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September 05, 2005
Chief Justice Roberts
Bush has tapped Roberts as Rehnquist's successor, making his hearings a combined affair. Senators, now, have to evaluate his acceptability as a) a Justice on the Supreme Court and b) the new head and leader of the Court, probably for then next 4 decades. This is a very, very savvy move by Bush. If the Senate had confirmed Roberts but not made him chief, Stevens, a liberal, would've become acting chief by virtue of seniority, and when the session opened, unless a Chief could be hustled onto the Court, liberals would have held as many seats as conservatives and they'd be setting the agenda. Roberts, too, is young, he'll have the power to reshape and direct the Court for four or five decades -- that's some fucking appointment for a guy who's only been a judge for two years!
Democrats, smartly, are pounding home the fact that Roberts is Rehnquist's replacement, and O'Connor should thus have her seat filled by a candidate exemplifying her imagined virtues: moderation, pragmatism, occasional liberalism. But what they say won't be nearly so important as what they do. If they lay down for Roberts, given the gravity and meaning of his appointment, Bush will be freed to nominate whomever he wants. With Roberts proven broadly confirmable, Bush can go still farther to his right, sacrificing comity for extremism. We don't want that. Roberts, almost certainly, will be confirmed. But he should face tough opposition and be proven on the outskirts of what Democrats view as acceptable. Bush will have him, but we expect someone more moderate next time. And if we make the Roberts confirmation a rough, draining affair -- we might well get someone better, as Republicans will want 2006 to be about tax reform, not a Court battle showing them social regressives.
Also, Democrats need to seriously consider Sam Rosenfeld's oft-made point about losing well. Blocking Roberts will take a dues ex machina figure -- we're talking his crack dealer stepping onto the floor of the Senate with a scrapbook full of fun times they had while free basing. But even if we let him through, the hearings offer a lot of press coverage and a lot of time to make the case for a Democratic judiciary, to attack the Republican vision of jurisprudence, and generally argue for our hoped-for world rather than theirs. Roberts can ascend to the bench while we win the fight -- and if that's the outcome, his follow-up will be moderate, as the Republican majority won't want another bruising, losing battle before the midterms.
That means choosing our ideological battles. The Roberts nomination isn't just about abortion and gay marriage -- indeed, it's not even mostly about that. The Roberts nomination is about equal pay for equal work (does he believe in it?), it's about worker regulations and the judiciary favoring corporations above employees. It's about the New Deal and The Great Society, Medicare and Social Security, anti-pollution regulations and Clean Air Acts. It is, in short, about the legacy and future of progressivism vs. the revival and trajectory of Gilded Age conservatism. And if Democratic senators, because they get more blast faxes from NARAL and HRC, let that playing ground narrow, they'll be far poorer for it.
September 5, 2005 in The Supreme Court | Permalink
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» Finding His Crack Dealer from Minipundit
Ezra writes: Blocking Roberts will take a deus ex machina figure -- we're talking his crack dealer stepping onto the floor of the Senate with a scrapbook full of fun times they had while free basing. Hey, if he talks [Read More]
Tracked on Sep 5, 2005 2:57:32 PM
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William Rehnquist, the chief justice of the Supreme Court who died on Saturday evening at the age of [Read More]
Tracked on Sep 5, 2005 3:49:11 PM
Comments
When all that's left is to lose, HOW you lose makes all the difference.
Posted by: Ara Rubyan | Sep 5, 2005 2:03:20 PM
I see Bush's promotion of Roberts as a serious sign of weakness. The typical Bush move would be to push a solid conservative and thumb his nose at liberals, knowing he had the votes to confirm him and could at least break even in a PR battle if Democrats try to filibuster. Instead, he went with a cipher/stealth candidate for O'Connor's slot at a time when he was reeling from losing the Social Security fight, and is now falling back on the same cipher for Rehnquist's seat when he's in an even weaker position, after a month of getting clobbered on the war and a week of the disaster in New Orleans.
This tells me two things: (1) Bush is feeling an incredible lack of confidence. The only reason for this kind of do-over is to pick someone who's not only a blank slate, but who's already been accepted as such. Bush isn't even trying to score points now, he's just trying not to burn himself any more than he already has. (2) Roberts is the least contentious candidate he's got on his list. At this point he's clearly looking to avoid a fight, and if he could've produced someone new who had an even more blandly pleasant appearance and invisible background, he would've; Bush wants attention on his court picks and not on the clusterfuck in New Orleans, and the talking heads only have so much to say about Roberts that hasn't been said before.
Posted by: Iron Lungfish | Sep 5, 2005 2:26:36 PM
But, mostly, the Roberts nomination is about changing the subject.
Posted by: BroD | Sep 5, 2005 2:47:25 PM
Bush may view Roberts as changing the subject but I think it just reinforces how little he did in the wake of Katrina. He can have a new Chief Justice nominated in 24 hours but did nothing about the hurricane for 3 days?!
Posted by: Becks | Sep 5, 2005 3:31:07 PM
This is you, right, Ezra? I don't see the byline yet, but I taste the Ezra flavor.
Posted by: Neil the Ethical Werewolf | Sep 5, 2005 4:04:34 PM
And also, although I'm sure the young Roberts is a very nice fellow and did very well in some very good schools, he's been a judge for TWO FRICKING YEARS!
Is Bush having another Michael Brown moment here? Like, seriously, CHIEF FREAKING JUSTICE? After two years' judicial experience?
No way.
Posted by: theorajones | Sep 5, 2005 6:56:54 PM
Blocking Roberts will take a dues ex machina figure -- we're talking his crack dealer stepping onto the floor of the Senate with a scrapbook full of fun times they had while free basing.
The word you're looking for is "boyfriend".
(And "deus", by the way.)
Posted by: Allen K. | Sep 5, 2005 9:16:02 PM
theorajones, that has been my problem the minute I heard about the nomination. He's still wet behind the ears and they want to give him the most powerful judicial position in the land? What does the other 7 think about that? Would you be b.s. if you had been on the court for this long and were passed over for a newbie? What gives?
I'm with Iron Lungfish in that I see this as a weakness. But I also see it as a sign of political savy. As much as Roberts isn't close to our acceptable candidate, nevertheless, he will not be perceived as an "out of touch" candidate with the public at large. This means he will get confirmed and Bush will get what he wants.
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