Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Nation & World

Miers nominated to bench

By Liz Halloran
Posted 10/3/05

White House counsel Harriet Miers, 60, who was a trailblazing lawyer in her native Texas but has never been a judge, was nominated today by President Bush to fill the Supreme Court vacancy that will be left by retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor.

Jim Lo Scalzo for USN&WR

Miers, a longtime Bush loyalist, had led the White House search for high court candidates, including recently confirmed Chief Justice John G. Roberts, whose first day leading the court began shortly after Bush's announcement. Her nomination harked back to Bush's 2000 presidential run when the man leading the search for a vice presidential running mate–Dick Cheney–settled on himself.

"For the past five years, Harriet Miers has served in critical roles in our nation's government, including one of the most important legal positions in the country," Bush said during an early-morning televised announcement with Miers, his personal lawyer, at his side. "She has devoted her life to the rule of law and the cause of justice." If confirmed, she would be the third woman ever to serve on the court and would join Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the bench.

In choosing Miers, the first female president of both the Dallas and Texas bar associations and described by those who know her as a workaholic, Bush bypassed his friend Attorney General Alberto Gonzales. Many believed the president wanted to name Gonzales, not a favorite of the religious right, as the first Hispanic Supreme Court justice.

But Bush's choice of Miers, who first worked for the president 11 years ago when he was governor-elect of Texas, immediately ignited a firestorm–and not among Democrats. Many in the president's base of religious conservatives who didn't want Gonzales are equally outraged by the nomination of Miers, who they say has no solid conservative judicial record and who in the late 1980s donated $1,000 each to the Democratic National Committee, Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore, and then Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, a Texas Democrat.

"Frankly, I'm stunned–and from the E-mails I'm getting, that's the reaction all over the country," said Manuel Miranda of the Third Branch Conference, a large coalition of culturally conservative Republicans. "This is not about Harriet Miers; it is about whether the president heard the people who voted for him who said they wanted someone with a record like Justice Antonin Scalia, a record like Justice Clarence Thomas."

Miranda predicted that the fragile conservative coalition that had held together through the Roberts nomination will likely fracture, though he said he expected that Miers will be approved in the Senate on an up-or-down vote with no filibuster by Democrats. Her nomination, he said, leaves Democrats with little to fight.

On the issue of Roe v. Wade, however, conservatives who support Miers note that when she was active in the American Bar Association, she worked–unsuccessfully, as it turned out–to have the organization rescind its endorsement of both abortion on demand and federal funding for abortions.

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist lauded Miers as an outstanding choice, and Leonard Leo, on leave from the Federalist Society to help the administration secure approval for its judicial nominees, seemed to be working to placate the far right in the party by insisting during a conference call that Miers has a commitment to a "conservative judicial philosophy" and is "devoted to the Constitution as it's written."

advertisement

advertisement

10 Things You Didn't Know About...

Why doesn't Barack Obama like ice cream? Find out.

Washington Whispers

Face it, you need to know the buzz in D.C., and that's where Whispers comes in.

advertisement

50 Ways to Improve Your Life

U.S. News offers tips for improving your life.

America's Best Leaders

What makes someone a great leader?

Thomas Jefferson Street

Daily insight on politics and culture from the Thomas Jefferson Street bloggers.

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.