It’s Showtime Now

Justice Sandra Day O’Connor resigned today after 24 years of service adjudicating the Law of the Land for the United States Supreme Court. Appointed by Ronald Reagan in 1981, she cast the deciding vote in 13 of 15 decisions handed down by 5-4 majorities during her term, and is seen by many to have been the crucial centerweight between the uber-reactionary Scalia/Thomas wing of the court, and the activist, secular liberalism of John Paul Stevens, Anthony Kennedy, and Ruth Bader Ginsburg.

In the end, despite having effectively decided questions of civil rights, equal protection, federal jurisdiction, abortion rights, campaign finance, free speech, and –in her final term– religious freedom, Ms. O’Connor ought not soon be forgotten for having also handed George W. Bush the presidency in 2001.

One cannot know the extent to which Mr. Bush appreciates Justice O’Connor’s effect on his career, or whether he feels any indebtedness to the first woman ever to sit on the nation’s highest court.

And, while some are surprised to see Ms. O’Connor (whom one-time Washington sports hero John Riggins famously implored, “lighten up, Sandy!”), instead of the ailing Chief Justice William Rhenquist become the first Supreme Court justice to step down during Mr. Bush’s tenure in office, all eyes are now on the President, anxiously awaiting his choice for her replacement.

Nutbag religious fanatic Gary Bauer was out in front of the coming debate on whoever the President may offer the nation, hoping to gain traction for the idea that the country is no longer interested in anyone so centrist or moderate as Ms. O’Connor (or, God forbid, Justice David Souter). In an e-mail to supporters of his conservative lobbying group, American Values, Bauer declared that America must resist the “shrill cries [of] the radical left and Senate liberals” (emphasis added), who will “demand” the President tender someone reasonable to interpret the nation’s laws.

Senate minority leader Harry Reid staked out the constitutional obligation of the patrician wing of the Legislative Branch, offering tentatively, “The Constitution gives the president and the Senate shared responsibility to fill this vacancy, ” and said he hoped Mr. Bush would “give life to the advice and consent clause by engaging in meaningful consultation with senators of both political parties.”

Suddenly in play again are arguments over procedural rules in the Senate, which hold Republicans hostage to the minority Democrats’ occasional resort to filibuster in keeping Mr. Bush’s most wildly unqualified appointments from positions of power and discretion.

The Democrats’ willingness last month to look the other way while ultra-reactionary Judges Janice Rodgers Brown and Priscilla Owen received lifetime appointments to the Federal judiciary should gain them an opportunity to show good faith now by “consenting” to a reasonable jurist. The President could also press his advantage, and appoint a candidate in obvious service to those on the right of the divide his presidency has spawned.

In either event he will further define a leadership record notable for its questionable appointments (Negroponte, Abrams, Kissinger, Gonzalez, Bolton, and the judges, infra), an absence of planning (Afghanistan, Iraq, China, North Korea), and dismal failure by most measures, including economic performance, public health, education & welfare, the environment, global diplomatic relations, and all-around accountability.

How much worse can it get?

Comments

  1. Bubbles - July 3, 2005 @ 10:49 am

    Well LD as you’re fond of saying ‘its nut cutting time’. The Republicans have had quite a party with their coalition of the ‘family valued’ but with these appointments they know full well that they are playing with C5 and blasting caps. Their situation in Iraq plus a fight over abortion rights is a problematic situation BUT if they actually do over-turn Roe v. Wade they will fully commit hari-kari. On the other hand they will fracture their base if they nominate moderates’ and don’t over turn Roe. If the filibuster show taught us anything no matter how wacky their nominee is they will get confirmed. The more pragmatic among the Republicans know this and see the danger but they’ve lost control to the zealots long ago. If the Supreme Court really does start to overturn the 100’s of cases they threaten to the Republican’s will rue the day they turned our Republic into an autocracy – because when the exit polls are 65% percent of the electorate against them even the most devious Diebold election systems are going to have a lot of explaining to do.

  2. Bubbles - July 3, 2005 @ 11:31 am

    A quick look at a few polling statistics tells me I may have understated this case.

    http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/01/20/health/main537243.shtml
    http://abcnews.go.com/sections/politics/2020/scotusabortion030619_poll.html
    http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/timespoll/la-000618abortpoll-442pa2an,1,7894326.htmlstory?coll=la-news-times_poll-nation

    Interesting stat fully 35% of Republicans favor abortion rights, 31% of ‘conservatives’ adding just 1/2 their numbers to the Democratic column (i.e. ‘Government way over-reaching’) and the Republicans have a very serious problem on their hands.

  3. LD - July 3, 2005 @ 11:38 am

    You are correct, sir. I have seen and felt the wheels coming off the Bush juggernaut for quite a while, but somehow, they have managed to keep the thing on track.

    A ‘perfect storm’ may be brewing, however, between the continuing debacle in Iraq, a rekindling of hostilities in Afghanistan, persistent torpidity of the domestic economy, and the emerging news that Karl Rove feloniously revealed the name of undercover CIA agent Valerie Plame, thereby endangering the sacred ‘national security’ behind which this administration so often hides when it wants to do illegal things in secret. It would be a happy day that sees Mr. Rove frogmarched out of the White House in handcuffs.

    Meanwhile, I’m not sure I trust Mr. Bush to do the smart thing and name a qualified jurist with a record of reason and balance in his or her legal writings and case decisions to replace Ms. O’Connor. The current civility of the Senate looks to be quite tentative, and Mr. Bush has more than enough hubris to be fine with saying, “let the name-calling begin!”

  4. Bubbles - July 3, 2005 @ 12:07 pm

    Nice, cant get more mainstream than this: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8445696/site/newsweek/
    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002356504_rove03.html
    and there’s the ‘Vice President of Secrecy’ Cheney connection: http://msnbc.msn.com/id/3129942/

    Maybe the Administration just went over the top w/Newsweek and the ‘Koran in Toilet’ story?

Leave a Reply