Five issues foes will try to use to torpedo Alito
Confirmation looks likely unless Democrats resort to a filibuster
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Supreme Court nominee's record reviewed Jan. 9: NBC News' Andrea Mitchell and Pete Williams review the judicial record of Supreme Court justice nominee Samuel Alito and the likely fight over his confirmation. Today show |
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Barring a disastrous performance in front of the committee, Alito will likely have at least the 51 votes he’ll need for Senate confirmation as justice of the Supreme Court to replace Sandra Day O’Connor. Even some of Alito’s opponents concede that the opposition will likely need to resort to a filibuster if they are to keep him off the court.
And if Alito wins confirmation, it will be a high point in President Bush’s second term as president. Twenty years ago, at a similar moment in Ronald Reagan’s second term, Democrats and liberal Republicans defeated Robert Bork, Reagan’s nominee to the high court.
The anti-Bork forces simplified the case against him especially in two issues that ordinary non-lawyers could understand. One was Bork’s opposition to the public accommodations section of 1964 Civil Rights Act, which said privately-owned hotels and cafes had to serve black customers as well as white ones.
The other was the American Cyanamid case, which led to a unanimous 1984 appeals court ruling by Bork and two other judges.
The question in that case was whether the Occupational Safety and Health Act could be used to penalize the chemical company for banning women of childbearing age from a plant with high levels of lead. The firm told women employees if they’d undergo sterilization they could work in that part of the plant.
Bork’s ruling in the American Cyanamid case didn’t deal with the ethics of sterilization. But in anti-Bork advertisements, his foes accused him of upholding a corporate policy of forcing women to choose between sterilization and losing their jobs.
Are there analogous issues that Alito’s enemies will use to try to defeat his confirmation? Here are five:
1) Alito's application for the job of deputy assistant attorney general in the Justice Department, submitted on Nov. 18, 1985.
Even though that job application was written more than 20 years ago, Alito’s adversaries argue it is a crucially important window into his current thinking.
In it, Alito, then working in the Solicitor General’s office preparing cases for argument for the Supreme Court, said, “I am particularly proud of my contributions in recent cases in which the government has argued in the Supreme Court that racial and ethnic quotas should not allowed and that the Constitution does not protect a right to an abortion.”
These positions, he said, are ones “in which I personally believe very strongly.”
Elliot Mincberg, the General Counsel of the liberal group People for the American Way, said the 1985 job application “provides a road map for Alito’s judicial record which comes out the same way on those issues that are of such great concern to the far-right legal movement.”
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., who led the opposition to Bush’s nomination of Chief Justice John Roberts, focused on the sentences in the job application in which Alito said he personally believed “very strongly” that the Constitution did not provide for a right to abortion.
“Does he stand by those statements?” asked Schumer, in a preview of the questions he’ll pose to Alito this week. “Does he still have the same view of the Constitution? We deserve a straight answer at the hearings. Is he going to distance himself from those comments?”
2) The strip search of a mother and daughter.
In a 2004 case, called Doe v. Groody, Alito dissented from a ruling by then-Judge Michael Chertoff and Judge Thomas Ambro that four police officers should not have immunity from a damages lawsuit after a female officer conducted a physical search of a suspected methamphetamine dealer’s wife and daughter at the suspect’s house.
The family filed suit claiming the wife and daughter had been illegally searched because the search warrant only specified the suspected meth dealer, not his wife and daughter.
Alito said “a reasonable officer certainly could have believed” that the search was permissible, because the affidavit accompanying the search warrant specified searching everyone on the premises. The officers “did not exhibit incompetence or a willingness to flout the law.”
“Judge Alito says it is OK for the police to strip search a mother and her ten-year old daughter even though they’re not named in the search warrant…. That’s one I think people can relate to,” said Mincberg.
But a group of nine law school deans, including former solicitor general Kenneth Starr, wrote in their endorsement of Alito that in the Groody decision, “The issue before the court was not whether the search was proper or good policy but whether police should be faced with possible money penalties for acting reasonably on the basis of the warrant and affidavit.”
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