supreme court
Specter Seeks Another Roberts-like
Nominee
By Hope Yen
Associate Pres Writer
September 19, 2005
CBN.com
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Predicting an easy confirmation for John Roberts,
the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee said Sunday he
hoped President Bush's next Supreme Court nominee will share Roberts'
conservative credentials.
"I hope that we'll have somebody who is modest like Judge
Roberts says he is, someone who will promote stability so there
are no sharp turns," said Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa.
With Roberts' rise from appeal courts to the high court all but
assured, Bush has begun early consultations on filling the vacancy
created by retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.
Bush plans to meet on Wednesday with Specter, Senate Majority
Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev.,
and Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont, the top Democrat on the Judiciary
Committee.
Leahy, appearing with Specter on CBS' "Face the Nation,"
said he expects to hear specific names from the president at the
White House breakfast meeting.
Possible replacements include federal appellate judges Edith
Clement, Edith Hollan Jones and Emilio Garza. Also mentioned have
been judges J. Michael Luttig, Samuel A. Alito Jr., James Harvie
Wilkinson III and Michael McConnell, lawyer Miguel Estrada, former
deputy attorney general Larry Thompson and Attorney General Alberto
Gonzales.
"I would hope that we could see the court have less 5-4
decisions and speak with more clarity," Leahy said. "I
think the president, with four of us there, may well get some
response on what we think about those names."
During last week's confirmation hearings, Roberts declined to
elaborate on specific issues such as whether he would uphold the
1973 landmark abortion decision of Roe v. Wade. Still, some Democrats
have shown little appetite for a political fight since Roberts
would fill the seat of conservative Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist,
an opponent of Roe.
O'Connor's seat, however, poses a different question because
her vote could tip a court closely divided on abortion, the death
penalty, gay rights and affirmative action.
Specter said he is confident Roberts will support privacy rights
such as abortion and believes a judge in the same mold would be
an appropriate replacement for O'Connor.
"I'd like to hear that the president is going to maintain
balance and have a very evenly divided court," he said.
The first vote on Roberts is expected Thursday in the 18-member
committee, which is divided between 10 Republicans and eight Democrats.
The full Senate - composed of 55 Republicans, 44 Democrats and
independent Sen. Jim Jeffords of Vermont - is scheduled to vote
the week of Sept. 26, in time for Roberts to take his seat when
the court opens a new term on Oct. 3.
One moderate Republican, Sen. Susan Collins of Maine, said Sunday
she will vote to confirm Roberts.
"My personal discussions with Judge Roberts, as well as
his responses during the Judiciary Committee hearings, have convinced
me that he respects precedents and will apply the law and Constitution
fairly," Collins, who supports abortion rights, said in a
statement.
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Roberts will be a reliable
conservative on the court, but he said Republicans will be disappointed
if they are counting on him to overturn Roe.
"If your view of conservative is he'll have to decide your
way, you'll be disappointed," Graham said on "Fox News
Sunday."
"Judge Roberts will listen to the arguments from those challenging
it and those seeking to uphold it and make a decision not based
on politics but the rule of law," Graham said.
A New York Times editorial on Sunday urged senators to vote against
Roberts, saying the 50-year-old appeals court judge is too much
of a risk to confirm because of his unclear positions.
"On abortion, church-state separation, gay rights and the
right of illegal immigrants' children to attend public school
- all currently recognized by the court - he asks to be accepted
on faith," the editorial said. "That just isn't good
enough."
The Washington Post, however, said in an editorial Sunday that
Roberts was "overwhelmingly qualified."
"Judge Roberts represents the best nominee liberals can
reasonably expect from a conservative president who promised to
appoint judges who shared his philosophy," according to the
editorial.
Former President Clinton said many Democrats may choose to vote
against Roberts even though he is well qualified because Roberts
could shift the direction of court.
"The Roe v. Wade issue is a big issue, because Justice (Clarence)
Thomas said he'd never even discussed it with anybody, and then,
like the minute he got on the court, he made it clear that he
wanted to repeal it," Clinton told ABC's "This Week."
Clinton said he did not know whether his wife, Sen. Hillary Clinton,
D-N.Y., would vote against Roberts.
CBN IS HERE FOR YOU!
Are you seeking answers in life? Are you hurting?
Are you facing a difficult situation?
A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need.
|