The federal judiciary is in crisis. At the
circuit court level alone, there are 15 openings currently listed
as "judicial emergencies." Unfortunately, the Senate confirmation
process is so shattered, it will require a bold and innovative move
to put it back on the right track.
Some background: On May 9, 2001, President Bush nominated 13
exemplary candidates to the courts of appeals. One year later, only
Roger Gregory and Barrington Parker -- the two judges who had first
been appointed by President Clinton -- were confirmed. Now, two
years later, four of those 13 are still waiting for a Senate vote
on their nominations.
When campaigning in 2000, President Bush said he would nominate
conservative judges like Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas. He was
even more direct in the off-year election of 2002, repeatedly
urging Senate Democrats to allow votes on his judicial
nominees.
Americans responded by returning control of the Senate to the
Republicans. Reduced to minority status, Senate Democrats swiftly
launched an unprecedented filibuster strategy to block nominees
they claim are "extreme."
A filibuster means 60 senators must vote to end debate before
the Senate can vote on a nomination, even though a majority would
then approve the nomination.
The "extremist" targets of the filibuster include Miguel Estrada
and Pricilla Owen. Both nominees have outstanding credentials.
Estrada, for example, received a unanimous "well qualified" rating
from the American Bar Association and is backed by a series of
Democratic Justice Department officials for whom he has worked.
Owen was re-elected to the Texas Supreme Court in 2000 with
near-record voter approval and with the endorsement of every major
newspaper in Texas.
Senate opponents have cited procedural reasons to justify their
opposition, including the false charge that Estrada did not answer
all of their questions. In truth, they seem to oppose these
nominees because they do not espouse the liberal activist positions
some Senate Democrats believe women and minority judges should
hold. Such motivations have a name: Bigotry.
Until now, the only successful filibuster over any judicial
nomination was in 1968, when the Senate stopped President Lyndon B.
Johnson's effort to elevate Justice Abe Fortas to chief justice of
the Supreme Court. That was a bipartisan filibuster. Senate records
show no cases where an appellate nominee was filibustered to
death.
By launching these filibusters, a minority of senators have
shown they are willing to block the will of both the president --
the man given the constitutional duty to nominate judges -- and the
will of a majority of their fellow senators. All this in an attempt
to force the president to name judges they consider more
"moderate."
How should President Bush respond to this challenge? One answer,
the wrong one, would be to continue doing nothing more than merely
urging the Senate to vote. That would be like giving the U.N.
Security Council endless authority to debate the merits of bold
action -- and offering Senate Minority Leader Thomas Daschle veto
power.
To accede to the minority's undemocratic tactics would be to
abandon the idea that, in the Senate, the majority rules. Even the
nomination of Clarence Thomas, which was wrongly politicized, did
not result in a filibuster. Only 51 votes were needed to confirm
him. Doing nothing now would raise that bar to 60 votes forever
more. President Bush is bringing democracy to Iraq; he must also
bring it to the Senate.
That's why the president should exercise his constitutional
power to make recess appointments. That means acting while the
Senate is out of session to name judges who will serve temporarily
until the permanent nominee is approved.
President Bush would not be the first to use this power in the
face of Senate delay. More than 300 judicial recess appointments
have been made. In fact, President Clinton gave a recess
appointment to Roger Gregory only six months after nominating him
to the Fourth Circuit court of appeals. Therefore, it's even more
appropriate for President Bush to use that same power when his
nominees command majority support in the Senate and have been
waiting as long as two years for a vote.
The president should also make strategic appointments that force
congressional Democrats to pay a political price paid for their
constitutional abuse. Their motivation for the filibuster is to
prevent so-called "extreme conservatives" from taking a place on
the federal bench.
So, instead of appointing the moderate judicial candidates the
Democrats are already blocking, President Bush should make recess
appointments of even more well-known conservative scholars and
former judges who are willing to serve until the Senate votes up or
down on the president's nominees. We hope Robert Bork and others
are willing to serve their country again, if only temporarily, on
the bench.
These appointments would serve notice that anti-democratic
filibuster tactics used by a Senate minority cannot take away a
president's right to appoint judges. It's admittedly an extreme
strategy, but large problems require bold solutions.
Paul Rosenzweig
and Todd Gaziano are senior
legal fellows in the Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The
Heritage Foundation.