If Judge John Roberts were a senator, he'd be a shoo-in for the
U.S. Supreme Court-at least, according to Senate Minority Leader
Harry Reid (D.-Nev.).
Senate liberals such as Teddy Kennedy (D.-Mass.) and Chuck Schumer
(D.-N.Y.) insist that the judicial philosophy of Supreme Court
nominee Roberts is fair game. If so, they should consider the
recent musings of Reid, who essentially pre-cleared several quite
conservative Republican senators for the nation's highest court.
According to Reid, Senators Mike Crapo (Idaho), Lindsey Graham
(S.C.), Mel Martinez (Fla.), Mike DeWine (Ohio) and Judd Gregg
(N.H.) all qualify.
After reviewing the voting records of these senators on several
hot-button issues, senior White House guru Pete Wehner observed:
"Sen. Reid has now declared these views are wholly acceptable in a
Supreme Court nominee." The media and others should "hold [Reid] to
that standard in the weeks and months ahead."
These senators embraced the conservative position on a number of
abortion-related and other cultural issues, including the
partial-birth abortion ban, the Unborn Victims of Violence Act (the
Laci Peterson law), a constitutional amendment to ban same-sex
marriage, and the Mexico City Policy, which forbids sending
taxpayer dollars to foreign organizations that provide abortions or
abortion counseling.
All the senators have received a 100% rating from the National
Right to Life Committee in 2005 and, according to the American
Conservative Union, their lifetime ratings range from 79% to 93%.
From everything we know of Roberts so far, his ideological leanings
place him comfortably within this range.
Moving the Goalposts
But rather than pre-clear Roberts, whose confirmation to the D.C.
federal appeals court cleared the Senate in 2003 with virtually no
opposition, Reid issued a terse statement acknowledging "the
President has chosen someone with suitable legal credentials," but
adding that "the Senate must review Judge Roberts' record to
determine if he has a demonstrated commitment to the core American
values of freedom, equality and fairness."
Perhaps Reid is simply being cautious. But given the overwhelming
influence that hard-left groups such as People For the American Way
and the American Civil Liberties Union exert over today's
Democratic Party, perhaps he's moving the goalposts in preparation
for a sustained assault on a very admirable selection for our
highest court.
UN-Ambiguous
To withhold or not to withhold. That is the question.
Last month, the House passed the Henry J. Hyde UN Reform Act, a
robust and long-overdue attempt to impose financial and moral
accountability on the United Nations. The legislation would make
our annual contribution to UN operations (expected to total $439
million in 2006) contingent on the UN's adopting at least 32 of 39
proposed reforms.
Examples of the proposed reforms include:
- Giving the U.S. more influence over budgetary decision-making.
- Imposing sunset policies and results-based budgeting on UN programs.
- Taking a swipe at the $565 million the UN spends annually on elaborate conferences replete with champagne, chauffeurs and shrimp.
- Establishing a truly independent oversight board to investigate rampant fraud and misconduct.
House Democrats objected not to Hyde's devastatingly accurate
critique or to the specific reforms in his bill, but rather to the
mechanism he proposed to leverage reform-the mandatory withholding
of taxpayer funds should the reforms not transpire. The Democratic
point man on UN reform in the House, Tom Lantos, ranking member of
the International Relations Committee, offered a watered-down and
ultimately unsuccessful, alternative that would have given the
secretary of State discretion to release the funds, reforms or no
reforms.
Now the issue moves to a reluctant Senate, where Senators Norm
Coleman (R.-Minn.) and Richard Lugar (R.-Ind.) have introduced a
bill (S 1383) that closely resembles the Hyde bill. It also sets
forth a powerful indictment of the UN and demands similar
reforms.
Unfortunately, the Coleman-Lugar proposal is masquerading as
reform. Rather than require that taxpayer contributions be
withheld, the legislation takes its cue from House Democrats and
merely requires the United States to "use its voice and vote at the
United Nations" to pursue meaningful reforms. As with the House
Democratic plan, withholding funds is an option, not a requirement,
and entirely subject to the whim of the President.
California GOP Rep. Dana Rohrbacher's critique of this approach
says it best: "If they're opposed to withholding dues, they are not
for reform."
Withhold. That is the answer.
Mike Franc, who has held a number of positions on Capitol Hill, is vice president of Government Relations at The Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in Human Events