Theodore B. Olson, who served under President George H.W. Bush, was more forceful. If members of Congress were asked to turn over private internal memos, they would be outraged, he said. Memos by solicitors general contain information that is private for a reason, he said, such as criticism of various judges or outlines of the weaknesses in the government's case.
"You can't get the kind of frank, confidential advice that you need if someone knows that it is going to eventually be made public," he said.
Ralph Neas, President of People For the American Way, is one of the strongest advocates for turning down Bush's unfortunately, but predictable, choice of extreme right-wing judicial activist and vicious partisan hack John Roberts as the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Neas has spoken out about what a terrible Supreme Court judge Roberts was likely to be before Bush decided to elevate the nomination to level of Chief Judge at the death of one of Roberts' mentors and collaborators, the execrable William Rehnquist. Below is a People For the American Way press release by Neas entitled "John Roberts: The Wrong Choice for Associate Justice, An Even Worse Choice for Chief Justice."
The death of Chief Justice William Rehnquist and President Bush’s nomination of John Roberts to succeed Rehnquist have raised the stakes for the Court and the American people exponentially. If confirmed, Roberts would not be one among eight Associate Justices, as when he was initially nominated to replace Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. Instead, he would become the nation’s highest ranking judicial officer, with unique powers, influence and responsibilities beyond those of the Associate Justices.
Last month, after an exhaustive examination of John Roberts’ public record, we concluded that Roberts’ confirmation as an Associate Justice should be opposed. As set forth in two lengthy, detailed reports, we based that conclusion in large measure on Roberts’ record of disregard for the laws and remedies that protect Americans from discrimination and his longtime efforts to restrict the role of the courts in upholding Americans’ rights and legal protections. To an even greater degree, Roberts’ record and the nature of the power and responsibilities of the Chief Justice make Roberts the wrong choice for this powerful lifetime position as the 17th Chief Justice in our nation’s history.
The Importance of the Chief Justice
The Chief Justice of the United States is one of our nation’s most important and influential public officials. Indeed, as Chief Justice Rehnquist frequently noted, his correct title was “Chief Justice of the United States,” not merely “Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.” Although the Supreme Court is made up of nine Justices, the Chief Justice has formal and informal powers, duties and responsibilities that exceed those of the eight Associate Justices, giving the Chief Justice a significant opportunity to shape the federal judiciary and the course of American law. Thus, the importance of who is confirmed to succeed Chief Justice Rehnquist cannot be overstated.
“The Chief Justice, as presiding officer of the Court, is responsible by statute for its administration, in addition to hearing cases and writing opinions.” One of the most important powers wielded by the Chief Justice is the power to assign the writing of the Court’s opinion in each case in which the Chief Justice is in the majority. Who writes the Court’s opinion in a particular case is critically important, since how the opinion is written –- its breadth and scope, its nuances, its reasoning –- affects not only the outcome of that case but sets judicial precedent for other cases as well, perhaps for decades to come. John Roberts’ disturbing record, as detailed in our reports, now takes on even greater importance given that Roberts, if confirmed as Chief Justice, would have the authority to determine who writes the Court’s opinion in particular cases.
The Chief Justice also has the power to influence the Court’s workload and thus how many and which cases the Court hears. Indeed, according to one report published during Chief Justice Rehnquist’s tenure, “[o]ne of Rehnquist’s proudest achievements as chief justice has been to pare the court’s docket. The Burger court heard oral arguments in 160 or more cases every term. Rehnquist and his colleagues hear half as many cases. . . . Rehnquist has pushed to minimize federal jurisprudence at every level.” Clearly, the number of cases the Court hears, and which cases it chooses to hear, are matters of vital importance to the interpretation of federal constitutional and statutory law and thus to the preservation of Americans’ rights and freedoms.
Significantly, John Roberts has troubling views about the courts and the ability of Americans to turn to them for redress. He has claimed that the courts frequently engage in “judicial policymaking” and “have been drawn by litigants before them into areas properly and constitutionally belonging to the other branches or to the states.” “[T]oo frequently,” he has written, courts have “attempted to resolve disputes not properly within their province.” In fact, Roberts responded to a suggestion intended to allow the Supreme Court to hear more cases by saying:
[I]t strikes me as misguided to take action to permit them to do more. There are practical limits on the capacity of the Justices, and those limits are a significant check preventing the Court from usurping even more of the prerogatives of the other branches. The generally-accepted notion that the Court can only hear roughly 150 cases each term gives the same sense of reassurance as the adjournment of the Court in July, when we know that the Constitution is safe for the summer.
Roberts even stated that “there is much to be said for changing life tenure to a term of years” for federal judges, in part because of his view that the federal judiciary “usurps the roles of the political branches.” And during his tenure in the Reagan Administration, Roberts took a position to the right of ultraconservative Ted Olson and supported the constitutionality of proposals to strip the Supreme Court of jurisdiction over cases concerning school desegregation, abortion, and school prayer, as well as proposals to strip lower federal courts of jurisdiction to order busing as a remedy in school segregation cases.
In addition, as we have documented, Roberts has attempted to reduce the ability of Americans to seek justice though the courts. For example, he has worked to make it harder for individuals to enforce rights granted them under federal law, and has advanced arguments that would make it harder for Congress to grant statutory standing to individuals whose rights have been violated. He has argued for strict limits on the nature of injuries the courts can address, making it difficult for plaintiffs to gain standing to bring suit in the public interest. Roberts has been hostile to prisoners’ habeas corpus petitions, and has even suggested eliminating the federal rule that prevents illegally obtained evidence from being used against a defendant in court. Throughout his career, Roberts has advocated legal theories that would deprive Americans of access to justice in the federal courts on civil rights, reproductive freedom, environmental protections, religious liberty, and other crucial subjects.
Someone with such a record concerning Americans’ ability to seek justice through the courts, and with such an uncharitable view of the courts generally and the Supreme Court specifically, is the wrong choice to be the most important judge in our country. This conclusion is reinforced by the fact that the duties of the Chief Justice “extend far beyond the Court. He is responsible for the administrative leadership of the entire federal judicial system.”
Law professors Judith Resnik and Theodore Ruger have recently explained just how much power is wielded by the Chief Justice as a result of these responsibilities, observing that,
[i]n essence, the chief justice is the chief executive officer of a bureaucracy of some 1,200 life-tenured judges, 850 more magistrate and bankruptcy judges, and a staff of 30,000. He is the chair of the policy-setting body -- the Judicial Conference of the United States -- that establishes the priorities for the federal judiciary, including overseeing its budget, now about $5.43 billion annually. The chief justice appoints the director of the Administrative Office of the United States Courts, and, together, they select the judges who sit on judicial committees focused on topics from technology to international judicial relations.
In addition, the Chief Justice chooses the members of important specialized courts, including the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which meets in secrecy and which, “since its creation in 1978 has approved over 10,000 government requests for surveillance warrants.” The Chief Justice “also picks the 255 people who sit on the 24 committees of the judiciary, including those that make the rules for litigants. Whether a civil litigant, a prosecutor, a criminal defendant or a bankruptcy petitioner, litigants must comply with requirements described in federal rules, all crafted by committees whose members are selected by the chief.”
Chief Justice Rehnquist demonstrated how much the judge who holds all these powers can use them off the Court to advance particular ideological beliefs, and to do so in tandem with his decision making on the bench. For example, in his 1994 year-end annual report to Congress on the federal judiciary, Chief Justice Rehnquist claimed that “[t]here is considerable sentiment in the federal judiciary at the present time against further expansion of federal jurisdiction into areas which have been previously the province of state courts enforcing state laws.” Then in 1995, Rehnquist wrote the Court’s opinion in United States v. Lopez, 514 U.S. 549 (1995), a 5-4 ruling dramatically reinterpreting the Commerce Clause to hold that Congress had no authority under the Constitution to make gun possession near schools a federal crime and striking down the Gun-Free School Zones Act.
Roberts is simply the wrong person to exercise the enormous powers and unique influence of the Chief Justice, both on and off the bench.
America cannot afford a “Roberts Court”
Following President Bush’s September 5 announcement that he intended to nominate John Roberts to succeed Chief Justice Rehnquist rather than Justice O’Connor, some have suggested that Roberts is ideologically similar to Rehnquist (for whom Roberts clerked), so that Roberts’ confirmation would not significantly affect the Court. There are several fallacies with these views.
First, every nominee to the Court, no matter who he or she is replacing, must be independently fit and qualified to serve on the Court and must satisfy the important criteria for confirmation. As more than 200 law professors explained in a letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee in July 2001, no federal judicial nominee is presumptively entitled to confirmation. Because federal judicial appointments are for life and significantly affect the rights of all Americans, nominees must demonstrate that they meet appropriate criteria for confirmation by the Senate, which is entrusted by the Constitution with the duty to make an independent evaluation of the president’s nominees.
According to the law professors’ letter, these criteria include not only “an exemplary record in the law,” but also a “commitment to protecting the rights of ordinary Americans and [not placing] the interests of the powerful over those of individual citizens,” a “record of commitment to the progress made on civil rights, women’s rights and individual liberties,” and a “respect for the constitutional role Congress plays in promoting these rights and health and safety protections, and ensuring recourse when these rights are breached.” These criteria are even more important in the case of someone nominated to our nation’s highest court, and still more important when that person has been nominated to be the Chief Justice.
As we have already demonstrated in our reports examining Roberts’ record, he does not satisfy these important criteria for confirmation. In particular, he has not demonstrated a commitment to protecting constitutional safeguards, respecting the role of the Congress, and understanding the impact of the law and the Court on the lives of individual Americans. Throughout his career, Roberts has shown a pattern of working from powerful positions to undermine Americans’ rights and liberties rather than uphold them.
During the past 25 years, Roberts worked to resist the important progress America has made in realizing the Constitution’s promise of equal justice under law. It is clear that his confirmation to the Supreme Court would jeopardize many of the legal and constitutional protections that Americans enjoy and would undermine the nation’s hard-won progress in civil rights and equal opportunity, privacy and reproductive choice, environmental protection, and religious liberty. He would strengthen the power of the presidency, already dangerously expanded by President Bush. All of this, which was of great concern when Roberts was nominated to fill Justice O’Connor’s seat, is of even greater concern now that he has been nominated to be Chief Justice.
Moreover, there is evidence in Roberts’ record indicating that he would be even more conservative than was Chief Justice Rehnquist in a number of significant areas of the law. For example, although the records of both Roberts and Rehnquist have been negative toward women’s rights and the laws that protect women from discrimination, Roberts’ record is even more troubling. In Franklin v. Gwinnett County Public Schools, 503 U.S. 60 (1992), Roberts, then the Principal Deputy Solicitor General, urged the Supreme Court to hold that victims of unlawful sex discrimination under Title IX could not obtain monetary damages, a position that would have left some victims of discrimination, including the plaintiff in that sexual harassment case, without any remedy at all. Roberts’ efforts to limit Title IX in this manner were rejected by a unanimous Court that included Chief Justice Rehnquist.
There are other important areas of the law in which Roberts’ record indicates that he may well be to the right of Chief Justice Rehnquist. For example, in the religious liberty case of Locke v. Davey, 540 U.S. 712 (2004), Chief Justice Rehnquist wrote the Court’s opinion holding that the state of Washington was not required to fund the education of a college student studying for the ministry, even though the state subsidized secular education. Roberts, however, has a long record of favoring government endorsement and support of religion that might well have caused him to rule differently than Rehnquist did in Davey (as did Justices Scalia and Thomas), and to require a state to fund religious education when it funds secular education, despite a state constitutional prohibition on such funding.
And in Nevada Dep’t of Human Resources v. Hibbs, 538 U.S. 721 (2003), Chief Justice Rehnquist wrote the Court’s opinion holding that state employees have the right to seek monetary damages from their employer for violating the federal Family and Medical Leave Act, rejecting the “states’ rights” claim that Congress has no authority to protect the rights of individual Americans in this manner. Roberts’ record, however, indicates that he takes a narrow view of congressional power that might well have caused him to rule differently than Rehnquist did in Hibbs, and seek to undermine the FMLA.
But even if Roberts proves to be not appreciably more conservative than was Chief Justice Rehnquist, from the perspective of Americans’ rights and interests the prospect of twenty, thirty or more years of a Chief Justice who shares Rehnquist’s judicial ideology is not a situation to be desired. To the contrary, several more decades of a “Rehnquist Court” would be significantly harmful to America.
Among other things, Chief Justice Rehnquist was the leader of an activist Court that from 1995 to 2000 alone struck down in whole or in part more than 22 laws passed by Congress, in contrast to the 128 struck down during the first 200 years of the Constitution. Between 1987, shortly after Rehnquist became Chief Justice, and 2002, the Court struck down in whole or in part some 33 federal laws. This assertion of judicial power has been called “one of the most important constitutional shifts in decades.” One Supreme Court expert has stated that “[n]ot since before the 1937 constitutional crisis over the court’s invalidation of progressive New Deal legislation has a bare majority been so bent on reining in Congress.”
In particular, Rehnquist was an architect of the new “federalism” revolution, leading a narrow 5-4 majority of the Court that overturned laws protecting Americans against discrimination and that protected our public well being. These included 5-4 rulings that struck down key parts of the Violence Against Women Act, that held the Gun-Free School Zones Act to be unconstitutional, and that held that state employees cannot sue their employers for money damages for violating the Americans with Disabilities Act or the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. Even if, as some have assumed, Roberts were expected to do no more than continue in Rehnquist’s ideological footsteps, that would be sufficiently harmful to this country in and of itself to warrant strong opposition to his confirmation.
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Professor Laurence Tribe has written that “[i]n the twentieth century the changing of the Chiefs has translated into an important difference in the Court’s direction.” Indeed, the power of the Chief Justice to shape the direction of the law and thus of the rights and freedoms of all Americans is illustrated by the appointment of Earl Warren to replace Chief Justice Vinson. As Professor Tribe describes it,
most observers believe that Chief Justice Fred Vinson was ambivalent about the constitutionality of school segregation, and uncertain about what position he would take after hearing arguments in a series of cases in 1953. Instead of deciding the cases, the Court ordered their reargument the following year. In the interim, Vinson died and a new Chief Justice, Earl Warren, took his place. The new Chief not only wrote the Court’s precedent-shattering decision in Brown v. Board of Education, signaling the end of segregated public schools in this country, but also worked with his Associate Justices to develop an opinion that could be announced unanimously. That the Court spoke with a single, authoritative voice in Brown added immeasurably to the ruling’s credibility in the face of widespread and bitter resistance.
According to Professor Tribe, “one Chief may make all the difference in the constitutional world.”
Chief Justice Rehnquist served on the Court since 1972, and as Chief Justice since 1986. If John Roberts, who is only 50, were to be confirmed as Chief Justice, it is likely that he could serve for thirty years or more. The confirmation of a successor to Chief Justice Rehnquist is of critical importance to this country and to the future of the rights, freedoms and interests of every American for years and most likely decades to come. Based on John Roberts’ record, it is clear that he is the wrong choice to serve as this country’s most important and powerful judge.
A RADICAL ROBERTS COURT-
President Bush has nominated a true ideological conservative to the most powerful judicial position in the country. So why are Democrats shying away from a big fight?
By Mary Lynn F. Jones, AlterNet.
Sept 12, 2005
With a shortened timetable and a higher position at stake, members of the Senate Judiciary Committee will today begin considering the nomination of Judge John G. Roberts Jr. to serve as the 17th chief justice of the United States.
Already, Roberts -- who was first tapped to succeed retiring Associate Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, then nominated to the court's top job after the death earlier this month of Chief Justice William Rehnquist -- had the opportunity at age 50 to shape the court for decades to come. If confirmed, he would be the youngest chief justice since the legendary John Marshall in 1801.
Although the chief justice's vote counts the same as those of his eight colleagues, he has more than 60 statutory duties, which include running the justices' conferences; deciding who among the justices should draft decisions; setting the initial agenda as to which cases the court should consider; and leading the Judicial Conference, which, among other things, issues ethics guidelines for federal judges.
The chief justice also presides over impeachment trials; chooses members of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, which allows the government to conduct secret national security surveillance; and serves as the head of the judicial branch of government.
Given the responsibilities of the job -- and President Bush's chance to nominate a second candidate to succeed O'Connor -- choosing about a quarter of the court's members will likely be one of Bush's most important acts as president.
Roberts' confirmation hearings, originally slated to begin last week, were delayed due to Rehnquist's death and congressional response to the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Senate Republicans hope the Judiciary Committee hearings -- which will include opening statements today, as well as testimony from Roberts and more than two dozen other witnesses -- will wrap up later this week. That would allow the entire Senate to vote on Roberts' nomination the week of Sept. 26, so he can be seated before the court's new term begins on Oct. 3.
Bush nominated Roberts to succeed Rehnquist just two days after the late justice's death, eager to avoid a long and contentious confirmation fight as his administration battles criticism of its response to the devastating hurricane. In announcing Roberts' nomination, Bush remarked, "The Senate is well along in the process of considering Judge Roberts' qualifications. They know his record and his fidelity to the law. I'm confident that the Senate can complete hearings and confirm him as chief justice within a month."
Democrats, however, have not agreed to a timetable, with Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., saying in a statement that Roberts' new nomination makes Senate consideration of him "even more important. ... The Senate must be vigilant in considering this nomination." Senate Judiciary Committee Ranking Member Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., promised that Democrats will ask "substantial questions" about Roberts.
Last week, Judiciary Committee Democrats repeated their request to Attorney General Alberto Gonzales to be able to look at 16 of the Supreme Court cases Roberts handled when he worked for then-Solicitor General Ken Starr in the first Bush administration. The senators noted that similar documents were made available to the committee during Rehnquist's confirmation hearings for the chief justice job in 1986. An earlier request to Gonzales resulted in a letter from an assistant attorney general who refused to discuss the senators' request.
Roberts -- who once clerked for Rehnquist and carried his flag-draped coffin up the Supreme Court steps as one of his pallbearers last week -- was originally Bush's choice for the court's top position before O'Connor stunned Washington in July by announcing her retirement and Rehnquist pledged to continue serving as chief justice despite battling thyroid cancer. So Bush named Roberts to the associate justice position.
Since his initial nomination in July, Roberts was considered likely to win confirmation for the O'Connor seat and is still expected to be confirmed as chief justice. "Democrats are in open disarray in the Senate," said Jonathan Turley, a law professor at George Washington University. "This is not the type of fight you win by coming late to it."
Last week, Senate Minority Whip Richard Durbin, D-Ill., told Roll Call that Bush did not consult at all with Democrats in nominating Roberts in July, while Sens. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., and Ben Nelson, D-Neb., said they thought the consultation process worked well.
Part of the reason is that Roberts' confirmation failed to trip the "extraordinary circumstances" clause of the agreement by the so-called Gang of 14 bipartisan senators. Several Democrats in states Bush carried in 2004, and who are up for reelection next year, have indicated that they plan to support Roberts.
Given Roberts' short tenure as an appellate judge and the administration's refusal to turn over some of Roberts' documents, the main job for Democrats in this week's hearings will be to sniff out Roberts' positions on issues such as abortion rights and affirmative action.
When he was nominated to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit two years ago, Roberts said that Roe v. Wade was "the settled law of the land." But in 1990, representing the first Bush administration, he said the 1973 decision should be overturned. As the high court's chief officer rather than a lower-court judge, Roberts may feel freer to exercise his own judgment on the issue.
In the weeks leading up to today's hearings, interest groups on both sides of the aisle have focused on Roberts' nomination. Progress for America, a conservative advocacy group that favors Roberts, held a two-week tour of 14 states promoting Roberts' confirmation. Speakers on the tour included Ben Ginsberg, who served as national counsel to the Bush-Cheney campaign in 2000 and 2004, and Victoria Toensing, a former deputy assistant attorney general and chief counsel to the Senate Intelligence Committee.
The group also launched a $400,000 ad buy on Fox and CNN starting August 31 called "Precedent," which showed Sen. Joe Biden, D-Del., informing then-nominee Ruth Bader Ginsburg at her 1993 confirmation hearings that she could choose which questions to answer. The group says in the ad that Roberts also "should not answer questions that force him to pre-judge cases."
Several progressive interest groups, including People for the American Way, remain opposed to Roberts, whose record "continues to be troubling," according to the group's vice president and legal director, Elliot Mincberg. The most important role for senators, he added, is to "ask and insist on straight answers to the right questions," such as Roberts' view on Roe v. Wade.
Other issues likely to be raised in hearings include what Roberts will do to build consensus on the court, his views on church-states issues, and whether to allow cameras in the court.
But both sides are already looking ahead to the next court fight, which could be even more important, given O'Connor's swing vote. (O'Connor has agreed to remain on the court until her replacement is confirmed.) After first saying he would choose O'Connor's successor "in a timely manner," Bush later said that "the list is wide open, which should create some good speculation here in Washington."
O'Connor and first lady Laura Bush said earlier that they hoped Bush would choose a woman to succeed the court's first female justice, although the nomination of a Hispanic, such as Gonzales, would give Bush a place in history.
Last week, Senate Democrats, including Reid, sent Bush a letter asking him to consult with them in choosing O'Connor's successor more than he did in selecting Roberts. "It is especially important to identify a consensus candidate to succeed Justice O'Connor, who has been a voice of reason and moderation," they wrote.
Mincberg called the list of names in Washington circulation -- including several people Bush passed over in favor of Roberts, such as Gonzales and appellate court judges Edith Brown Clement and Edith Hollan Jones -- "extremely, extremely troubling." He added, "Our concern is with the list as a whole, where there are many people in the mold of [Justices Antonin] Scalia and [Clarence] Thomas and not in the mold of O'Connor."
Experts are split on what kind of nominee Bush will name. Anger over the administration's hurricane response and growing opposition to the war in Iraq may lead Bush to nominate a more moderate associate justice. On the other hand, Bush tends not to shy away from "hard fights," Turley said, and he is likely to face continuing pressure from his conservative base.
The problem facing Democrats now, Turley added, is that if they vote to confirm Roberts, it will be hard to argue ideologically against the candidate Bush puts forward to succeed O'Connor. "Roberts could not be more conservative on most issues," Turley said.
Ralph Neas and People For the American Way sent out an important memo to the media today explaining Roberts hemming, hawing and obfuscating-- and misleading-- during his confirmantion hearings. You might want to read it as a guide to help you understand why Roberts is a catastrophe-in-the-making for America.
ROBERTS’ ‘SO-CALLED’ COMMITMENT TO PRIVACY
Double Talk Shows Longstanding Rights Endangered by Roberts Nomination
After yesterday’s bobbing and weaving from Chief Justice nominee John Roberts, you might think Roberts told senators that the Constitution protects rights Americans have come to expect – reproductive choice for women, a right to privacy in our own bedrooms, and the right to make intensely personal medical decisions, such as refusing unwanted medical treatment, without government interference.
You’d be wrong. While Roberts said he believed in a right to privacy under the Constitution, he immediately added that every member of the Supreme Court does, “to some extent or another.”
By saying that he believes in a constitutional right to privacy the way every member of the Court does, Roberts is essentially saying that he would provide virtually no real protection for the right to privacy. Every member of the Court, of course, includes Justices Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas. According to their view, any right to privacy does not encompass a woman’s right to reproductive choice, and both have argued that Roe v. Wade should be overruled. According to their view, any right to privacy apparently does not include the right of consenting adults to be free from criminal prosecution for what they do in the privacy of their own bedrooms, as reflected in their dissents in Lawrence v. Texas. And according to Scalia’s view, the right of privacy does not give even a fully competent adult the right to refuse unwanted medical treatment, as reflected in Scalia's opinion in Cruzan v. Missouri Dept. of Health.
To what extent does Roberts believe in a right to privacy? Beyond the right of married couples to use contraception, recognized in the Griswold decision, Roberts refused to divulge whether he believed a constitutional right to privacy included reproductive choice or end-of-life decisions. Right-wing leaders are apparently comfortable concluding that Roberts “provide[d a] basis for reversing Roe v. Wade,” as one LifeNews headline put it. Pat Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network reported that Roberts “may vote [to] overturn Roe v. Wade,” and that “[p]ro-life groups were happy to hear” his answers on when it is appropriate to overturn settled law. According to a posting on confirmthem.com, a prominent anti-Roe attorney applauded Roberts’ evasion, saying “Roberts’ answer was carefully framed to provide a basis for revisiting and overturning Roe in the future.”
“Judge Roberts’ answer is too clever by half,” said People For the American Way President Ralph G. Neas. “With one breath, he gives false reassurance to Americans who are concerned that a Roberts Court would endanger privacy rights. With the next breath, he signals the far right wing that he could well join Scalia and Thomas in trying to take those rights away.”
Neas said Roberts’s comments are “eerily similar” to the words Clarence Thomas used 14 years ago to respond to the similar questions. A transcript of Roberts’ answers on Tuesday and Thomas’s answers from 1991 are below.
BIDEN/ROBERTS
SEN. JOE BIDEN (D-DE): Now, you have already said to the chairman that you agree that there's a right to privacy. And you said the Supreme Court found such a right in part in the Fourteenth amendment. My question is: Do you agree that -- not what said law is -- what do you think? Do you agree that there is a right of privacy to be found in the liberty clause of the Fourteenth Amendment?
JUDGE ROBERTS: I do, Senator. I think that the court's expressions, and I think if my reading of the precedent is correct, I think every justice on the court believes that, to some extent or another.
Liberty is not limited to freedom from physical restraint. It does cover areas, as you said, such as privacy. And it's not protected only in procedural terms but it is protected substantively as well. Again, I think every member of the court subscribes to that proposition.
If they agree with Bowling against Sharpe, as I'm sure all of them do, they are subscribing to that proposition to some extent or another.
KOHL/ROBERTS
KOHL: … Judge, as we all know, the Griswold v. Connecticut case guarantees that there is a fundamental right to privacy in the Constitution as it applies to contraception. Do you agree with that decision and that there is a fundamental right to privacy as it relates to contraception? In your opinion, is that settled law?
ROBERTS: I agree with the Griswold court's conclusion that marital privacy extends to contraception and availability of that. The court, since Griswold, has grounded the privacy right discussed in that case in the liberty interest protected under the due process clause.
SIMON/THOMAS
SEN. PAUL SIMON [former Democratic of Illinois, now deceased]: …do you consider the right of privacy a fundamental right?
JUDGE THOMAS. Senator, to my knowledge, the Supreme Court, no majority has used the ninth amendment to establish as the basis for a right. Of course, it was used by Justice Goldberg and by Justice Douglas in Griswold. With respect to the approach that I indicated that I thought was the better approach, it was Justice Harlan's approach. But with that said, my bottom line was that I felt that there was a right to privacy in the Constitution, and that the marital right to privacy, of course, is at the core of that, and that the marital right to privacy in my view and certainly the view of the Court is that it is a fundamental right.
For more information, see www.SaveTheCourt.org.
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