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SOUTER IN ROBERTS CLOTHING, ANN COULTER
Ann Coulter.com ^ | 7-30-05 | Ann Coulter

Posted on 07/20/2005 7:33:31 AM PDT by Babu

After pretending to consider various women and minorities for the Supreme Court these past few weeks, President Bush decided to disappoint all the groups he had just ginned up and nominate a white male.

So all we know about him for sure is that he can't dance and he probably doesn't know who Jay-Z is. Other than that, he is a blank slate. Tabula rasa. Big zippo. Nada. Oh, yeah...we also know he's argued cases before the supreme court. big deal; so has Larry fFynt's attorney.

But unfortunately, other than that that, we don’t know much about John Roberts. Stealth nominees have never turned out to be a pleasant surprise for conservatives. Never. Not ever.

Since the announcement, court-watchers have been like the old Kremlinologists from Soviet days looking for clues as to what kind of justice Roberts will be. Will he let us vote?

Does he live in a small, rough-hewn cabin in the woods of New Hampshire and avoid "women folk"?

Does he trust democracy? Or will he make all the important decisions for us and call them “constitutional rights.”

It means absolutely nothing that NARAL and Planned Parenthood attack him: They also attacked Sandra Day O’Connor, Anthony Kennedy and David Hackett Souter.

The only way a supreme court nominee could win the approval of NARAL and Planned Parenthood would be to actually perform an abortion during his confirmation hearing, live, on camera, and preferably a partial birth one.

It means nothing that Roberts wrote briefs arguing for the repeal of Roe v. Wade when he worked for Republican administrations. He was arguing on behalf of his client, the United States of America. Roberts has specifically disassociated himself from those cases, dropping a footnote to a 1994 law review article that said:

“In the interest of full disclosure, the author would like to point out that as Deputy Solicitor General for a portion of the 1992-93 Term, he was involved in many of the cases discussed below. In the interest of even fuller disclosure, he would also like to point out that his views as a commentator on those cases do not necessarily reflect his views as an advocate for his former client, the United States.”

This would have been the legal equivalent, after O.J.'s acquittal, of Johnnie Cochran saying, "hey, I never said the guy was innocent. I was just doing my job."

And it makes no difference that conservatives in the White House are assuring us Roberts can be trusted. We got the exact same assurances from officials working for the last president Bush about David Hackett Souter.

I believe their exact words were, "Read our lips; Souter's a reliable conservative."

From the theater of the absurd category, the Republican National Committee’s “talking points” on Roberts provide this little tidbit:

“In the 1995 case of Barry v. Little, Judge Roberts argued—free of charge—before the D.C. Court of Appeals on behalf of a class of the neediest welfare recipients, challenging a termination of benefits under the District’s Public Assistance Act of 1982.”

I'm glad to hear the man has a steady work record, but how did this make it to the top of his resume?

Bill Clinton goes around bragging that he passed welfare reform, which was, admittedly, the one public policy success of his entire administration (passed by the Republican Congress). But now apparently Republicans want to pretend the Party of welfare queens! Soon the RNC will be boasting that Republicans want to raise your taxes and surrender in the war on terrorism too.

Finally, lets ponder the fact that Roberts has gone through 50 years on this planet without ever saying anything controversial. That’s just unnatural.

By contrast, I held out for three months, tops, before dropping my first rhetorical bombshell, which I think was about Goldwater.

It’s especially unnatural for someone who is smart and there’s no question but that Roberts is smart.

If a smart and accomplished person goes this long without expressing an opinion, they'd better be pursuing the Miss America title.

Apparently, Roberts decided early on that he wanted to be on the Supreme Court and that the way to do that was not to express a personal opinion on anything to anybody ever. It’s as if he is from some space alien sleeper cell. Maybe the space aliens are trying to help us, but I wish we knew that.

If the Senate were in Democrat hands, Roberts would be perfect. But why on earth would Bush waste a nomination on a person who is a complete blank slate when we have a majority in the Senate!

We also have a majority in the House, state legislatures, state governorships, and have won five of the last seven presidential elections — seven of the last ten!

We're the Harlem Globetrotters now - why do we have to play the Washington Generals every week?

Conservatism is sweeping the nation, we have a fully functioning alternative media, we’re ticked off and ready to avenge Robert Bork . . . and Bush nominates a Rorschach blot.

Even as they are losing voters, Democrats don’t hesitate to nominate reliable left-wing lunatics like Ruth Bader Ginsberg to lifetime sinecures on the High Court. And the vast majority of Americans loathe her views.

As I’ve said before, if a majority of Americans agreed with liberals on abortion, gay marriage, pornography, criminals’ rights, and property rights –liberals wouldn’t need the Supreme Court to give them everything they want through invented “constitutional” rights invisible to everyone but People For the American Way. It’s always good to remind voters that Democrats are the party of abortion, sodomy, and atheism and nothing presents an opportunity to do so like a Supreme Court nomination.

During the “filibuster” fracas, one lonely voice in the woods admonished Republicans: “Of your six minutes on TV, use 30 seconds to point out the Democrats are abusing the filibuster and the other 5 1/2 minutes to ask liberals to explain why they think Bush's judicial nominees are ‘extreme.’" Republicans ignored this advice, spent the next several weeks arguing about the history of the filibuster, and lost the fight.

Now we come to find out from last Sunday’s New York Times — the enemy’s own playbook! — that the Democrats actually took polls and determined that they could not defeat Bush’s conservative judicial nominees on ideological grounds. They could win majority support only if they argued turgid procedural points.

That’s why the entire nation had to be bored to death with arguments about the filibuster earlier this year.

The Democrats’ own polls showed voters are no longer fooled by claims that the Democrats are trying to block “judges who would roll back civil rights.” Borking is over.

And Bush responds by nominating a candidate who will allow Democrats to avoid fighting on their weakest ground – substance. He has given us a Supreme Court nomination that will placate no liberals and should please no conservatives.

Maybe Roberts will contravene the sordid history of “stealth nominees” and be the Scalia or Thomas Bush promised us when he was asking for our votes. Or maybe he won’t. The Supreme Court shouldn't be a game of Russian roulette.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: anncoulter; aspintersrant; bushbotrage; coulter; johngroberts; johnroberts; scotus; souter
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To: Stingray51

bump


81 posted on 07/20/2005 7:52:16 AM PDT by Rodney King (No, we can't all just get along.)
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To: bankwalker
Maybe Ann is just trying to make his confirmation easier by tricking the rats with this article.

There could be some strategery here, but I tend to doubt it. Ann is considered by the left to be a total right-wing whackjob. If she supported him, that would be a strike against him in some circles.

82 posted on 07/20/2005 7:52:23 AM PDT by RobFromGa (Send Bolton to the UN!)
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To: frogjerk
Mark Levin is one of the great minds in our circle.
Honestly while I like Ann I don't pay too much
attention to her.Her mo is to be outrageous.
83 posted on 07/20/2005 7:52:25 AM PDT by since1868
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To: billnaz

DUmmies also hyperventilated on Souter. Again, is she wrong about Roberts opposition to time limits on welfare? Nobody has addressed this point.


84 posted on 07/20/2005 7:52:27 AM PDT by Austin Willard Wright
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To: frogjerk

Bush could nominate Leon Trotsky or Lenin to the Supreme Court and the mainstream leftist Dems would attack them.

The Dems simply hate Bush - period. They will oppose ANYTHING or ANYONE he supports. Its a visceral, unreasoned hatred for a man who is far from a far-right conservative. Its grounded in a personal vendetta.


85 posted on 07/20/2005 7:52:40 AM PDT by ZULU (Fear the government which fears your guns. God, guts, and guns made America great.)
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To: Willie Green

John G. Roberts Biography

Some say John G. Roberts is a Rehnquist clone, sounds perfect to me.

Info from slate.com's biography of him: Age: 50 Graduated from: Harvard Law School. He clerked for: Judge Henry Friendly, Chief Justice William Rehnquist.

He used to be: associate counsel to the president for Ronald Reagan, deputy solicitor general for George H.W. Bush, partner at Hogan & Hartson. He's now: a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit (appointed 2003). His confirmation battle: Roberts has been floated as a nominee who could win widespread support in the Senate. Not so likely. He hasn't been on the bench long enough for his judicial opinions to provide much ammunition for liberal opposition groups. But his record as a lawyer for the Reagan and first Bush administrations and in private practice is down-the-line conservative on key contested fronts, including abortion, separation of church and state, and environmental protection.

Civil Rights and Liberties For a unanimous panel, denied the weak civil rights claims of a 12-year-old girl who was arrested and handcuffed in a Washington, D.C., Metro station for eating a French fry. Roberts noted that "no one is very happy about the events that led to this litigation" and that the Metro authority had changed the policy that led to her arrest. (Hedgepeth v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, 2004).

In private practice, wrote a friend-of-the-court brief arguing that Congress had failed to justify a Department of Transportation affirmative action program. (Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Mineta, 2001).

For Reagan, opposed a congressional effort—in the wake of the 1980 Supreme Court decision Mobile v. Bolden—to make it easier for minorities to successfully argue that their votes had been diluted under the Voting Rights Act.

Separation of Church and State For Bush I, co-authored a friend-of-the-court brief arguing that public high-school graduation programs could include religious ceremonies. The Supreme Court disagreed by a vote of 5-4. (Lee v. Weisman, 1992)

Environmental Protection and Property Rights Voted for rehearing in a case about whether a developer had to take down a fence so that the arroyo toad could move freely through its habitat. Roberts argued that the panel was wrong to rule against the developer because the regulations on behalf of the toad, promulgated under the Endangered Species Act, overstepped the federal government's power to regulate interstate commerce. At the end of his opinion, Roberts suggested that rehearing would allow the court to "consider alternative grounds" for protecting the toad that are "more consistent with Supreme Court precedent." (Rancho Viejo v. Nortion, 2003)

For Bush I, argued that environmental groups concerned about mining on public lands had not proved enough about the impact of the government's actions to give them standing to sue. The Supreme Court adopted this argument. (Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation, 1990)

Criminal Law Joined a unanimous opinion ruling that a police officer who searched the trunk of a car without saying that he was looking for evidence of a crime (the standard for constitutionality) still conducted the search legally, because there was a reasonable basis to think contraband was in the trunk, regardless of whether the officer was thinking in those terms. (U.S. v. Brown, 2004)

Habeas Corpus Joined a unanimous opinion denying the claim of a prisoner who argued that by tightening parole rules in the middle of his sentence, the government subjected him to an unconstitutional after-the-fact punishment. The panel reversed its decision after a Supreme Court ruling directly contradicted it. (Fletcher v. District of Columbia, 2004)

Abortion For Bush I, successfully helped argue that doctors and clinics receiving federal funds may not talk to patients about abortion. (Rust v. Sullivan, 1991)

Judicial Philosophy Concurring in a decision allowing President Bush to halt suits by Americans against Iraq as the country rebuilds, Roberts called for deference to the executive and for a literal reading of the relevant statute. (Acree v. Republic of Iraq, 2004)

In an article written as a law student, argued that the phrase "just compensation" in the Fifth Amendment, which limits the government in the taking of private property, should be "informed by changing norms of justice." This sounds like a nod to liberal constitutional theory, but Rogers' alternative interpretation was more protective of property interests than Supreme Court law at the time.

Do you see anything here that makes you believe he is anything but a strict constructionalist, originalist and deep thinking conservative?


86 posted on 07/20/2005 7:52:44 AM PDT by traderrob6
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To: i_dont_chat

>> She is man enough <<

Umm, unfortunate choice of words, giving the ridiculous conspiracy theory being floated by the barking moonbats over at DU.


87 posted on 07/20/2005 7:52:49 AM PDT by dangus
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To: PhiKapMom

I for one, am waiting on EIB's take on Roberts.


88 posted on 07/20/2005 7:52:53 AM PDT by Sybeck1 (chance is the “magic wand to make not only rabbits but entire universes appear out of nothing.”)
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To: evets

You want fat chicks, cruise a MoveOn.org rally.


89 posted on 07/20/2005 7:52:58 AM PDT by FormerLib (Kosova: "land stolen from Serbs and given to terrorist killers in a futile attempt to appease them.")
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To: RockinRight
Ann, sorry babe...like I told you last night when we were talking...I think you're wrong on this one.

So that was you who woke us up at midnight. Next time call before 9.

90 posted on 07/20/2005 7:52:58 AM PDT by 1Old Pro
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To: Austin Willard Wright

No. But I believe Roberts is a solid Constructionist. He has ruled this way all throughout his career. Don't forget, he's a judge not a legislator.


91 posted on 07/20/2005 7:53:04 AM PDT by trek
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To: Willie Green

If you'll accept anecdotal evidence, a rock-solid conservative co-worker of mine worked with him for several years & swears this is the best choice Bush could have made.


92 posted on 07/20/2005 7:53:07 AM PDT by nina0113
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To: Josh in PA
Sounds like Ann isn't happy.

She is right, this is a missed opportunity. We could have pounded the Dems into the ground, and driven them into heretofore unknown reaches of publicly witnessed insanity.

93 posted on 07/20/2005 7:53:08 AM PDT by D Rider
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To: MeanWestTexan

True about any lawyer's defense and his personal opinion.

I'm sure that any defense of an alleged murderer in court certainly doesn't mean that his lawyer agrees with him.


94 posted on 07/20/2005 7:53:26 AM PDT by GOPologist ("On some days you may feel like a dog; on other days you may feel like a hydrant!")
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To: Babu
Gotta disgree with with Ann on this one. She's off the resrvation.

Anyone who confuses Roberts with Souter just is not credible on this issue.

95 posted on 07/20/2005 7:53:37 AM PDT by CWW (Mark Sanford for President on 2008!)
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To: Babu
Sorry, Ann ... gotta love ya (and statements like "The only way a supreme court nominee could win the approval of NARAL and Planned Parenthood would be to actually perform an abortion during his confirmation hearing, live, on camera, and preferably a partial birth one." make me love ya even more), but your off the planet on this one. This guy is NOT a blank slate. His rulings, and his opinions, while serving on the Appeals court these past two years demonstrate that he is a strict constructionist. His willingness to work, ardently, as legal counsel for conservative causes also shows that he is a conservative. He's a member of the Federalist Society. He was law clerk for the CJ. His personal contributions to the Bush 2000 recount fund, and repeated campaign contributions to Republican Conservatives and the Party, all demonstrate that he puts his money where his heart is.

Sorry, Ann. We still love ya, but you're wrong on this one. Beautiful, but wrong.
96 posted on 07/20/2005 7:53:37 AM PDT by TexasGreg ("Democrats Piss Me Off")
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To: Babu
It means nothing that Roberts wrote briefs arguing for the repeal of Roe v. Wade when he worked for Republican administrations. He was arguing on behalf of his client, the United States of America. Roberts has specifically disassociated himself from those cases...

I agree with the always-brilliant Ann that it's troubling that some of Roberts's words seem meant to disassociate himself from his "Roe was wrongly decided and should be repealed" statement.

HOWEVER. Something I heard this morning might contradict this:

According to James Rosen of Fox News, the "Roe was wrongly decided" language was included in an "INTERNAL MEMO" written by Roberts, not originally intended for public consumption.

Rosen insisted that that statement therefore was a reflection of Roberts's personal views.

I don't know if Rosen is right, just reporting what I heard him say this morning on WABC radio.

97 posted on 07/20/2005 7:53:57 AM PDT by gingersnaps
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To: schmidt

What brought that on?


98 posted on 07/20/2005 7:53:57 AM PDT by sarasota
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To: traderrob6

She obviously hasn't spoken with Mark Levin yet.


99 posted on 07/20/2005 7:54:08 AM PDT by TexasCajun
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To: Russ

dittos
`


100 posted on 07/20/2005 7:54:34 AM PDT by AFPhys ((.Praying for President Bush, our troops, their families, and all my American neighbors..))
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