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Sunday, June 17, 2007
Robert Bluey :: Townhall.com Columnist
Judicial Nominee Hangs in the Balance
by Robert Bluey
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Senate Democrats and Republicans operated in relative harmony this spring when confirming President Bush’s judicial nominees, but the nomination of Leslie Southwick to the New Orleans-based federal court of appeals has shattered that peace.

The fight over Southwick’s confirmation comes at an important time. As the White House prepares a short list of candidates for a potential Supreme Court vacancy, liberals are sharpening their battle-axes. Conservatives, meanwhile, sense a return to the days of filibusters and obstructionism that nearly brought the Senate to a nuclear showdown.

Caught in the middle is Southwick, a former Mississippi state appellate court judge who was nominated by Bush to serve on the 5th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals. The seat has gone unfilled for seven years without a permanent judge, primarily because Democrats have blocked the last three nominees. As a result, it has been declared a “judicial emergency.”

But for liberals on the Senate Judiciary Committee, no emergency trumps political pandering to left-wing interest groups. When People For the American Way and the Human Rights Campaign objected to Southwick, committee libs leveled the outrageous charge that he is a racist. His nomination’s been stuck in committee ever since.

Tensions over appellate court judges last reached a boiling point in 2005 when a group of 14 senators, both Republicans and Democrats, brokered a deal to confirm a handful of nominees and avoid bringing the Senate to a halt. But with Southwick’s delay dragging on and no clear resolution in sight, there’s talk among some Republicans of bringing the Senate’s work to a screeching stop until committee liberals allow action on the nomination.

Mississippi Sen. Trent Lott, who strongly supports Southwick’s confirmation, said he would lead an effort to bring the Senate to a “total shutdown” if Democrats continued their obstructionism. With the hot-button issues of immigration and the Iraq War capturing the headlines on Capitol Hill these days, Lott’s biggest hurdle might be rallying enough support among his own fractured caucus.

But if there’s one issue that unites conservatives, it’s support for conservative judicial nominees. At a time when the president’s approval rating has hit rock bottom among his base, Bush should welcome a fight to bring conservatives back into the fold. The successful confirmations for Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justice Sam Alito to the Supreme Court represented a crowning moment during the Bush presidency after years of fighting smaller battles for appellate court nominees.

With just 18 months left on the job, Bush faces a predicament: a Democrat-controlled Senate that is hardly eager to confirm his nominees. During the first six months of 2007, the Senate ushered through only three appellate court judges. In addition to Southwick, four others, Jennifer Elrod, Peter Keisler, Raymond Kethledge and Stephen Murphy, await approval. Continued...

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About The Author
Robert B. Bluey is director of the Center for Media & Public Policy at The Heritage Foundation and maintains a blog at RobertBluey.com
 
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I have little trust...
...in the Presidents decision making ability these days. Even in appointing judges. It seems to me that he has such contempt for his GOP base that he might appoint moderate or even liberal judges just to spite them.
What a tragedy that is, too. Because that is one of the things he has done well in the past. DD

Mitt is preparing
Wow, what preparation detail in this guy! When elected He will hit the ground running. Just Look.

Boston, MA – Today, Governor Mitt Romney announced the Co-Chairs of the Romney for President Advisory Committee on the Constitution and the Courts. Together, Professor Mary Ann Glendon and Professor Douglas Kmiec will lead a group of noted legal scholars and professionals in advising Governor Romney on judicial matters, separation of powers and federalism issues. Additional members of the Committee will be announced at a later date.

"Too often, too many of the most important issues of our day are decided by a select group of judges. This makes it even more important that we select judges who will respect our Constitution and the rule of law. Mary Ann Glendon and Douglas Kmiec are two of our country's leading conservative voices on judicial matters and I look forward to their counsel as we move forward in this campaign," said Governor Romney.

With today's announcement, Professor Mary Ann Glendon said, "In the aftermath of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court's decision redefining marriage, I had the opportunity to work with Governor Romney and see him in action. He knows the importance of defending principles of judicial restraint. I was proud to work with him then and am proud to work with him now as he pursues our nation's highest office."

Joining Professor Glendon, Professor Douglas Kmiec said, "More than any other candidate, Governor Romney understands the importance of nominating 'honest constructionists' – that is, judges with a genuine appreciation for the text, structure, and history of the Constitution and the laws as enacted. There have been far too many examples of late where the public has been given reason to believe that those charged with dispassionately interpreting the law have relied on partisanship instead. It is as wrong to politicize the Courts as it is for the Courts to play politics. For this reason, Governor Romney strongly supported the nominations of Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Samuel Alito, and he will appoint federal judges and justices in the same mold. With Governor Romney as President, I am confident that we will have a judiciary that will respect our Constitution and not legislate from the bench."

The Romney For President Advisory Committee On The Constitution And The Courts Co-Chairs:

Mary Ann Glendon Is The Learned Hand Professor Of Law At Harvard University. Glendon teaches and writes on international human rights, comparative law, constitutional law, and legal theory. She served as a member of the U.S. President's Council on Bioethics from 2001 to 2005. She has represented the Holy See at United Nations meetings concerning poverty, development, and women's issues, and currently serves as President of the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences in Rome. She is a past-President of the International Association of Legal Science, a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the International Academy of Comparative Law.

Professor Douglas Kmiec Holds The Endowed Chair In Constitutional Law At Pepperdine University Law School In Malibu, California. One of the country's best known scholars and popular law commentators, Kmiec served several years as Dean and St. Thomas More Professor of Law at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and for nearly two decades, on the law faculty at the University of Notre Dame. Kmiec also served Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Bush from 1985-89 as Assistant Attorney General and Head of the Office of Legal Counsel in the U.S. Department of Justice. The author of multiple volumes on the American Constitution, he writes a syndicated column for the Catholic News Service, and previously, wrote a regular column for the Chicago Tribune. He is a regular guest analyst on law issues for the national media.
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