By Russ Ferguson on 5.28.08 @ 12:07AM
Who he might choose, assuming a very Democratic Senate.
John McCain effectively has the Republican nomination for
president, and social conservatives are getting a bit wary. Now
accustomed to being listened to by the White House, they're not
keen on giving up their newly acquired power. After the Bush
Administration, they finally have the Supreme Court in a place
where they feel comfortable; but, they know that the judges most
likely to retire next are the ones they disagree with the most --
and if they can just get a President who is sympathetic to them,
they can get a nominee on the Court for life that will
agree with what they so fervently believe in.
Senator McCain, on the other hand, knows that social
conservatives make up a large portion of the vote. Although his
image is that of an independent maverick, he knows he needs the
conservative base to show up and vote for him to even have a chance
of spending a single night in the White House. But he is listening.
He has recently given speeches about judicial nominations to quell
conservative fears that he's just a bit too much of a maverick.
So who should he pick? He's got a lot to consider. For one, he
probably wants to pick someone young so that a life term
really means something. But, if he is lucky enough to be elected
President, he is likely to face a heavily Democratic Senate. In
other words, thanks to the U.S. Constitution and a little thing we
call democracy, McCain has to worry about what his old colleagues
in the Senate will think of his nominees.
SINCE SANDRA DAY O'CONNOR left the court, there has been somewhat
of a void. Because she was replaced by a white male, the Senate and
electorate are likely to be more amenable to a woman, a minority,
or both. Fortunately, President McCain will have many
qualified candidates to pick from even from a pool limited to women
or minorities.
Priscilla Owen. 53 years old (young enough),
and a female currently on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, Owen
was widely rumored to be a top choice of President Bush, who
appointed her to the Fifth Circuit. She has a good story, she grew
up working in rice fields and herding cattle, but came to have the
highest score on the Texas State Bar and made partner at a law firm
by age 30. She is rated "well-qualified" by the America Bar
Association. Her downfall? Nomination problems. She had a rough
trail to the Fifth Circuit, when Democrats first held her
nomination, not allowing a vote on it, and later filibustered to
keep the Senate from approving her. It wasn't until the GOP picked
up some Senate seats in the 2004 election that she was confirmed.
Part of this, however, is because Democratic leaders knew she was a
possible candidate for the Supreme Court, and wanted to keep her
out of the appellate court to prevent her from gaining any
credibility.
Janice Rogers Brown. A 59-year-old African
American female on the D.C. Circuit of Appeals, she is the daughter
of a sharecropper, who worked her way through law school as a
single mother. She is not widely considered a solid conservative,
which makes her more likely to be a choice of John McCain. She
upheld a ban on semi-automatic weapons, but is anti-abortion enough
to satisfy the base. Her libertarian reputation didn't keep her
from being filibustered in the Senate, but she was finally
confirmed to the D.C. Circuit by a vote of 56-43. Not exactly a
overwhelming endorsement, but a thirteen-vote margin is fairly
large in today's Senate.
Karen Williams. A 57-year-old Caucasian female
who is the chief judge in the conservative Fourth Circuit Court of
Appeals, where she has served for sixteen years. She fits within
the McCain message (separating himself from the President) because
she was not appointed by President Bush (though she was appointed
by the first President Bush). She has upheld a Virginia state law
that requires public school children to be led in the pledge --
popular with conservatives. She has no heavy abortion decision
though -- nothing for Democrats to hate her for, but nothing for
conservatives to really around her for, either.
Consuelo Callahan. A 58-year-old Hispanic
female who sits on the liberal Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. As
an Hispanic, she presents a good opportunity for McCain in bringing
this growing population to the Republican party. She is not all
that conservative, but in the face of a Democratic Senate, she
would be a good compromise. She is well liked by conservatives, and
is known for being tough on criminals. Nonetheless, Democrats rave
about her, even Senator Leahy, and she enjoyed a unanimous
vote in the Senate to confirm her to the Ninth Circuit.
OF COURSE IT DOESN'T necessarily have to be a female, and if it's
not, Edward Prado might be the guy. He, like
Collahan, is strongly supported by Democrats -- Senators Leahy and
Schumer included. He a 61 year-old Hispanic male who sits on the
Fifth Circuit of Appeals. He was nominated to the Fifth Circuit by
President Bush, but was originally nominated to a Federal District
Court by President Reagan. And John McCain will be quick to tell
you (over and over) that he was a "foot soldier in the Reagan
revolution." He is seen as a moderate, and would be a solid choice
in the face of compromise. Age is less of a factor for a compromise
candidate, as neither side cares as much how long the nominee is on
the Court.
Michael Luttig has become almost a cliche when
talking about future Supreme Courts; although a Caucasian Male, he
is only 53 years old, and was the youngest judge on a Federal
Appeals Court when he was appointed to the Fourth Circuit Court of
Appeals in 1991. He is highly respected in conservative circles,
even though he pulled the rare move of leaving the court to be
General Counsel to the Boeing Corporation. He got into somewhat of
a skirmish with the Bush Administration over transferring a case
about an enemy combatant when the Administration feared reversal in
the Supreme Court. He refused to transfer the case, but the Supreme
Court stepped in and acquiesced. This distance from the Bush
Administration will help John McCain in securing a seat on the High
Court for Luttig.
If Senator McCain resides in the White House the next time a
seat on the Supreme Court opens up, he will have a lot of choices
in the Circuit Courts alone. A large portion of his decision will
already be made simply by who happens to occupy the Senate chambers
a few miles down the road, which makes it hard to predict. But John
McCain is not known for being predictable. His pick for the high
court may not be on this list -- or anybody's.
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