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Jewish World Review
Oct. 14, 2005
/ 11 Tishrei, 5766
Excitement all too irresistible
By
Bob Tyrrell
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http://www.JewishWorldReview.com |
To the excitement of all Washington, the
hullabaloo over President George W. Bush's nomination of Harriet E. (and you
can be sure the Senate Judiciary Committee will get to the bottom of this
mysterious "E" in due course) Miers builds, picking up wails and execrations
daily. What makes the excitement so irresistible is that conservatives have
now joined with liberals in fuming over the president's judicial nominee.
Well, as the philosopher Samuel Goldwyn was wont to say, "include me out."
This hullabaloo is but another piece of evidence in support of
my long held view that the greatest unsung force in history is boredom. Yes,
the rise and fall of nations, the comings and goings of eminences and fads,
can be attributed to the seven deadly sins, to mere chance, or to a
potentate dallying too long over lunch. But more often than the historians
would have us know mere boredom has been the yeast for great events. At some
point in every president's life, especially as his presidency ages, he finds
himself in a sticky wicket because the politically engaged have become
bored.
I do not mean to say that there are not potential high court
nominees more qualified than Miers. Moreover, for two decades the
conservative movement has developed a community of fine legal minds ready
and able to do as well against the haranguers of the Senate Judiciary
Committee as the suddenly exalted John Roberts. One need look no farther
than the Federalist Society. Yet the intensity of this row has grown out of
all proportion to the president's oversights. Consider this from an
overheated "news story" in the New York Times: "'Everybody is hoping that
something will happen on Miers, either that the president would withdraw her
or she would realize she is not up to it and pull out while she has some
dignity intact,' a lawyer to a Republican committee member said." Most
likely this will never happen, and most likely only a handful of
shortsighted Republicans would want it to happen.
The criteria for a Supreme Court nominee have historically been:
A) proven facility with the law and B) personal integrity. That is the
argument most conservatives have made ever since liberals politicized the
selection process starting with Judge Robert Bork. Surely Miers has shown
facility with the law, and if she lacks integrity it will be revealed very
soon. We have all argued that a justice's personal beliefs are not relevant.
All a justice does is apply the law as written by legislators to each
case under consideration. Judge Roberts returned to this truth repeatedly
during his torture before the Senate Judiciary Committee. If Miers is
capable, she will hold to this fundamental truth and be nominated.
Were the Republicans to overthrow the principles they solemnly
defended during the Roberts hearing and sink Miers' nomination the
consequence would be anarchy in subsequent Senate hearings and a messy
victory for partisan Democrats. The Republicans have claimed the principle
that barring maleficent revelations a president should be granted his
nominee for the federal judiciary. If they were to join the Democrats in
contradicting their own sensible principle and thwarting the president, the
partisan Democrats would be justified in voting down any future conservative
nominee. That would mean raising to the Supreme Court only nominees of their
choice or, as I say, anarchy.
On the face of it none of this will happen. The conservatives
have every right to be disappointed that a seasoned conservative of
superlative intellect was not nominated by the president. But they are not
going to throw the nominating process into chaos or rather into the control
of primitive partisans such as Senator Patrick Leahy.
Washington's yearning for excitement is what actuates this
hullabaloo. It also actuates the press's incessant coverage of it. This town
is easily bored and boredom often sets in motion some of history's most
frivolous events. Think back. Was it not general boredom that accounted for
the election of Bill Clinton over the perfectly normal President George H.
W. Bush?
Every weekday JewishWorldReview.com publishes what many in in the media and Washington consider "must-reading". Sign up for the daily JWR update. It's free. Just click here.
JWR contributor Bob Tyrrell is editor in chief of The American Spectator. Comment by clicking here.
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© 2005, Creators Syndicate
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