Miers May Have Saved Bush's Presidency
Human Events, Oct 31, 2005 by Buchanan, Patrick J
By withdrawing her nomination, Harriet Miers spared herself an agonizing inquisition and probable rejection by the Senate. She also did President Bush the greatest service of her career. She may just have helped him save his presidency.
Like a school maim indulging a teacher's pet, Miers just gave Bush permission to retake the final exam he booted badly. She has given him a second chance to succeed where Nixon, Ford, Reagan and his father all failed: To become the President who rang down the curtain on 50 years of judicial tyranny and reshaped the Supreme Court into the great constitutionalist body the Founding Fathers intended.
Bush is a lucky man to have a friend like Miers.
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Had her nomination been pursued through the Judiciary Committee to the full Senate, it would have meant civil war inside the party. Bush would have been forced to watch members of his congressional party and conservatives publicly call for rejection and defeat of the woman who had given him a decade of devoted service.
The fallout from this fratricidal war could have lasted for years. By standing down, Miers called off the family fight about to erupt inside the President's own household.
Nothing better befit Miers' nomination than the style and grace of her leaving it. Mirabile dictu, it may have been the Washington Post that spared us this ordeal by delivering a painless coup de grace.
Twenty-four hours before Miers withdrew, the Post carried on Page 1 the report of a startling speech she delivered in 1993 to a Dallas women's group. As the Post reported, while still president of the Texas Bar Association, Miers "defended judges who order lawmakers to address social concerns."
But judges who "order lawmakers to address social concerns" that the lawmakers decline or refuse to take up is the quintessence of judicial activism-i.e., it is the substitution by judges of their own ideas of what law and public policy ought to be for that of the men and women elected to write laws and to make public policy.
The Post went on: "While judicial activism is derided by many conservatives, Miers said that sometimes Officials would rather abandon to the courts the hard questions so they can respond to constituents: I did not want to do that-the court is making me.'"
Exactly. Lawmakers often prefer to "let this cup pass away" and let courts decide social and moral issues. But if we are to remain a republic, the proper recourse, when lawmakers lack the courage or wisdom to do the right thing is not to have judges order them to do the right thing, but to elect new lawmakers.
In her speech, Miers showed sympathy for feminist causes, spoke of the "glass ceiling," and said that on issues like abortion: "The underlying theme in most of these cases is the insistence of more self-determination. And the more I think about these issues the more selfdetermination makes sense."
Miers seemed to be implying that Roe v. Wade, by which the legal protection of unborn life was removed from the jurisdiction of lawmakers and handed over to women, was probably the right call.
Given Miers' absence of a judicial record or a deeply embedded philosophy of judicial restraint, her expressed sympathy for jurists who order legislators to act, and her sympathy for feminist causes, it is hard to see how a conservative senator could vote to make her the decisive voice on the Supreme Court for the next generation.
If they voted her down, they would have split the party and enraged the President. If they voted her onto the court, they would have betrayed the voters to whom they had pledged to support only strict constructionists and constitutionalists of proven merit and ability.
It was lose-lose. The President, his party and the right were all marching grimly toward First Manassas when Sister Harriet saved us all.
Democratic Senators Teddy Kennedy (Mass.), Pat Leahy (Vt.) and Barbara Boxer (Calif.) are urging Bush to "show strength," by appointing a moderate. But, if 1 am not mistaken, didn't Bush just do that? And how did the nominee that made Democratic Leader Harry Reid (Nev.) a happy man turn out?
President Bush just survived a barrel ride over Niagara Falls. A man of reasonable intelligence would not risk it a second time.
Mr. Buchanan is a nationally syndicated columnist and author of The Death of the West, The Great Betrayal, and A Republic, Not an Empire (published by Regnery-a HUMAN EVENTS sister company.)
Copyright Human Events Publishing, Inc. Oct 31, 2005
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