By The Prowler on 5.11.09 @ 6:09AM
The liberals' case against Leah Ward Sears. Also: X-rated GOP
tour.
NEO-LYNCHERS
Two weeks ago, when the Obama Administration's Department of
Justice received requests for some background information on
several potential nominees for the U.S. Supreme Court vacancy,
one of the names gave some senior advisers in the building pause:
that of Georgia Supreme Court Chief Justice Leah Ward
Sears.
Sears, an African-American, who will retire from her chief
justice position in June, was well known among liberal activists
and the civil rights industry for a friendship with U.S. Supreme
Court Justice Clarence Thomas. In fact, Thomas
made headlines when he appeared and spoke at Sears' swearing in
several years ago, an event boycotted by some civil rights
industry activists.
"This isn't a potential nominee that anyone over here at Justice
who has high hopes for this pick wants to see," says one current
DOJ official, who has previously done work on federal court
nominations at Justice's office of legislative affairs and office
of legal policy. "When her name popped up, you could see people
around here were nervous." The result: a high-profile
front-page story in the Washington
Post yesterday focusing on Sears' ties to Thomas. "The
reporter might not have known it, but that piece just reeked of
piece designed to get her crossed off the list."
Thus far, speculation over Obama's potential high court
nomination has focused on women with Hispanic backgrounds, but
according to White House staff and others, there is a much longer
list being reviewed. "This administration is going to have more
than one vacancy to fill on the court," says one White House
aide. "We're looking at this as a good exercise to pull together
information on a number of individuals who may be considered if
not today, then down the road."
Sears, though, says the DOJ source, clearly would be unacceptable
to the far left and liberal judicial communities. "They want a
reliable liberal, just as conservatives what a reliable strict
constructionist. Sears is viewed with suspicion. My guess is that
she would be an underwhelming selection, and people here wanted
it known and expressed that she would not be viewed with the
adulation other nominations might be."
LISTEN CLOSELY
Republican House minority whip Eric Cantor is
taking his lumps for the launch of brainchild, the National
Council for a New America, a group that appears designed more to
burnish his political aspirations -- along with those of former
presidential candidate Mitt Romney and
Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour -- than
accomplish real policy or political work.
Cantor was most stung after last week's launch of what he termed
a national "listening tour," when Stormy
Daniels, an adult film actress, announced at the same
time her own "listening tour" as she mulls a run for the Senate
in Louisiana.
"Apparently it's true: great minds do think alike," quipped a
former colleague of Cantor who lost his seat last election cycle,
he believes, for supporting the Bush bank bailout plan at
Cantor's request.
topics:
Supreme Court Nominations, Clarence Thomas