Posted on 09/16/2007 3:25:02 PM PDT by paltz
President Bush has settled on retired federal judge Michael B. Mukasey to replace Alberto Gonzales as Attorney General, two sources familiar with the decision said Sunday.
The appointment of Mukasey, 66, considered a law-and-order conservative and authority on national security issues, could come as early as Monday morning, the sources said.
(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...
I was merely pointing out that the Ronald Reagan imprimatur isn't the ultimate litmus test.
Mukasey is not being put on the SC for 25 years like O’Connor was. He’s being up as AG for a little more than 1 year. He’ll have nothing to do with whether Roe or Casey is overturned, Affirmative Action is upheld, gay marriage is ruled constitutional, etc...
He’s basically just going to continue to be a strong advocate for Bush’s terrorism policies and hpe to restore morale and order afer Gonzo.
Also, if you look at both O’Connor and Kennedy they were both vaery conservative initially in their first few years. It was only later that they became more liberal and moderate. Mukasey won’t have time to evolve so we’ll get the conservative side of him for the year he’ll be there.
Sorry for the large text, but this bears repeating.
I admit Bush has taken a lot of crap off the Dems for the "Good of the Country." I don't know what the answer is, but I think a good fight wouldn't be a bad thing. The whole New Tone thing was for the good of the country, and we can all see what a good thing that turned out to be. He let the Clintons slide on all sorts of things, just to protect the office of the President, but damn, I don't think letting Sandy Burger walk was for the good of the country. He wants to legalize millions of illegal immigrants for the good of the country. We are supposed to be a nation of laws, and you can't judge criminals to be OK just because it is for the good of the country. Enforcing the laws of the country would be for the good of the country.
That's a little harsh
Oslen may have said Thanks, but no thanks, who needs that POS Schumer lording over me and treating my good name like pond scum
Also Oslen simply was not going to be confirmed.
Remember Bush gets to pick, not to approve. If any people are weasels it's the gutless, feckless GOP Senators who will not back their President.
Yep a place holder for the next 15 months until the next President is sworn in.....
Your delusions of grandeur makes a wimp out of President Bush?
I think not.
Another good point.
He is essentially a temp, after all; and if his stance on terrorism is sound right now, you're probably correct.
He won't have time to cave to political pressure.
Come on, lets make excuses for Bush. Lets get someone that RINO Rooty likes. If you are a conservative and dumb enough to go for this, YOU are no conservative, neither is Rooty.
+/-
I feel better to know he’s been on some TERRORIST’s cases.
At first glance I thought Gonzales had been replaced by a monkey.
Oh, c’mon ... think a bit. With this congress, Olson would never get through .. for one thing: because he was one of Bush’s lead attorneys in the 2000 election chad spectacle. The WH was already apparently told he was not “acceptable.”
So, you’d want more hearings, more rancor, more MSM interloping and attacking .... just how many simultaneous, ongoing partisan battles to appease their base would be acceptable to you in a time of war?
Judge Mukasey Would Make a Stellar Attorney General
A gifted former prosecutor and renowned jurist could be just the right fit.
By Andrew C. McCarthy
It is not exaggeration to say that the United States Department of Justice is among the handful of our nations most important institutions. It is the fulcrum of our rule of law.
The department must be above reproach. It must enforce our laws without fear or favor. It must be the place the courts, the Congress and the American people look to without hesitation for the most unflinching recitation of fact and the most reliable construction of law. Creativity is welcome it is the departments proud boast always to be home for some of the worlds most creative legal minds. Defense of executive prerogatives is also essential for the department is not the servant but the peer of the judges and lawmakers before whom it appears, with its first fidelity to the Constitution. Creativity, however, is not invention, and prerogative is not partisanship.
The department must foremost be the Department of Justice. Its emblem is integrity. We can argue about where the law should take us, in what direction it should evolve. We must first, however, be able to know what it is. For that, we must be able to rely without question on the department and its leader, the attorney general.
President Bush is about to select a new attorney general at a particularly tempestuous time. In todays Washington, even national security has not been spared from our fulminating politics. In the cross-fire, we need stalwart leadership of incontestable competence and solid mooring in the departments highest traditions. Without it, a growing crisis of confidence will grip not only the courts but field prosecutors across the nation.
To address such a crisis, the president is fortunate to have several able candidates. One I know particularly well, though you may not, would instantly restore the departments well-deserved reputation for rectitude, scholarship, vision and sober judgment. He is Michael B. Mukasey.
I had the privilege of appearing before Judge Mukasey for nearly three years, from 1993 into 1996, when, as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Southern District of New York, I led the prosecution of Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman and eleven other jihadists who had waged a terrorist war against the United States bombing the World Trade Center, plotting to strike other New York City landmarks (including the United Nations complex, the FBIs lower Manhattan headquarters, U.S. military installations, and the Lincoln and Holland Tunnels), and conspiring political assassinations against American and foreign leaders.
The case was bellwether for 9/11 and its aftermath, presenting all the complex and, at times, excruciating issues we deal with today: the obscure lines a free society must draw between religious belief and religiously motivated violence, between political dissent and the summons to savagery, between due process for accused criminals with a right to present their defense and the imperative to shield precious intelligence from incorrigible enemies bent on killing us.
The trial was probably the most important one ever witnessed by nobody. In an odd quirk of history, our nine-month proceeding began at the same time as, and ended a day before, the infamous O.J. Simpson murder trial. While Americans were riveted to a televised three-ring circus in California, Judge Mukasey, in his meticulous yet decisive way, was demonstrating why our judicial system is the envy of the world: carefully crafting insightful opinions on the proper balance between national security and civil liberties, permitting the government to introduce the full spectrum of its evidence but holding it rigorously to its burden of proof and its ethical obligations; managing a complex litigation over defense access to classified information; and developing jury instructions that became models for future national-security cases.
All the defendants were convicted, and the sentencing proceedings, complicated by the need to apply novel federal guidelines to a rarely used, Civil War era charge of seditious conspiracy, ended in the imposition of appropriately lengthy jail terms. No one, however, could contend that the case had not been an exemplar of our system at its best. Indeed, in an unusual encomium, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, upon scrutinizing and upholding the judges work, was moved to observe:
The trial judge, the Honorable Michael B. Mukasey, presided with extraordinary skill and patience, assuring fairness to the prosecution and to each defendant and helpfulness to the jury. His was an outstanding achievement in the face of challenges far beyond those normally endured by a trial judge.
No one should have been surprised. By the time the Blind Sheikhs trial was assigned to him, Judge Mukasey had already forged a reputation as one of Americas top trial judges. (In my mind, he is peerless.) That was so because he was also one of Americas most brilliant lawyers. From humble beginnings in the Bronx, he had earned his bachelors degree at Columbia before graduating from Yale Law School in 1967. As a judge, he tolerated nothing but the best effort from prosecutors because he had, himself, been a top prosecutor. He well understood the enormous power in the hands of young assistant U.S. attorneys, the need to temper it with reason and sound judgment. He grasped implicitly and conveyed by example that the great honor of being a lawyer for the United States Department of Justice is that no one gets, or should expect to get, an award for being honest and forthright. It is a realm where those attributes are assumed.
In 1988, Michael Mukasey left a lucrative private law practice when President Ronald Reagan appointed him to the federal bench. He was exactly the credit to his court and his country that the president had anticipated. Quite apart from terrorism matters, he handled thousands of cases, many of them high-stakes affairs, with skill and quiet distinction. In his final years on the bench before returning to private practice, he was the Southern Districts chief judge, putting his stamp on the court especially in the aftermath of the September 11th attacks. Through the sheer force of his persistence and his sense of duty, the court quickly reopened for business despite being just a few blocks away from the carnage. Indeed, it never really closed Judge Mukasey personally traveled to other venues in the District to ensure that the courts vital processes were available to the countless federal, state and local officials who were working round the clock to investigate and prevent a reprise of the suicide hijackings.
Characteristically, the judge ensured that the Justice Department was able to do its vital work in a manner that would withstand scrutiny when the heat of the moment had cooled. Judges, himself included, made themselves available, day and night, to review applications for warrants and other lawful authorization orders no one would ever claim that in his besieged district, crisis had trumped procedural regularity. And as investigators detained material witnesses and scrambled to determine whether they were mere information sources or actual terror suspects, Judge Mukasey made certain that there was a lawful basis for detention, that detainees were represented by counsel fully apprised of that basis, and that the proceedings were kept on a tight leash under strict judicial supervision, with detainees promptly released unless there was an independent reason to charge them with crimes.
Judge Mukaseys mastery of national security issues, reflecting a unique fitness to lead the Justice Department in this critical moment of our history, continued to manifest itself after 9/11. He deftly handled the enemy-combatant detention of Jose Padilla (recently convicted of terrorism crimes), forcefully endorsing the executive branchs wartime power to protect the United States from an al Qaeda operative dispatched to our homeland to conduct mass-murder attacks, but vindicating the American citizens constitutional rights to counsel and to challenge his detention without trial through habeas corpus. Later, in accepting the Federal Bar Councils prestigious Learned Hand Medal for excellence in federal jurisprudence, Judge Mukasey spoke eloquently of the need to maintain the Patriot Acts reasonable national security protections. More recently, he has written compellingly as a private citizen with unique insight about the profound challenges radical Islam presents for our judicial system.
At this moment in time, the nation would be best served by an attorney general who would bring the department instant credibility with the courts and Congress, provide a needed shot in the arm for prosecutors craving a reminder of the departments proud traditions, and reassure the public of the administrations commitment to the departments high standards. There are precious few people who fit that bill, and of them, Michael Mukasey may be the least well known nationally. But he is as solid as they come. Our country would be well served if he were asked, once again, to answer its call.
“I thought Gonzales had been replaced by a monkey”
That would be an improvement!
Bite me.
Total wimp out. Agreed.
You have a weak litmus test for what makes a conservative, don’t you think?
And who would want to inflict themselves and their families through it? Fergodsakes, if one of the most sterling and dutiful military officers currently on the world stage had to endure relentless vicious personal attacks on his integrity and reputation, what do you think Olson would undergo?
He lost his lovely wife on 9/11 in the plane that crashed into the Pentagon ... he’s remarried and probably has a relatively serene life finally.
Why would he or his family want endure this hell at his age and life experiences? It would be like a public forensic autopsy on a living human, without anesthesia.
Everyone expects the President to fulfll their personal wish list, 24/7 .... or else they pout and spew forth their armchair namecalling and ultimatums. People ... there’s a big picture view and priorities out there.
Now stop it with the savvy.
Show us all who you really are. : )
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