On Samuel Alito: Don't Confirm Him
He is firmly anti-abortion. His mom said so. His record -- formal and informal -- attests to this. And despite holding views that would roll back a woman's right to control her reproductive circumstances, he carries a solidly far-right wing sensibility in many other areas, particularly with regard to general egalitarianism in our society and race.
But the clincher is that he is committed to a vision of expansive Executive Branch power in our government at a time when the other branches sorely need to be propped up -- and need to get back in the business of curbing Executive authority. Our democracy is in fragile shape on many fronts -- and the Courts and Legislature must reassert themselves and end the de facto monarchy America has tripped into.
When John Kerry lost the election, I felt that he had never really made the case to the American people that that election was mostly about the Supreme Court choices the next president would make. Kerry failed to connect on this issue -- but the Congress, particularly if Democrats hold mostly together -- could conceivably draw some Republican votes from those who know he will undo Roe v. Wade and who are uncomfortable with his strong embrace of unlimited presidential authority.
...
I can't run this campaign against Alito. Others are working it -- but those moderate Republicans, who are pro-choice and minimal government type conservatives, should feel real pain -- profound citizen pressure -- if they plan to endorse Bush's choice.
To win this, Alito's candidacy needs to be killed by freezing moderate Republican votes.
-- Steve Clemons
edit to include link:
http://www.thewashingtonnote.com/