Friday, November 17, 2006

Opportunist McCain Woos Conservatives on Judges

From MSNBC:
WASHINGTON - In his quest for the Republican presidential nomination, Arizona Sen. John McCain courted Thursday the group that vets conservative judicial nominees, the Federalist Society.

The powerful lawyers’ group, which is holding its annual convention in Washington this weekend, has spawned such conservative nominees of President Bush as appeals court Judge William Pryor and Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito.

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In his speech to a packed ballroom at a Washington hotel, McCain assured the group that despite last week’s sobering election returns for Republicans, “the election was not an affirmation of the other party’s program. Try as hard as I could, I couldn’t find much evidence that my Democratic friends were offering anything that resembled a coherent platform.”

McCain asserted that “the majority of Americas still consider themselves conservatives, or right of center.”

He spoke of the importance of judges who would strictly interpret the Constitution.

“They should be people who respect the limited scope afforded federal judges under the Constitution,” he said.

The reaction from the Federalists was polite, but not overwhelming. Last year another GOP presidential contender, Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, got a similarly friendly reception when he addressed the group.

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Some social conservatives are wary of McCain because he has never shared their enthusiasm for such causes as banning same-sex marriage.

One Republican active in judicial confirmation politics, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said of McCain the day before the speech: “He’s regarded as a problem among conservatives on several levels.”

McCain was a leader of the bipartisan Gang of 14, a group of senators who averted a vote on changing Senate rules to abolish filibusters of judicial nominees.

Several Bush nominees were filibustered and blocked in 2002 and 2003, including Miguel Estrada.

During the Estrada battle, the Republican activist said, “McCain was a whiner. He kept saying, ‘why are we having these repeated votes (to try to stop the filibuster)?’ He was obtuse; he didn’t get why the issue was important.”

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Carter Snead, a Federalist Society member who is a law professor at Notre Dame University and former counsel to President Bush’s Council on Bioethics, praised McCain’s speech saying, “I was astonished by how far he was willing to go in broaching the subject of the kinds of judges that he admires. He essentially committed himself to originalism: he used the phrase ‘the original intent’ of the statute or Constitution. He sent a clear message that he shares President Bush’s view of the judiciary. I was surprised by how forthcoming he was.”


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3 Comments:

At 11/17/2006 1:50 PM, Blogger Sir Galen of Bristol said...

I don't believe a word he's saying about this. You?

 
At 11/17/2006 2:19 PM, Blogger Pro Ecclesia said...

Nope. Not a word.

 
At 11/17/2006 3:51 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

His political instincts have improved, I'll give him that: at this point in the 2000 election cycle he was wooing pro-choicers by saying that he didn't think Roe v. Wade should be overturned at the time.

 

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