[Mb-civic] Roberts throws a curve - Thomas Oliphant - Boston Globe
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Thu Sep 15 03:26:45 PDT 2005
Roberts throws a curve
By Thomas Oliphant | September 15, 2005
WASHINGTON ''WELCOME to 'Night Court,' " said a smiling Democratic
Senator Richard Durbin to a deadpan John Roberts as the confirmation
hearings for the country's 17th chief justice droned into their 12th
hour. It was late, but before the evening session was over there was one
more instructive lesson into the nominee's distinguished past that ended
up undercutting the Democrats' efforts to use inference instead of
evidence to suggest that Roberts is an agenda-driven right-winger.
President Bush may have made no bones about his admiration for Justices
Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, offering them as his models for the
Supreme Court. But in nominating Roberts, and off his diligent
performance in the confirmation process, Bush has ended up disquieting
his conservative supporters more than antagonizing progressives. The guy
is coming off like a judge who happens to be conservative as opposed to
a conservative judge.
The exchange with Senator Durbin of Illinois was over one of the most
shameful episodes of the Ronald Reagan era, when there was an attempt to
chip at the foundations of civil rights law. Early in Reagan's first
term, in a move that deeply split the young administration, there was an
effort to allow tax deductions for tuition paid to private schools that
were flagrantly racist. None was more so than Bob Jones University --
which at the time forbade black and white students from socializing. Had
the effort succeeded, segregation could have received a huge economic
boost via the back door.
Reagan's move was blocked in a Supreme Court decision more than 20 years
ago. Eight justices on a conservative court opposed. The lone dissenter,
however, was William Rehnquist, for whom Roberts had just finished
clerking. Moreover, Roberts moved on to Reagan's Justice Department and
then his White House counsel's office. While he played no active role in
the case, the young lawyer did write at least two of his famous memos on
the subject in 1982 and 1983.
What Durbin pressed him on was the fundamental questions relevant to
today: ''Which side were you on?" After a little fencing, Roberts said
the Reagan administration was wrong in its attempt to help the likes of
Bob Jones University. End of subject, end of suspicion, and once again
Roberts had commented on a Supreme Court case from the recent past.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2005/09/15/roberts_throws_a_curve/
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