[Mb-civic] President Pushover - David S. Broder - Washington Post
Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Nov 2 03:53:05 PST 2005
President Pushover
By David S. Broder
Wednesday, November 2, 2005; Page A21
Under other circumstances, President Bush's choice of Judge Samuel Alito
for the Supreme Court would have been seen as a bold move by a strong
president with a clear policy objective. By choosing a man of superior
intellectual heft and an indelible record of conservative views on major
social issues, Bush would have been challenging his critics on the
Democratic side to test their arguments in an arena where everything
favored him: a Republican Senate.
But after the fiasco of the Harriet Miers nomination and the other
reversals of recent days and weeks, the Alito nomination inevitably
looks like a defensive move, a lunge for the lifeboat by an embattled
president to secure what is left of his political base. Instead of a
consistent and principled approach to major decision making, Bush's
efforts look like off-balance grabs for whatever policy rationales he
can find. The president's opponents are emboldened by this performance,
and his fellow partisans must increasingly wonder if they can afford to
march to his command.
None of this is to suggest that Judge Alito will be -- or should be --
blocked from elevation to the seat of Sandra Day O'Connor. His record
entitles him to the serious consideration and questioning he will
undoubtedly receive from the Judiciary Committee. But after Bush
acquiesced in the conservative movement's uproar denying Miers her
chance for an up-or-down Senate vote, or even a hearing in that
committee, there is no plausible way the White House can insist that
every major judicial nominee deserves such a vote.
That was the rationale behind the threatened "nuclear option" in the
Senate, the mid-session rule change that would have banned judicial
filibusters. If the mass of Democrats and a few Republicans who may be
dismayed by Alito's stands on abortion and other issues can muster the
41 votes needed to sustain a filibuster under current rules, they now
have precedent for using their power.
The conservative screamers who shot down Miers can argue that they were
fighting only for a "qualified" nominee, though it is plain that many of
them wanted more -- a guarantee that Miers would do their bidding and
overrule Roe v. Wade . But whatever the rationale, the fact is that they
short-circuited the confirmation process by raising hell with Bush.
Certainly there can be no greater sin in a sizable bloc of sitting
senators using long-standing Senate rules to stymie a nomination than a
cabal of outsiders -- a lynching squad of right-wing journalists,
self-sanctified religious and moral organizations, and other frustrated
power-brokers -- rolling over the president they all ostensibly support.
But the message that has been sent is that this president is
surprisingly easy to roll. He came out of his election victory
proclaiming that Social Security reform was his No. 1 priority. For six
months he stumped the country trying to sell his ideas -- and failed. In
retrospect, even Republicans said he misjudged the temper of the public
by emphasizing privatization over solvency as the chief goal. He tried
to isolate senior citizens from the battle, only to see them in the
front lines. And he managed to unite the Democrats in opposition --
something their own leaders rarely can manage.
Next came Hurricane Katrina, which showed the whole country a case study
in mismanagement by a White House supposedly under Harvard Business
School-level discipline. Bush's first decision post-Katrina was to
suspend the law guaranteeing prevailing wages for reconstruction work.
But that decision too was quickly reversed, in the face of pressure from
Democrats, moderate Republicans and even the supposedly enfeebled labor
movement.
And then came the Miers fiasco, with the dagger held by the president's
staunchest allies. It made a shambles of any consistent claim that Bush
employs serious principles in picking judges. A system that veers from
an accomplished and studiously nonideological John Roberts to a
marginally credentialed and often confused-sounding Harriet Miers to an
intellectual and experienced Samuel Alito with pronounced ideological
views is no system at all.
Politically, the president probably had no choice but to reach back for
his conservative base in making the Alito nomination. At his current
levels of support, he has no place else to go. But the latest Washington
Post-ABC News poll contains a clear warning. Self-described
conservatives made up only 31 percent of the electorate. Moderates
numbered 44 percent. And the moderates were nearly exact opposites of
the conservatives in their views toward Bush, disapproving of his job
performance by a 38 to 61 percent margin, while conservatives approved
61 to 39.
The risks of a Supreme Court showdown fight are at least as great for
Bush as for the Democrats.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/01/AR2005110101256.html
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