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Senate Democrats prostrate as Alito confirmation hearings
get under way
By Joe Kay and Patrick Martin
12 January 2006
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The Senate hearings that began this week for Supreme Court
nominee Samuel Alito have provided a further demonstration of
the impotence and cynicism of the Democratic Party and its lack
of any serious commitment to the defense of democratic rights.
Alito, an official in the Justice Department under Ronald Reagan
and a federal appeals court judge since 1990, is a member of the
right-wing Federalist Society and judicial reactionary known for
his pro-corporate rulings, his support for expanded presidential
and police powers, his hostility to abortion rights, and his dismissive
attitude toward civil liberties.
The questioning of Alito by liberal senators like Edward Kennedy
and Charles Schumer was perfunctory, and by midweek leading Senate
Democrats were admitting to the press that they had little hope
of blocking the nomination, either on the Judiciary Committee
or in the full Senate.
In their remarks at the Judiciary Committee hearing and their
questions to Alito, the Democrats downplayed the dimensions of
the shift to the right on the Supreme Court which is being engineered
by the addition of two Bush nomineesnewly installed Chief
Justice John Roberts and Alito. The latter, if confirmed, will
replace Sandra Day OConnor, the courts long-time swing
vote.
On the first day of questioning, January 10, not a single Democrat
mentioned the name of Harriet Miers, Bushs previous nominee
for the OConnor seat. Miers was withdrawn after two weeks
of frenzied attack by Christian fundamentalist elements, who considered
her insufficiently reliable on social issues like abortion and
gay rights. The embrace of Alito by these ultra-right forces tells
more about the judges real views than anything he might
choose to reveal at his confirmation hearings.
The hearings themselves have been largely scripted in advance,
on the model provided by the Roberts nomination. The Supreme Court
nominee speaks only in the vaguest generalities or refuses to
answer questions outright, Republican senators heap praise on
him and denounce any opposition as illegitimate, and Democrats
either join in the celebration or make half-hearted and largely
futile attempts to penetrate the smokescreen.
The basic tenor of the hearings was established on Monday with
the opening statement of Senator Arlen Specter, a Republican and
the chairman of the committee. He began by addressing the issue
of what questions a nominee must answer. It has been my
experience, Specter said, that the hearings are really,
in effect, a subtle minuet, with the nominee answering as many
questions as he thinks necessary in order to be confirmed.
In other words, Alito is obliged to make certain general pronouncements,
amounting to nothing more than platitudes, on such questions as
the importance of precedents in determining court decisions and
the requirement that the president act within his powers under
the Constitution. However, as with Roberts before him, Alito is
permitted to avoid making any definitive statements on any specific
issues.
One exchange between Alito and Senator Herb Kohl (Democrat
of Wisconsin) captured the farcical character of the whole exercise.
Kohl asked the nominee to give his views on the Supreme Courts
decision in Bush v. Gore which put Bush in the White House.
Was the Supreme Court correct to take this case in the first
place? Kohl asked.
Alito responded, As to that particular case, my answer
has to be, I really dont know. I have not studied it in
the way I would study a case that comes before me as a judge.
And I would have to go through the whole judicial process.
Kohl repeated the question, observing, That was a huge,
huge case. And I would like to hope and I would bet that you thought
about it an awful lot, because you are who you are. And I would
like for you to give an opinion from the convictions of your heart.
As a person whos very restrained with respect to judicial
activism, this being a case of extreme judicial activism, were
they correct in taking this case, in your opinion?
Again, Alito evaded a response: Senator, my honest answer
is I have not studied it in the way that I would study the issue
if it were to come before me as a judge. And that would require
putting out of my mind any personal thoughts that I had on the
matter and listening to all of the arguments and reading the briefs
and thinking about it in the way that I do when I decide legal
issues that are before me as a judge. And thats the best
answer I can give you to that question.
If it were true that Alito, who has 25 years experience in
national politics and the law, had given no serious thought to
the issues raised by a political and legal battle that riveted
the country for five weeks, that fact alone would seem enough
to disqualify him from any significant official position, let
alone a seat on the Supreme Court replacing the very justice who
provided the fifth vote for the majority decision in Bush v.
Gore. But Kohl acquiesced to his stonewalling, thanked Alito,
and shut up. No other Democrat even mentioned the issue.
Executive power and illegal spying
Alitos confirmation hearings take place within the context
of revelations of massive illegal spying carried out by the Bush
administration and justified on the grounds of legal arguments
that seek to grant the president virtually unlimited powers. It
has become clear that the US government is storing vast amounts
of data on US citizens, including on opponents of the war in Iraq.
The Bush administration further maintains that it has, as part
of the war on terrorism, the right to indefinitely
detain individuals, including US citizens, without charging them
or granting them access to the courts.
It is well known that Alito supports an interpretation of presidential
powers that flies in the face of constitutional limits and the
principle of checks and balances between the executive,
legislative and judicial branches of government. There is no doubt
he was selected by Bush, in part, because he is deemed an ally
of the White House in its assertion of quasi-dictatorial powers.
In the course of the hearings, Alito has indicated, in carefully
hedged language, that he does not oppose the view that the president
has the right to order spying without court warrants and detain
individuals indefinitely.
In his opening remarks, Senator Patrick Leahy, the ranking
Democrat on the Judiciary Committee, advised Alito that he would
ask him to demonstrate his independence from the interests
of the president appointing him or nominating him, and that
no president, Democratic or Republican...is above the law.
Alito obliged Leahys request by declaring, in his opening
statement, that no person in this countryno matter
how high or powerfulis above the law. Leahy, in his
questioning of Alito, raised the question again, within the context
of the spying ordered by the administration and the legal memos
drawn up by administration lawyers claiming a presidential right
to torture prisoners.
In his answer, Alito suggested that what is above the
law is an entirely open question. The president has
to follow the Constitution, he said, but added that whether
a specific act that contradicts existing legislationsuch
as the Bush administrations decision to order spying in
a manner prohibited by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Actis
unconstitutional depends on the specifics of the situation.
The Wall Street Journal reported on January 5 that Alito
is a strong supporter of the so-called theory of the unitary
executive, which holds that the president should have complete
control over all executive bodies. In practice, the theory has
been used repeatedly by administration lawyers to bolster arguments
for the elimination of restraints on presidential power.
According to the Journal, In written statements
issued when he signs legislation, Mr. Bush routinely cites his
authority to supervise the unitary executive branch
to disregard bill provisions he considers objectionable.
When he signed the recent Defense Department appropriations
bill, which included a measure passed by Congress prohibiting
torture by US agencies, Bush wrote that the executive branch would
follow the law in a manner consistent with the constitutional
authority of the president to supervise the unitary executive
branch and as commander in chief and consistent with the constitutional
limitations on the judicial power.
In other words, Bush asserted his right to disregard the letter
and spirit of the anti-torture provision of the law.
In an analysis of Alitos legal record published January
6, the news agency Knight-Ridder found that Even when government
authorities have overstepped the bounds of legal searches, Alito
has arguedin both judicial opinions and prior memosthat
most should not be held liable. The article went on to say
that in his court decisions, Alito has almost never found
a government search unconstitutional and that he has argued to
relax warrant requirements and to broaden the kinds of searches
that warrants permit.
Abortion and the Christian Right
On the question of abortion, Alito replied with similar innocuous-sounding
but evasive statements. I would approach the question with
an open mind, he said, attempting to downplay the significance
of a document he wrote in the 1980s arguing against a constitutional
right to privacy and outlining a strategy to roll back the right
to abortion.
The precedents established by Roe v. Wade and subsequent
decisions upholding the right to abortion are important, he said,
and must be taken into consideration when deciding future cases.
He refused, however, to repeat the words used by Roberts in his
confirmation hearings, when Roberts called Roe v. Wade settled
law.
The day before the Senate hearings opened, representatives
of Christian fundamentalist groups met at a Philadelphia church
in the third in a series of rallies televised nationally by Christian-oriented
cable networks. The outlook of these groups was expressed by Tony
Perkins of the Family Research Council, one of several speakers
who fantasized a nationwide onslaught that was on the brink of
making Christianity illegal.
At the Senate hearing the following day, not a single Democrat
made reference to the assembly of ultra-right and fascist-minded
elements who fervently support Alitos addition to the Supreme
Court.
See Also:
Why US big business
is pleased with Alitos nomination to the Supreme Court
[9 November 2005]
Memo exposes anti-democratic
agenda of US Supreme Court nominee
[17 November 2005]
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