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New York's Senator
CHARLES E. SCHUMER
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 26, 2001
SCHUMERSAYS ROLE OF IDEOLOGY
IN JUDICIAL CONFIRMATION PROCESS SHOULD BE LEGITIMIZED AND CONSIDERED
IN EVALUATION OF JUDICIAL NOMINEES
During the first hearing of the Courts Subcommittee of the Senate
Judiciary Committee, US Senator Charles E. Schumer today said that
the Senate should acknowledge that ideology plays an important role
in the judicial confirmation process, and called on the Senate to
openly consider a nominee's ideology as a legitimate part of the
confirmation process. The Courts Subcommittee, which Schumer chairs,
held hearings today to examine the role of ideology in the judicial
confirmation process. The hearings marked the first time in over
a decade the Senate formally has examined the judicial confirmation
process, and initiated a series of hearings that will study the
state of the confirmation process.
Schumer said the stigma attached to using ideology as a consideration
in evaluating nominees to the federal bench since the nomination
of Robert Bork to the United States Supreme Court in 1987 has led
to an "escalating war of gotcha politics over nominations that
has warped the confirmation process and harmed the Senate's reputation,"
and called for an open and rational consideration of a nominee's
ideology.
Schumer also said the Senate is responsible for ensuring the federal
bench does not tilt too far in either ideological direction, justifying
opposition to nominees whose views fall outside the mainstream and
have been selected to push the bench in one ideological direction.
"This era, perhaps more than any other before, calls out for
collaboration between the President and the Senate in judicial appointments,"
said Schumer. "It certainly justifies Senate opposition to
judicial nominees whose views fall outside the mainstream and have
been selected to further tilt the courts in an ideological direction."
The hearing featured former White House Counsels Lloyd Cutler and
C. Boyden Gray, University of Chicago Law School Professor Cass
Sunstein, Harvard Law School Professor Laurence Tribe, Northwestern
Law School Professor Stephen Presser, UCLA Law School Professor
Eugene Volokh, National Women's Law Center Co-President Marcia Greenberger
and Vice President of the Institute for Justice Clint Bolick.
In his statement opening the hearing, Schumer said:
"Today, for the first time in over a decade and for the first
time during the Bush presidency, we are formally examining the judicial
nominations process.
"This hearing is specifically focused on the vital question
of what role ideology should play in the selection and confirmation
of judges. Let me start by saying that it is my intention to hold
a series of further hearings that will examine in detail several
other important issues related to the judicial nominating process.
"At this point, we plan to hold at least three more hearings
on the following issues:
"The proper role of the Senate in the judicial confirmation
process. What does the Constitution mean by 'advise and consent'
and historically how assertive has the Senate's role been?
"What affirmative burdens should nominees bear in the confirmation
process to qualify themselves for life-time judicial appointments?
The Senate process can be criticized for being a search for disqualifications.
We will examine whether the burden should be shifted to the nominees
to explain their qualifications and views to justify why they would
be valuable additions to the bench.
"The significance of the Supreme Court's recent federalism
decisions for the judicial selection process. Most Americans probably
do not realize what these cases curtailing the powers of Congress
mean for their everyday lives and futures. We will try to make these
somewhat esoteric and often abstract decisions more real and relevant
for ordinary citizens.
"Today's hearing on ideology is a good place to start because
it will touch upon all of these issues and serve as the beginning
of the important dialogue that we in the Senate should be having
before we proceed much further with nominations hearings and certainly
before we embark on the consideration of Supreme Court nominees.
"One thing is clear: the ideology of particular nominees
often plays a significant role in the confirmation process. Unfortunately,
knowing when and to what degree ideology should be a factor for
the Senate is far more obscure.
"For whatever reason, possibly senatorial fears of being
labeled partisan, legitimate considerations of ideological beliefs
seem to have been driven underground. It's not that we don't consider
ideology, we just don't talk about it openly.
"And, unfortunately, this unwillingness to openly examine
ideology has sometimes led Senators who oppose a nominee to seek
out non-ideological disqualifying factors, like small financial
improprieties from long ago, to justify their opposition. This in
turn has led to an escalating war of gotcha politics that has warped
the Senate's confirmation process and harmed the Senate's reputation.
"As many of you know, this was not always the Senate's practice.
During the first 100 years of the Republic, one out of every four
nominees to the Supreme Court was rejected by the Senate, many for
clear ideological reasons. George Washington's appointment of John
Rutledge to be Chief Justice and President Polk's nomination of
George Woodward are two early examples of the Senate rejecting nominees
on purely ideological grounds.
"The power of the Senate in the nominations process has,
however, been accordian-like, and from 1895 to 1967, only one Supreme
Court nominee was defeated. Since 1968, ideological considerations
have occasionally surfaced, notably in Republican opposition to
the Fortas nomination to be Chief Justice and in Democratic opposition
to the nomination of Robert Bork.
"But since the Bork fight in 1987, ideology, while still
an important factor for the Senate, has primarily been considered
sub-rosa, fostering a search for a nominee's disqualifiers that
is more personal and less substantive.
"It is high time we returned to a more open and rational
consideration of ideology when we review nominees. Let's make our
confirmation process more honest, more clear, and hopefully more
legitimate in the eye of the American people. And let's be fair
to the nominees the President picks.
"If we do this, the knotty question we face is how dominant
a factor should a nominee's ideology be in the Senate's consideration.
Historically, the role ideology has played in past confirmations
has varied, but it seems to me that several factors are relevant:
"First, the extent to which the President himself makes his
initial selections on the basis of a particular ideology; second,
the composition of the courts at the time of nomination; and third,
the political climate of the day.
"The Eisenhower presidency is instructive and shows how these
factors affect the Senate's confirmation process. First, Eisenhower's
selection criteria were non-ideological. He brought the ABA into
his selection process and sought candidates with, as he put it,
"solid common sense," eschewing candidates with 'extreme
legal or philosophical views.'
"Second, the balance of the courts was leftward in light
of twenty years of Democratic appointments. In fact, when Eisenhower
took office, four out of every five federal judges were Democrats.
Third, politically Eisenhower had a strong mandate, having been
elected by overwhelming majorities in both 1952 and 1956.
"Thus, in a time when the courts had been filled by Democrats,
a split Senate had little cause to ideologically oppose the non-political
picks of an overwhelmingly popular Republican President.
"Today, the calculus is much different. President Bush campaigned
on a pledge to appoint judges of a particular stripe, like Justices
Scalia and Thomas. And the balance of the courts, especially the
Supreme Court, leans decidedly to the right. Politically, the American
people were completely divided in our recent national elections,
sending a message of moderation and bipartisanship.
"This era, perhaps more than any other before, calls out
for collaboration between the President and the Senate in judicial
appointments. It certainly justifies Senate opposition to judicial
nominees whose views fall outside the mainstream and who have been
selected in an attempt to further tilt the courts in an ideological
direction.
"Having one or even two Justices like Scalia and Thomas might
be legitimate because it provides the Court with a particular view
of constitutional jurisprudence. But having four or five or nine
Justices like them would skew the Court, veering it far from the
core values most Americans believe in. The Constitution instructs
the Senate to first advise the President as to his choice of nominees
and then to review and decide whether to confirm the President's
picks. As the research of Professors Tribe, Sunstein and others
has forcefully revealed, the debates of the Constitutional Convention
suggest a fully shared authority between the President and the Senate
as to the composition of the Supreme Court.
"As Professor Sunstein has written, the text of Article II,
section 2 assigns two distinct roles to the Senate -- an advisory
one before the nomination and a reviewing function after it. The
clause envisions, or at least encourages, collaboration in which
Presidential consultation leads to easier confirmation.
"Let me conclude by saying that I and many of my colleagues
see the appointment of judges as the ultimate test of bipartisanship.
In electing two branches of our government, the country was split
down the middle, leaving appointments to the third branch as perhaps
the defining indicator of the political direction our country will
take.
"The President, of course, can choose to exercise his nomination
power however he sees fit. But if the President sends countless
nominees who are of a particular ideological caste, Democrats will
likely exercise their constitutionally-given power to deny confirmation
so that such nominees do not reorient the direction of the federal
judiciary.
"But if the President does not grossly inject ideological
politics into his selection criteria, neither will the Senate.
"Today, we are going to hear from two former White House
Counsels who spent years advising and recommending candidates for
the federal bench in both Republican and Democratic administrations.
We will also hear from some of the brightest legal academics around
who have dedicated their careers to studying judicial nominations
and the way the Senate and President handle them.
"The issue we're discussing today is not merely academic.
The stakes involved for our country are enormously high. The Supreme
Court has split 5-4 on so many fundamental issues of the day, including
most importantly the extent of power held by the Court's co-equal
and democratically-elected branches of government.
"We therefore begin this important inquiry and examination
of the nominations process carefully, conscientiously, and fairly.
Let me thank in advance our distinguished witnesses; we are very
interested to hear your testimony and engage you on these issues.
"I'll now turn to our Ranking Member, Senator Sessions for
his opening statement. And let me just thank him up front for helping
to make this a fully bipartisan hearing with equal numbers of witnesses.
He and his staff are a pleasure to work with and I look forward
to holding future hearings in the same manner." The following
individuals participated in today's hearing:
Clint Bolick is Vice-President and Litigation Director of the Institute
for Justice which he co-founded in 1991. Bolick has been a leader
in the litigation efforts defending the use of government-funded
vouchers in religious schools, winning rulings on this issue from
the Supreme Courts of Wisconsin, Arizona, and Ohio. His most recent
book is Transformation: The Promise and Politics of Empowerment.
Lloyd Cutler is a founding member and Senior Counsel at the Washington-based
law firm Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering. Serving as White House
Counsel during the Clinton and Carter administrations, where was
responsible for helping the President decide who to nominate to
the federal bench, Cutler is also an expert on international legal
issues, serving as the lead attorney for the Lend-Lease administration
as well as playing a key role in the SALT II negotiations. Marcia
Greenberger is the founder and co-president of the National Women's
Law Center. She serves on numerous boards, including the American
Bar Association Commission on Women in the Profession, the National
Policy Council of the Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund,
and the Georgetown University Law Center Women's Law and Public
Policy Fellowship Program. C. Boyden Gray is Chairmen of Citizens
for a Sound Economy and a partner at the Washington, D.C. law firm
of Wilmer, Cutler & Pickering. Gray served as White House Counsel
to George Bush during both his Presidential and Vice-Presidential
administrations, where was responsible for helping the President
decide who to nominate to the federal bench. Currently, he focuses
on a variety of regulatory issues pertaining to trade, the environment,
and risk management.
Stephen Presser is the Raoul Berger Professor of Legal History
at the Northwestern University School of Law. A frequently invited
witness before committees of the Senate and the House of Representatives,
Presser holds a joint appointment with the J. L. Kellogg Graduate
School of Management and teaches in the Northwestern History Department.
He is the author of many books and articles, including Recapturing
the Constitution: Race, Religion, and Abortion Reconsidered.
Cass R. Sunstein is Karl N. Llewellyn Distinguished Service Professor
of Jurisprudence at the University of Chicago Law School. He has
served as an advisor to the constitution-making efforts of Israel,
South Africa, and many Eastern European nations. A member of the
Board of Editors of several scholarly journals, his most recent
book is One Case at a Time: Judicial Minimalism on the Supreme
Court.
Laurence Tribe is the Ralph S. Tyler Professor of Constitutional
Law at Harvard Law School. During the 2000 election he was an attorney
for the Gore campaign. A leading authority on constitutional law,
his publications include Constitutional Choices, and Abortion:
The Clash of Absolute.
Eugene Volokh is Professor of Law at UCLA. A former clerk for U.S.
Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, Volokh worked as a computer
programmer for 12 years and is still a partner in a small software
company. His research and teaching interests include free speech,
copyright law, firearms regulation, and government and religion.
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