September 29, 2005
Democrats Rebuke Democrats on Judicial Nominations

I don't know if they're sincere, but at least the rhetoric is good.

Several Senate Democrats who support the nomination of federal Judge John G. Roberts Jr. rebuked their colleagues this week over opposing the nominee based on partisan politics.
Sen. Ron Wyden, Oregon Democrat, who supports President Bush's nominee for Supreme Court chief justice, said fellow Democrats should not base their votes on the nominee's perceived political beliefs.
"I ask my friends to imagine the mess we will have left for our country if the Senate uses this test and votes solely on the basis of a nominee's political beliefs," he said yesterday in a speech on the Senate floor. "Friends who a year ago said we don't want ideologues appointed to the Supreme Court now want Judge Roberts and the next nominee to show up at the witness table and submit to an ideological litmus test."
Judge Roberts is expected to be confirmed before noon today with the bipartisan support of at least 76 senators.
Earlier this week, Sen. Joe Lieberman, Connecticut Democrat who supports the nomination, also lamented the "excessively partisan" atmosphere.
"In these partisan times, it is worth remembering that seven of the nine sitting justices were confirmed by overwhelmingly bipartisan votes in the Senate," he said.
Mr. Wyden noted yesterday that "in spite of the divisive national debate surrounding gays in the military, universal health care, Travelgate, Filegate and the Whitewater investigation," President Clinton named two Supreme Court nominees who were overwhelmingly approved.
Judge Roberts has been almost universally hailed as a brilliant jurist, but many Democrats -- under pressure from outside interest groups -- oppose him because he did not state more clearly his personal views on contentious political issues such as abortion.
Mr. Wyden warned that a "sword forged in ideology" today will be used against the next Democratic president to fill a Supreme Court vacancy.
"If these debates are purely partisan, our future will include constitutional bedlam whenever a Supreme Court vacancy occurs when the Senate is controlled by the opposition party," he said. "The decision that each senator has to make should be based on the judicial nominee before the Senate, not the one that we wish was before us."

Posted by Jonathan R. on September 29, 2005 10:58 AM
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