June 26, 2005

THE SENATE ISN'T THE PUBLIC:

To Confirm Their Judge, Republicans Abandoned Their Ideas (Jonathan Rauch, June 24, 2005, National Journal)

Here arises a question for Republicans. If [Janice Rogers] Brown's views were defensible, why not defend them?

Two possibilities present themselves. One is expediency, or, to use the sort of strong language that Brown herself sometimes favors, cowardice. On this theory, Republicans agree with Brown but know her views are controversial, indeed unpopular, and prefer not to make a case for them.

If so, this would not be the first time expediency has won the day in politics, but Republicans should beware. Liberals learned the hard way, with court-approved or court-imposed policies like forced busing and racial quotas, how dangerous it is to put in place policies and nominees that they could not defend in public debate.

If Republicans hope to install small-government judges without publicly embracing small-government views, they are traveling the same road that led Democrats to political purgatory and made "liberal" a dirty word.

A second possibility is that Republicans ran from Brown's views because they regard them with ambivalence, or even embarrassment. On this theory, what Republicans support is not so much Brown's philosophy as her life story and the opportunity to put a conservative black woman on the federal bench. After all, Brown is a small-government ideologue in an age of Big Government conservatism. Republicans control the whole federal government and are not shy about using it. They want to be able to enact the sort of "economic, environmental, consumer, and labor regulations" that DeMint insisted Brown would uphold.

If so, Brown's nomination put Republicans in a bit of a pickle. Endorsing her philosophy would tie their hands; renouncing it would leave everyone wondering why they wanted her on the bench at all. Rather than confronting the tension between Big Government conservatism and small-government nominee, the Republicans pretended there was no tension. They maintained that Brown, like the Washington Republican Party itself, would denounce Big Government without actually doing anything about it.

Either way, Republicans have come a long way from Reagan, who would have spoken as proudly of Brown's ideas as of her childhood. Lott was almost right: The Brown debate was not a proud hour for principled Republicans.


Tell it to Justice Bork. Confirmation fights aren't about ideas, but about vote counts. And Ms Brown's was about her race and gender, not her conservatism. The place to defend the ideas is before the electorate, not the pols.

Posted by Orrin Judd at June 26, 2005 11:57 AM
Comments

Bill Clinton ran away from Lani Guinier. Bush (and the GOP) were behind Brown all the way.

Posted by: jim hamlen at June 26, 2005 3:09 PM

I do believe that Lani Guiner is the FIRST woman Clinton ran away from.

Posted by: obc at June 26, 2005 6:23 PM

The Rauch essay is so confused as to be beneath refutation. He seems to be saying that the Republicans and the Right are afraid to submit the social issues to the voters. This is *** backwards. The issue is whether the Supreme Court shall continue to be a super-legislature whose function is to overrule the will of the people. Social conservatives are only too happy to have these issues settled by the political process.

The Supreme Court, could not, for example, make abortion "illegal," it could only allow the states to regulate the procedure as they saw fit.

Posted by: Lou Gots at June 26, 2005 8:28 PM

He ran from Zoe Baird, Kimba Woods and Linda Chavez too.

Posted by: Dave W. at June 26, 2005 10:42 PM

Dave:

Chavez was under consideration by George Bush, not Bill Clinton (she is quite the Republican).

obc:

Good one. Now, if Rauch had written about Bernie Kerik instead, maybe he would have made some sense.

Posted by: jim hamlen at June 26, 2005 11:32 PM
« LET'S JUST EDIT A BIT: | Main | IT'S NOT ABOUT WINNING, BUT DYING: »