By Quin Hillyer on 6.13.07 @ 12:08AM
What if there's an opening?
So let's imagine, for the fun of it, that when the Supreme Court
closes its term in a few weeks, one justice stands up to read aloud
parts of a strong dissenting opinion in an eagerly awaited, 5-4
decision. Once he finishes his comments on the case, though, he
asks leave to change the subject. Then, to the amazement of
everybody in the courtroom and indeed of almost everybody in the
United States, the justice announces that he is retiring from the
high court, effective immediately.
And thus, by fulfilling his desire to return to his cabin in the
woods, does Justice David Souter begin the biggest, most closely
fought Senate battle of the entire Bush 43 presidency.
What would happen? What would President Bush do? What would
conservatives do? What would the general public think?
It's not out of the realm of reason.
Consider that Souter has never been known to particularly enjoy
the grind and the spotlight of the Supreme Court. And consider that
Souter was appointed by Bush's father, and that he might reason it
would be fitting to retire under a presidency not just of the same
party, but of the same blood -- but with an important twist. From
the standpoint of a liberal such as Souter has proved to be, this
would be a propitious time, because the current Bush is at almost
unprecedented levels of unpopularity, meaning that he will be in
the weakest position possible to replace Souter with a solidly
conservative nominee.
At this point, Souter might reason, Bush will be all but forced
to nominate somebody who is seen as a moderate consensus-builder,
somebody who won't make waves...in short, somebody who is very much
like the image Souter thinks he sees in his own mirror.
This might be what Souter would want. But it's not what Bush
should do. Instead, Bush ought to pick a fight. He ought not only
to try to shore up his base, but also to attract the American
center again -- and he can do it with the same nominee. How?
Because, properly framed, the battle over judges is one in which
the American middle will agree with the American right.
Middle America does not like judges who ignore the Constitution
in order to let private property be seized for the use of other,
bigger, private interests. Middle America does not believe that
partial birth abortion is a constitutional right. Middle America
does not believe in absolute hostility to religion in the public
square. Middle America does not believe (on an issue more symbolic
than substantive) that the Constitution forbids the words "under
God" to be included in the Pledge of Allegiance. Nor does Middle
America believe in racial preferences, overly intrusive regulatory
power at home and at the office, or any number of other results put
into effect by the courts in the past several decades.
A conservative nominee, without deliberately trying to reach
these particular results, would almost certainly be on the same
side as Middle America on all of these issues just by virtue of
hewing closely to the original understanding of the Constitution,
its amendments, and the various statutes on which he might be asked
to rule.
It is known, meanwhile, that Bush is determined to use his next
choice (if he gets one) for a woman or an ethnic minority. Such a
determination, in this case, also will help politically. As long as
a female or, say, Hispanic nominee is well qualified and has an
unthreatening demeanor, she or he will be difficult for moderate
Democrats (and Republicans, for that matter) to oppose.
ABC's superbly knowledgeable Jan Crawford Greenburg recently
reported that the White House short list for any potential opening
includes federal appeals court judges Priscilla Owen, Janice Rogers
Brown, Diane Sykes, and Edith Brown (Joy) Clement, federal district
court judge Loretta Preska of New York, and Florida Supreme Court
judge Raoul Cantero.
Some of those, in particular, look like fine choices to me. I
have written at least a few good things about the first four in the
past. But here's one other name the White House ought to add to its
list: Alice Batchelder of the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court
of Appeals. She reportedly was once on at least the medium-short
list before, when Sandra Day O'Connor and William Rehnquist both
retired.
A solid conservative, but utterly unthreatening in demeanor and
boasting a great middle-American background (do read the
linked piece, above), Judge Batchelder would help Republicans rally
from huge setbacks in the key state of Ohio while presenting a
terrific example with whom a majority of Americans could empathize
and whom a clear majority would admire.
And the two political disadvantages earlier tallied against her
could this time turn out to be a plus. First is her age: She'll be
63 in August. President Bush has previously wanted younger nominees
who would presumably carry on his legacy on the bench for far
longer after he leaves office. But at 63, she still is young enough
to serve beyond any two Democratic terms that might follow Bush,
which might -- in Bush's weakened political state -- be the best
Bush could hope for.
Yet at 63, she also would be more palatable to moderate
Democrats than the other potential nominees, all of whom are
significantly younger and thus would presumably serve even longer
terms. In other words, the Democrats might figure that if they
don't approve Batchelder, they will only be confronted with yet
another nominee who is both politically attractive and
more likely to spend a longer time blocking their (the Democrats')
liberal aims.
The second political disadvantage is a very minor, utterly
inadvertent ethical glitch that came to light a full eight years
ago. As has happened with many other top judges, she did not recuse
herself on some cases involving a company in which her spouse held
stock. In her case, it was her husband's retirement account that,
among a number of other securities, owned stock in the company at
issue.
With the bloodlust of the left at play, the minor apparent
conflict of interest would immediately attract most of the focus of
the Bush opponents and the media. Fine. It's a proverbial briar
patch. Let the left throw her there and waste all their venom
trying to make her suffer from it. The truth is that the example is
old and minor. As ABC's Greenburg wrote in her recent book on
recent court battles, Supreme Conflict, "Scores of judges,
unaware of stocks in a fund or portfolio, had encountered similar
problems over the years." The truth will out, and if the Democrats
try to push this bogus issue too hard against a woman who palpably
exudes integrity, they might engender a public backlash against
themselves.
A battle over Batchelder is a battle Bush, and conservatives,
can win.
Now if only Justice Souter will cooperate....
topics:
Religion, Abortion, Constitution, Supreme Court