By Shawn Macomber on 11.8.04 @ 12:08AM
If you don’t stand by Pat Toomey, Specter happens.
Scant days after President Bush's victory at the polls,
conservative are already going to the mattresses again, to echo the
famous refrain of Corleone family hit man Peter Clemenza in The
Godfather. Their target? Perpetual problem senator, the
liberal Republican Arlen Specter, currently in line to head the
Judiciary Committee, and, thus, wielding considerable sway over
potential Supreme Court nominations.
The election had barely been called for Bush when Specter
strolled into a post-victory press conference, and breezily told
reporters Bush had "no mandate," reassured the world that he
believed Roe v. Wade "inviolate," and, finally, deemed the
appointment of any pro-life justice "unlikely." A day later, in the
midst of the maelstrom of letters, faxes, and calls into various
Republican leaders' offices calling for Specter to be denied his
long-coveted Judiciary Committee chairmanship, Specter backed off
and claimed his statements had been misinterpreted. He even made
the Sunday morning television rounds to reaffirm his fealty
to…well, to whatever slogan would help him survive the
siege.
But his words did not soothe the souls of social conservatives
still basking in the media glow bestowed upon them for swinging the
election Bush's way. Apparently, they were not willing to take
Specter at his word -- and wait for a smoking gun that could come
in the form of a sunken conservative nominee. And why should they?
Senator Specter is, after all, the man who spent primary season
promising to support "strict constructionists" when fighting true
blue conservative Pat Toomey's challenge, only to revise that to
"centrists" once Toomey was out of the way.
Specter's biggest asset in this fight is tradition. There is
certainly nothing "inviolate" about the upcoming committee vote to
recommend a chairman. It is done by secret ballot, and Specter's
fellow GOP committee members could take the wind out of his sails
quickly if they so desired. They could skip right over Specter and
nominate the much more conservatively-palatable Arizona Senator Jon
Kyl. But tradition dictates that the senator with the most
seniority ascends, and, as we are endlessly lectured, senators are
creatures of tradition. Shirking such tradition would be no small
thing.
Social conservatives have other walls to scale, as well. The
White House, via the comments of Karl Rove on Meet the
Press, has made it clear it is in Specter's corner. Senators
Lindsey Graham and Rick Santorum are said to be working feverishly
behind the scenes to save Specter, as well. Senate aides I spoke
with said there was a general uneasiness about the whole business,
even among conservatives who would have just as soon seen Specter
lose last Tuesday as come back to the Capitol and muck up the
agenda.
But let's be honest for a moment here. This situation should not
come as the least bit of a surprise to anyone. This is the senator
who helped invent the verb to bork, for God's sake. He
fought the Bush tax cuts -- vociferously, as Bush himself might say
-- and has been variously supported monetarily by George Soros,
Harold Ickes, Alan Dershowitz, and nearly-First Lady Teresa Heinz
Kerry, who actually made a commercial for him in 1992. In a
fundraising letter sent out to primary voters during his brief 1992
run for president, unearthed by the fine folks over at Grassroots
PA, Specter proclaims a desire to, "give pro-choice Republicans a
voice." Some 2004 campaign signs read, "Kerry & Specter For
Working Families." Unions love the guy. Liberals, too. Few
conservatives would argue with his designation by National
Review's John J. Miller as "the worst senator."
Even this year, the liberal Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's
endorsement said outright that the "best argument" for voting
Specter would be his ability "to block some of the ideologically
extreme federal judges likely to be nominated by President Bush in
a second term, some of them for the Supreme Court." Even more
specifically, the editors wrote, Specter had given his word that
"no extremists would be approved for the bench." Why should we have
expected anything less from him?
And yet, despite all that, the person most to blame for Specter
being in a position to deep six President Bush's judicial nominees
is…President Bush. He's the one, after all, who went before
Pennsylvania conservatives when Specter was on the edge of defeat
and intoned, "I'm here to say it as plainly as I can: Arlen Specter
is the right man for the United States Senate." Bush explained that
Specter might be "a little bit independent-minded sometimes" but,
à la Seinfeld, there is "nothing wrong with that."
Those are the words of our president; the guy we keep hearing has a
mandate.
Not everyone is on board the anti-Specter train. Syndicated radio
host and blogger Hugh Hewitt has recently pointed out that Specter
just won both the Republican primary and general election in his
state, and contends that that should count for something.
"Institutions that are destabilized for expediency's sake do not
regain stability after a convenient alteration," Hewitt
wrote, adding: "For the past four years Republicans have
complained bitterly of Democratic obstructionism that upended the
traditions of the Senate. Should the GOP begin its new period of
dominance with a convenient abandonment of the very rules they have
charged Dems with violating repeatedly?"
It's a reasonable question for even those of us who loathe the
idea of Specter helping to shape the Supreme Court to mull over. It
is easy to upset the apple cart. Not so easy to right it again.
Should conservatives push this through now, they should be fully
prepared for the day when a committee made up of liberal
Republicans snubs a conservative with seniority.
Nevertheless, for asking such a question, Hewitt was dubbed a
"confused conservative" on the website, Not Specter. I have
yet to hear anyone similarly deride George W. Bush or Karl Rove.
But, then again, maybe that's the sort of deference that got us
into this mess to begin with. Perhaps the time to throw a fit was
while Bush was lavishing praise on Specter and pulling his
chestnuts out of the fire, not a week after the election.
topics:
Television, Business, Supreme Court, NATO, Unions