Should conservatives be concerned about Gov. Chris Christie’s
picks to fill the two open seats on the N.J. Supreme Court? Steve
Lonegan, who heads about the state chapter of Americans for
Prosperity (AFP), has offered up a reasonable and balanced
assessment. Lonegan, a former mayor who challenged Christie from
the right in the 2009 Republican gubernatorial primary, is “open
but skeptical.” That’s fair.
Gov. Christie is clearly playing the diversity game and
that does not necessarily mean his two nominees are not qualified.
But it is worth recalling that our own Ronald Reagan also played
the diversity game back in the early 80s’ when he placed Sandra Day
O’Connor on the Supreme Court instead nominating Judge Robert Bork.
The diversity card came back to bite the conservative movement in a
number of ways. As I report
here today for The American Spectator, it was O’Connor
who upheld the use of race in admissions in the Grutter v.
Bollinger ruling involving the University of Michigan Law
School.
Gov. Christie does deserve credit and praise for
challenging the N.J. Supreme Court’s activism and for making
judicial overreach a major theme of his administration. (For a
fuller explanation, please see last year’s “Supreme
Confidence.”)
But elevation of “diversity” above merit could have
unsettling policy ramifications.
Here is Lonegan’s full statement:
With two vacancies to fill on the state Supreme Court,
Gov. Christie has an historic opportunity to steer the court in a
new direction and restore the proper balance of powers to state
government. Four decades of unrestrained judicial activism and
social engineering from the state’s high court has done untold
damage to the state’s fiscal condition, resulted in an
ever-escalating tax burden, and undermined the very fabric of
communities across the state.
The appointment of conservative, originalist justices to
the state Supreme Court is a critical step in restoring the rule of
law, putting New Jersey back on a path to prosperity, and
completing the ‘New Jersey comeback’ the governor touts.
While I am open to considering the nominations of Mayor
Harris and Executive Assistant Attorney General Kwon, I remain
skeptical for neither of these nominees has served on the bench nor
has a record suitable to proper vetting of a potential Supreme
Court Justice.
At first blush, it appears these nominees may have been
chosen more for their demographic profile than their philosophical
leaning and if that’s the case, New Jersey taxpayers will have lost
a great opportunity we thought would happen when Jon Corzine was
defeated.