Bush's Sham Standards Exposed By Roberts Nomination

By nominating John G. Roberts to the Supreme Court, George W. Bush has made a mockery of the very standards he professes to be guided by in making his judicial appointments.

Roberts has a clear record of rejecting strict construction (as well as original intent and following established precedent) when it gets in the way of reaching the results he is after, according to a 2003 report that cites his own words to contradict the image of what Bush says he is giving the American people.  

Just one day after completely reversing his position on firing anyone involved in exposing a covert CIA Agent, Bush has once again revealed that his so-called "principles" are a mere sham intended to sound good on the evening news, with no relationship at all to reality.

A report on Roberts by the Alliance For Justice, prepared in response to his 2003 nomination to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit contains clear examples showing that, in the Alliance's words, "Roberts' non-literal interpretation of the [takings] clause seems to fly in the face of President Bush's pledge to nominate judges who would strictly interpret the law, not make it."

Gory details on the flip...

On page 12 of its report, the Alliance for Justice writes:
Published Writing and Public Statements
As a law student, Roberts authored two law review articles arguing for the courts to interpret clauses of the Constitution in ways that would weaken key worker, consumer, and environmental protections.39 Interestingly, he advanced interpretations of both the Takings and Contracts Clauses that went against long-standing precedent and explicitly rejected "plain language," or literal interpretation of the Constitution's language.

In the first article, Roberts offered his view of the Takings Clause, which requires that the government give "just compensation" for takings of "private property." Roberts claimed that courts trying to ascertain its meaning, "have not been significantly aided by the words of the clause, which are incapable of being given simple, clear-cut meaning... Indeed, the very phrase `just compensation' suggests that the language of the clause must be informed by changing norms of justice."40 After rejecting on various grounds several interpretations of the clause traditionally used by courts - i.e. physical intrusion onto an owner's property as anachronistic in a largely non-agrarian society, "noxious use" as too value-laden, and Justice Holmes' 1922 "diminution of value" test as too vague, Roberts argued for a "constrained" model based on a utility-based test proposed by Professor Frank Michelman. Under that model, parties made unwhole or "insecure" by regulation should be compensated accordingly.

This is, of course, a reliance on the same sort of "evolving understanding,""living Constitution" and "changing social values" philosophy commonly associated with judicial liberalism--suitably twisted for very illiberal ends, of course.  But the underlying basis of reasoning could not be farther from what "conservatives" like Thomas, Scalia, and Bush--who cites them as his models--publicly profess to embrace.  

Roberts is arguing to overturn not just 200 years of American jurisprudence, but centuries of English Common Law before it.  It is a breathtakingly bold act of judicial activism, throwing out every major tenent of conservative jurisprudence--it ignores precedent, original intent, and plain language.  

There may indeed be times when this is morally and legally necessary, of course. Brown v. Board of Education swept away centurie of racial subjugation, and is justly seen as one of the greatest Supreme Court decisions of all time.  

But they men who wrote and joined in that decision did not pretend to be mere machines following the unambiguous dictates of law, holding their own views in restraint. They fully acknowledged, even agonized, over the moral responsibilities they had to discharge, some of which were in contradiction with one another.  They acknowledged that they were judges not automatons.  

The Bush pretense is that he will appoint automatons, who will somehow interpret the law, without "tainting" it with their own judgement. Not only is this a practical impossibility, it is a standard that his own nominee openly flouts--without the honesty, integrity and guts to simply stand up and be counted for what he is clearly doing.

The Alliance continues (still on p. 12):

In his second article, Roberts took on the Contract Clause, which provides that, "No state shall... pass any... law impairing the obligation of contracts." Roberts argued that this clause should be interpreted to protect corporations from legislation that might increase their obligations to their workers, such as pension protection, and not, as Justice Brennan had asserted, to protect individuals from decisions by states that nullified rights by reneging on contracts.41 Roberts criticized Justice Brennan's plain language interpretation of the Contract Clause, arguing instead that, "Constitutional protections, however, should not depend merely on a strict construction that may allow `technicalities of form to dictate consequences of substance.'"42 Here, as in his Takings Clause article, Roberts seems unafraid to reject a "strict construction" approach to constitutional interpretation to reach results that favor corporations and wealthy property owners. In both articles, Roberts' non-literal interpretation of the clause seems to fly in the face of President Bush's pledge to nominate judges who would strictly interpret the law, not make it.
While there are many reasons to oppose Roberts, we need to maintain a focus on this very key point--which is not simply an attack on Roberts, but a well-founded attack on Bush himself, and his pattern of bald-faced duplicity of lying to the American people about the most fundamental issues of public policy.

The bolded portions of the above passage are a key point that we need to pound home again, and again, and again. Not in a way that  implies that Bush's standard is right. We need to present it as showing, quite clearly, that Bush's so-called "standard" is a sham, which he only embraces because Karl Rove tells him that it sounds good to the American people.  Just like telling them that Saddam Hussein has nuclear weapons.

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Comments

34 Comments

You're right, but it won't matter
The Dems are not nearly sophisticated enough to make this argument. We are going to pay the price of two decades of Democratic limp wristed concessions to GOPers on judicial and Constitutional issues.

Original Intent, Textualism and Re-writing the Constitution are buzz words with no substantive meaning. I'd like to see Roberts stopped, but I don't see the Dems holding together more than thirty votes in opposition.

We need to use this nomination as an education vehicle to help turn the tide on future nominations.

by Gary Boatwright 2005-07-19 07:51PM | 0 recs
You're Acting Like A Bystander, Gary!
It will damn sure matter if enough of us raise our voices. This is a slam dunk if it gets into the right hands. What we need is a primo point guard.
by Paul Rosenberg 2005-07-19 08:12PM | 0 recs
I'm saying the Dems will be bystanders
Who will be the Democratic point man? Kennedy? I'll bet Biden and Feinstein are already in the bag.

Here are the Dem Judiciary Members:

Patrick J. Leahy
RANKING DEMOCRATIC MEMBER, VERMONT

Edward M. Kennedy
MASSACHUSETTS

Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
DELAWARE

Herbert Kohl
WISCONSIN

Dianne Feinstein
CALIFORNIA

Russell D. Feingold
WISCONSIN

Charles E. Schumer
NEW YORK

Richard J. Durbin
ILLINOIS

by Gary Boatwright 2005-07-19 09:46PM | 0 recs
Diversionary tactics..
They released this now in the hope that it would push Karl Rove out of the news..

The Dems need to stand firm on EVERYTHING that comes out of the GOP greed machine.. Saying NO to the looting of America isn't obstructionism, its CONSERVATION.. Because they are like smirking crooks who are laughing at us as they try to (cheating) steal it and our futures..

You know it, I know it and they know it...

Narcissists don't respect people who are nice to them. They only understand strength.. We have the power of right and the will of the people on our side on this one..

They are fascists.. They can not pass..

by ultraworld 2005-07-19 10:09PM | 0 recs
You're Usually Pretty Smart, Gary
But this time around, you just can't seem to hear what I'm saying. I'm not talking about the Senate Judiciary Committee. I'm talking about continuing to massacre George W. Bush in the court of public opinion.  I'm talking about mounting an attack right now that makes everything Bush is trying to do sputter to a halt.  I'm talking about changing the whole dynamic of the country.

The Senate Judiciary Committee will be the last people in the country to know about it.  I don't expect any of them to be point people. I expect us to be point people.  But you're spending all your energy pissing on anyone who wants to stand up and fight.

Bork wasn't defeated in the Senate. He was defeated in the Senator's backyards. Bush's approval numbers are in the toilet. Pound home the point I'm making in my diary with several million dollars worth of ads, and you will have Senators lining up to be first to denounce Bush and Roberts both.

by Paul Rosenberg 2005-07-19 10:30PM | 0 recs
Re: You're Usually Pretty Smart, Gary
What makes you think that attacking Roberts is going to damage Bush in the court of public opinion? AS far as I see it the Senators see this as a solid conservative nominee who is at least worthy of the position. Rhenquist wasn't even a judge when he was nominated, and you could call him a partisan hack too... but his record as a supreme court justice and chief justice is good.  

All the arguments I've heard havn't persuaded me one bit to go out and try to fight against this nominee. I have been interested in fighting against Karl Rove and real criminals in the White House. The President gets to nominate the judges he wants.

  1. Don't start fights you can't win.
  2. Don't have knee jerk reactions to every single thing. Everyone knows the whoever wins the Presidency picks the judges.
  3. Why gamble when you can get a sure thing.

You are going to run to smear somebody who, although he does have a conservative philosophy, has a distinuguished record and is well respected by both Democrats and Republicans.

Meanwhile, Karl Rove and the rest of the criminals in the are going to get a reprieve because people like you want to blow all the ammo on a fight you can't win?

by Christopher Hitchens 2005-07-20 12:04PM | 0 recs
Re: You're Usually Pretty Smart, Gary
Uh...welcome to MyDD Christopher Hitchens (?).

All solid points, except for the larger point you miss.

The GOP has spent millions convincing the country that there are two options to follow on Roberts:  vote up or down.  Give in to the President's will or be damned.  No other options.

This is absolute nonsense.  It's a logic bought and paid for by a Bush Presidency that has contempt for our consitution and the system.  Bush told the country that he was "deliberating" and being "thoughtful" in his choice for the Supreme court, but instead he took two weeks to drop another white Christian man on the courte, expertly floated into the media to squeegee away as much of the Rove carnage as he could.  

The choice is not to fight or not to fight.  The choice is how to advance a Democratic agenda at this moment, under these circumstances, in this political climate.  That's the choice.

So, anyone who stands up and says, "You can't win, so don't waster your bullets," is not really interested in advancing a Democratic agenda in this country.  It's just posturing at "real politics."

George Bush didn't just nominate a justice.  It's not some job applicant  he put forward for review.  He's put in place the next phase of his plan to destroy Liberal though in America, to eliminate the Bill of Rights, and to elevate the Presidency to a status that is above the Constitution and the people.  

When the Democrats respond strongly to Roberts, it's not about winning or losing.  Any Democrat with a pulse can see that Roberts will likely be confirmed.  But how do we want it happen?  What ideas do we want out there?

Partisan hack?  I don't know.  It seems like as good a place to start as any other.  

When Thomas was confirmed, Democrats knew they were going to lose.  And the used it as an opportunity to change political discourse in this country.  And it worked.  The concept of "sexual harassment" came out of that process.  And it has led to important changes.  Not perfect, but important.

We can do the same, here.  We may not know exactly where we want to take the debate, yet.  But we know we want this debate to reinforce the idea that the Bush White House is corrupt and that the  nation is suffering a national crisis--a national crisis--brought on by a group of criminals that President Bush is now protecting through some fancy Rose Garden maneuvers.

Absolutely:  Rove is waltzing around the White House thinking that he outsmarted the Democrats.  But he didn't.  Because right now the Democrast are going to seize the Roberts nomination and use it to crack open the lid on this administration.

by Jeffrey Feldman 2005-07-20 12:50PM | 0 recs
Re: You're Usually Pretty Smart, Gary
The only way to really advance the Democratic agenda is to win elections, or change so that the agenda is what the people want. It's like a 'chicken or the egg' scenerio. If all you do is fight the Republicans on every single thing, then you will lose sight of your agenda. And continue to lose elections.
by Christopher Hitchens 2005-07-20 02:03PM | 0 recs
Apology!
Scratch that "welcome to Mydd" opening.  I thought you were the other Hitchens.   An honest mistake...
by Jeffrey Feldman 2005-07-20 01:03PM | 0 recs
Re: You're Usually Pretty Smart, Gary
What makes you think that attacking Roberts is going to damage Bush in the court of public opinion?
Please re-read my diary. I say quite clearly that we should be attacking Bus, not Roberts. And the reason is because Roberts is not the sort of judge that Bush is pretending to give us. Just as the "war on terror" is not the sort of response to 9/11 that he pretended to give us.

You really do need to learn to (1) read, (2) stop parroting other people's talking points, (3) make actual arguments, so that people can have more productive discussions with you.

by Paul Rosenberg 2005-07-20 02:05PM | 0 recs
I am currently trying to call for moderation
as the litmus test in the confirmation process. If you agree, please check out my petition to Arlen Specter:

http://www.petitiononline.com/ft12rc24/petition.html

by bruh21 2005-07-19 07:56PM | 0 recs
This Is So 1990s!
I'm not saying it shouldn't be done.  But what I'm talking about is getting right in Bush's face long before it comes to the formal confirmation process.
by Paul Rosenberg 2005-07-19 08:14PM | 0 recs
Re: This Is So 1990s!
Well a call for moderation as the petition I have written states nothing about being in Bush's face, but ask them to look for signs that Judge Roberts will be a moderating influence on the Court as their litmus test. This isn't saying that he needs to be liberal or conservative- just moderate is all.
by bruh21 2005-07-19 08:58PM | 0 recs
Re: This Is So 1990s!
I'm not objecting to what you're doing. I'm simply pointing out that there are newer ways to do things, and that we need to keep evolving our strategies. That doesn't necessarily mean dropping old approaches. Especially since there's polling data showing that people want a moderate, I think that both our approaches will converge.  

But the danger is that old approaches will continue to be used semi-automatically, and that people will fail to press themselves to seek out new approaches.  We simply can't afford that sort of passive activism.

by Paul Rosenberg 2005-07-19 09:07PM | 0 recs
Re: This Is So 1990s!
Well to be honest, I don't think you have to worry about that from my petition. I have gotten tepid response from people. The view seems to be wait and see. I am not exactly sure why that approach makes sense unless they want to Rove story to take over again. I say this because it would make sense to want to have a test for what is important in terms of the nomination process- perhaps people want to wait until the Republicans shape this for us? I really don't know. Also, I plan to rewrite the petition maybe in a few days, and see if the less agressive petition will work. Right now, I am not counting on it though. Our response to everything seems to be to do nothing.
by bruh21 2005-07-19 09:32PM | 0 recs
Re: This Is So 1990s!
Our response to everything seems to be to do nothing.

That's the typical Dem approach. I don't see anything about Roberts that will change that.

by Gary Boatwright 2005-07-19 09:48PM | 0 recs
Re: This Is So 1990s!
Well, I just had a talk over at D Kos- I think the point seems to be to wait closer until the nomiation process so that Bush's goal of using this to change the subject from Rove will fail.
by bruh21 2005-07-19 10:00PM | 0 recs
Well at least we can all rest assured.....
That Gore would have nominated this guy anyway....

After all Gore and Bush are the same right?

Lets move left and vote for Ralph Nader.....

Or Dean.

by donkeykong 2005-07-20 01:18AM | 0 recs
I'll smash you with an oversized hammer!!!
Why do people keep calling Dean 'left?'

Oh right... 'cuz he opposed the war, so he must be a leftist!  FUCK!

Dean is more centrist when you take into account his other, non-Iraq views.  Listen to him speak once in a while, DK.

Grrr.

by teknofyl 2005-07-20 02:01PM | 0 recs
You go, Paul!
This is a great piece.  MyDD is the only site that has been willing to break out of the bogus "polite politics" frame that Bush has enforced with this Roberts nomination.  

What do you think about the idea of "obedience" to the President?

I think a strong case can be made that President Bush only nominates judges who have a strong record of obeying the Bush agenda.  Nominations, for Bush, are rewards for obedience, not achievement.

John Roberts has a history of being "Mr. Obedience."

Any thoughts?

by Jeffrey Feldman 2005-07-20 03:44AM | 0 recs
YEAHAAARGHH!!!!!
I can see why you guys like Dean, that "fire up the base" rhetoric sure is E-LEC-TRI-FY-ING!

Now can we rejoin the adult world? You cannot Bork this guy, that well is dry. If you had any craft at all you would be using judo rather than 60s style confrontation politics. Don't attack on a strong front, keep going after their weakness, Rove and the lies to get us to war. The ongoing occupation.

I'm so tired of the usual suspects coming out of the woodwork for yet another Pickett's charge. A petition? Gimmie a break. This country has close to 130 million voters. Try capturing half of that with your "teenage angst" Liberalism.

by Paul Goodman 2005-07-20 05:18AM | 0 recs
Re: YEAHAAARGHH!!!!!
I'm not sure if this "usual suspects" was directed at me, but...

This argument keeps coming up:  ignore Roberts, go after Rove.

I see the logic, but the media will be on Roberts for the current cycle.  So we can't walk away.  Like it or not, there was a nomination and we have to try to control that debate, too.

The problem last night was that everyone laid down and went to sleep because Roberts wasn't a KKK Grand Wizard with blood dripping down his neck.  The pumped up rhetoric was to wake people up again.  The arguments will get more subtle over the course of the day.

by Jeffrey Feldman 2005-07-20 05:30AM | 0 recs
Re: YEAHAAARGHH!!!!!
Not necessarily true... There is one way to shift the media focus off of Roberts.  It will take total balls on Reid though and the willingness to piss off the Pro-Choice advocates.  Come out and say that there will be some tough questions, but there will be no filibuster, as long as no extrordinary circumstances come up.  The media focus is not on Roberts... it is on the fight.  Take the fight away and they go back to the juiciest piece of meat.  If you do it though, do it ASAP... get Rove right back in the picture.  In fact Reid could say he is calling for hearings on what the white house knew about the Plume thing... Even if the GOP squashes it, it gets people talking.  
by yitbos96bb 2005-07-20 06:16AM | 0 recs
Red Herrings,Pathetic Claims In Place of Arguments
There is so much wrong with this comment, it could fill its own diary. In one way, it boils down to yet another tired, ill-conceived attack on Dean. Yawn. It does so by using rightwing language ("Bork") and by using that in making an unsubstantiated, dismissive, demobilizing claim ("You cannot Bork this guy, that well is dry.")

It pretends to common sense/great wisdom: "Don't attack on a strong front, keep going after their weakness."  But Rove himself has clearly demonstrated the value of doing the opposite, and going after strength.

And then there's the name-calling ("teenage angst" Liberalism.}

But behind all these wrong-way signs there is one giant wrong-way sign.  The one that says to focus on "Rove and the lies to get us to war" when those are actually two different targets, of which Rove himself is a distraction.

This gets back to my whole point in this diary. It's not about Roberts. It's not about Rove. It's about Bush.

It's about Bush and his lies about Iraq, sending thousands off to die for a lie. It's about Bush and his lies about firing Rove. It's about Bush and his lies about appointing judges who won't legislate from the bench. It's about Bush and his lies about everything he ever talks about.  It's about Bush and the destruction of America, because when he says "protect America" he really means "destroy America."

by Paul Rosenberg 2005-07-20 06:56AM | 0 recs
Why Bush?
Why the focus on Bush? He's not running again for anything. The useful thing about Rove is his ties to Republican money and strategy, and his ties to the Republican congress. A tarred and feathered Rove still squatting in the White House would be gold for '06.

Bush is vile, but at this point putting all your focus on attacking him is just personal vendetta, not useful politics.

by rusty 2005-07-20 07:57AM | 0 recs
Re: Why Bush?
(1) Because he's the most powerful Republican in the known universe, and everything we can possibly do to weaken him weakens the Republicans as a whole.

(2) Because, come 2007, I'm looking forward to President Pelosi.

by Paul Rosenberg 2005-07-20 06:11PM | 0 recs
Obedience, Certainly!
This is all part of the neo-feudalist agenda.  

You don't promote people because of their competence. You fire them. Because competent people tell you when you're wrong. And those in power--rulers of the state, blessed by God--can do no wrong.

You promote people who are loyal. People who obey. People who twist, and turn, and fix the conclusions to fit the policy, no matter what the facts, no matter what decades--or even centuries--of settled, professional practice say--whether its in the field of intelligence, or jurisprudence.

In the wider world, we can't lead with the "neo-feudal" frame. People don't have the context to understand it. But we can use the obedience frame to introduce it. Because it really is what's going on.  

by Paul Rosenberg 2005-07-20 07:06AM | 0 recs
Sham choice by bush
This appointment was a sham by Bush.  He used this appointmaent to take the attention immediately off of his troubles in the Karl Rove leak investigation.  Had it not been for the leak investigation, Bush would have given more time and consideration to the nominee and named a moderate.  But Bush rushed his choice and not given the careful consideration the nominee needed for short term political gain.  I am saddened by this nominee, and he will try to overturn alot of presidents set by previous courts over 40 years. Now the court is divided 4-4-1 and 1 more new nominee that replaces a liberal or a moderate will tip the balance the the 5-4 conservative side.  Even if the nominee, Judge Roberts get through, the all of the Democrats can vote no on this nominee to tell Bush, one more nominee to replace a swing or liberal vote won't be tolerated.  This nominee is not on the Democrats side and is anti civil right.
by mleflo2 2005-07-20 04:47AM | 0 recs
Yeah! Yeah! and we're gonna fall for it!
He's... trying... to... distract us... from... Rove... Must... Not... fall for it... Can't... Control... my reflexes... Must... fall... for trap...

"The nominee is not on the Democrats side" Duh.

"and is anti civil right" any proof of that? Didn't think so.

By the way are you in favor of legalized Gay Marriage?

by Paul Goodman 2005-07-20 05:22AM | 0 recs
Proof He's Anti-Civil Rights
From The Alliance For Justice (there's a reason God invented hyper-links, folks!):
Civil Rights
Roberts co-authored two briefs on the government's behalf arguing for court supervision to be lifted in school desegregation cases. In a 1990 case, the amicus brief co-authored by Roberts in his capacity as Deputy Solicitor General sought to weaken the standard and limit the timeline for court-enforced desegregation decrees in the nation's schools.

Roberts argued that Oklahoma City schools, which had been declared "unitary" in 1977, could not again be subjected to a desegregation decree in 1985, despite the school board's decision to eliminate busing in elementary  schools, thus returning a number of schools that had previously been desegregated to one-race status.16 In a 5-3 split, with Justice Souter not yet participating, the Supreme Court held that the board did not have to remain under court-ordered supervision, and that it could implement the proposed change, so long as the result did not cause a new violation of the Equal Protection Clause. In a strong dissent joined by Justices Blackmun and Stevens, Justice Marshall wrote:


    The majority today suggests that 13 years of desegregation was enough.... Because the record here shows, and the Court of Appeals found, that feasible steps could be taken to avoid one-race schools, it is clear that the purposes of the decree have not yet been achieved and the Court of Appeals' reinstatement of the decree should be affirmed. I therefore dissent.17

Here's a hint, PG: "It's better to remain silent, and be taken for a fool, than to open your mouth, and remove all doubt."

by Paul Rosenberg 2005-07-20 07:17AM | 0 recs
Legalized Gay Marriage is a must
Why would anyone care if gays want to marry?

I'd think that if you were against homosexuality, you'd also be against homosexual promiscuity... but no.... these people want all gays to be single.

And single people get around... or at least... i would... if i were single.

=P-

But seriously... what's the big problem?

by teknofyl 2005-07-20 02:06PM | 0 recs
Response to absurb comment
No I'm not in favor of gay marriage.  He is anti civil rights because he is not in favor of affirmative action.  He is a vote against the 6-3 affirmative action decision that was decided last year.  So, if theat case go before the court again, he is a vote against that decision.
by mleflo2 2005-07-20 06:02AM | 0 recs
And what exactly is wrong ...
...with being "in favor" of gay marriage?  
by ugagal00 2005-07-20 06:22AM | 0 recs
rebuttal to rebuttal
I'm still not in favor of gay marriage.  This nomination is a sham.  The guy, Mr. Roberts is a right wing activist and he is a movement conservative.  He wants to overturn Roe, he doesn't want affirmative action (anti-civil rights) and wants prayer in school (10 commandments in public players).  The guy shouldn't be confirmed.  If he is the Dems should pound on him and expose him for what he is and expose Bush for what they are both movement conservatives.
by mleflo2 2005-07-21 06:25AM | 0 recs

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