| Values
Voters Want Conservative Courts
by John Plecnik
With
Election Day come and gone, President George W. Bush and the Republican
National Committee have got to be feeling fairly good. Values voters
have made Republicans the majority party. Increased margins in the
U.S. House and Senate give Republicans a solid majority, albeit
vulnerable to filibuster. With U.S. Sen. Tom Daschle (D-S.D.) ceding
his seat to former U.S. Rep. John Thune (R-S.D.), the so-called
obstructionist-in-chief will be forced to watch from the sidelines.
Poor Daschle. From last summer, I vividly remember seeing him enter
the Senate dining room while I ate lunch with U.S. Rep. Sue Myrick
(R-N.C.). The hapless Daschle was introduced by one of his colleagues
as the next "Majority Leader" of the Senate. Such was
not to be...
The real prize from November 2 is "4 more years!"
The real question, then, is how shall we spend them? Will Republicans
maintain their support among values voters to remain the majority
party? Values voters want Supreme Court nominees who are strict
constructionists who write their opinions based on the Constitution,
not activists that rewrite the Constitution based on their personal
opinions.
I earned a 4.0 in Constitutional Law, but learned
only one absolute. Today, the law is what the judges say it is.
Judicial appointments color our Constitution, causing such selections
to be of utmost importance. Chief Justice William Rehnquist has
recently undergone throat surgery following a diagnosis of thyroid
cancer. He is likely to step down shortly. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
is also nearing retirement. To be frank, most of the court is graying
fast. Bush will probably have to fill anywhere from two to four
vacancies over his next term.
First, Bush must avoid the sins of his father; conservatives
will not accept another David Souter. The 51% of America that weighed
in on the Right side of our nation's election expect some results.
The Democrats are already drawing a proverbial line in the sand
at Supreme Court nominations, characterizing Roe v. Wade as holy
writ and threatening to filibuster. Not satisfied with disqualifying
nominees who openly disagree with the dubious precedent of Roe v.
Wade, the Democrats have taken to blocking any and all conservatives.
Tongue in cheek, Daschle and company swore that Miguel Estrada,
a respected lawyer, held views that were "outside the mainstream"
and permanently forestalled his appointment to the U.S. Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. A conservative superstar and American
success story, Democrats feared the very real possibility that Estrada
might become the first Hispanic justice on the U.S. Supreme Court
during a second Bush term.
Let's face the truth. No matter how qualified or
reasonable our conservative jurists are the Democrats will cry “extremist”
every time. Bush has two simple choices: appease his enemies with
activist appointments or repay his base with strict constructionists.
Should he choose the former, Bush would earn a week of favorable
coverage from the New York Times and enrage millions of Christian
conservatives who would likely never vote Republican again. Choose
the latter, and a feeble filibuster would stay his hand for a year
at the most.
I say choose the latter and stick with your freinds.
For that matter, if angering the Left is inevitable, you might as
well enjoy it. My recommendation for U.S. Supreme Court: the Honorable
Kenneth Starr.
John
T. Plecnik is a twenty-year-old law student at Duke University and
Executive Editor of The Devil's Advocate. As Policy Advisor
for the Duke Chapter, John authored the first-ever statewide platform
for the North Carolina Federation of College Republicans.
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