Before a New Justice Is Chosen
A full debate would reveal right-wing extremism
It is a summer exercise that often descends into
ugly insinuations and cheap shots while evading real questions. But perhaps
this time will be slightly different, as the president nominates—and the Senate
considers—a replacement for retiring Justice John Paul Stevens. For once, the
nation may confront fundamental differences with a degree of candor.
Influential pundits on the right are advising the
Senate Republican leadership to mount a sustained opposition to virtually any
nominee chosen by President Obama. The time has come, they argue, for a
partisan showdown on the most basic issues that divide the country.
"I think Republicans should want to have a
serious debate on the Constitution," says William Kristol, editor of The Weekly Standard, FOX News
commentator and Republican strategist. “I'm struck when you listen to the Tea
Party activists. They often talk about, ‘We need to be constitutionalists, we
need to be constitutional conservatives.’”
The aim of such a debate would not be to influence
the court, since the Senate's majority seems certain to overcome opposition to
an Obama nominee—as it did when Sonia Sotomayor ascended to the highest bench
last year.
The purpose would be to drive votes for Republicans
in the upcoming midterm election—because Kristol and others in his camp plan to
introduce health care reform and other legislative controversies into the
nomination debate as "constitutional issues."
Republican Agenda Undermines Social Gains
What exactly do they mean by
"constitutional"? On the increasingly powerful fringes of the Republican
right, a category that includes some Tea Party supporters, the Constitution is
interpreted as prohibiting every social and political advance since before the
Civil War. They would outlaw the Federal Reserve System, the progressive income
tax, Social Security, Medicare, environmental protection, consumer regulation
and every other important federal initiative of the past century.
Targets of the "constitutional
conservatives" would certainly include civil rights legislation that
guarantees equal protection under the law to minorities and women, with
right-wing zealots, especially in the South, speaking openly again about
state's rights—the old code for racist oppression and segregation.
A serious debate would highlight this extremism,
which Democrats, independents and Republicans alike have rejected for most of
the past five decades. (Retiring Justice Stevens was a Republican nominee,
placed on the court by Gerald Ford and confirmed unanimously.)
A serious debate might also reveal the incoherence
of a right-wing jurisprudence that deprives government of the power to address
basic national problems even as it empowers the president in wartime with
absolute and monarchical authority.
In a recent memo on the upcoming Supreme Court
battle, political theorist William Galston, pollster Stan Greenberg and
demographic analyst Ruy Teixeira urge their fellow Democrats not to back away
from a constitutional debate. They warn that the judicial agenda of the
Republican right would undermine not only Social Security and Medicare, but
also the separation of church and state and the very rule of law in America.
"Democrats can—and must—respond firmly and
categorically to this extremist philosophy," write the three strategists.
"They must respond by saying that the Democratic Party proudly upholds the
traditional American view of the Constitution—the view of the founding fathers
of this country: George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Benjamin Franklin,
Alexander Hamilton and John Adams."
Upheld by Republicans as well, from Abraham Lincoln
and Theodore Roosevelt to Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, those principles
encompass religious freedom for everyone regardless of sect or creed; the
capacity of elected representatives to legislate for the common good; and the
protection of individual liberty within a framework of enforceable laws.
So yes, let the debate rip—and let the exposure of
the radicalism of the right begin.
2010 Creators.com.



I don't want to give Joe Conason more attention than he deserves. He is nationally syndicated, a hack, and an extremist in his own right. However, to say that "constitutional conservatives" would target civil rights legislation is downright looney. Conason would probably include affirmative action (the soft bigotry of low expecations) as "civil rights legislation". Affirmative action is racist in and of itself. Progressives- get this through your heads- outside of the lone wack-jobs that have always existed on both sides, no tea party attendees, no conservative politicians, and no conservative commentators have made any statements or implications that they are against legislation that protects basic civil rights. The mainstream and left media are making this "racist" thing up- unfortunately, they've dropped that nuke so many times that the public in general is no longer buying it.
There is no way Conason or any other Establishment type wants a "substantial debate" on anything. Call TeaPartiers names and avoid mentioning the Federal Reserve. You want sophisticated ideas? Decades of scholarship by economists such as George Reisman (capitalism.net) have shown that the Fed's ONLY purpose is to dilute our purchasing power and thus take wealth from the public without having to vote for tax increases. In the 1970s Jimmy Carter called inflation--which is ALWAYS caused by the Fed--"the cruelest tax", but ever since lefties such as Wm Greider think that stealing middleclass savings by elites is A-OK. There are lots of "extreme" economists ready to show Conason just how destructive the Fed is, should he ever stop sneering at ideas he does not understand. How about a "debate" on this, Conason? How about a real debate amongst real economists about the outright theft of our hard-earned purchasing power through inflation that Bernake & co. engage in daily? No? Conason will just keep on engaging in namecalling and distraction. Oh, and speaking of the sophisticated, caring, public spirited Left that supports the warmonger Obama, why have you all just rolled over and accepted permanent, expensive wars paid for through inflation as a "cost of civilization"? Where is the "debate" on war and Gitmo, Lefties? You will only find it at Tea Parties! Shame on you, Conason, and all the Democratic Party media hacks engaging in namecalling as America crashed under the weight to unpayable welfare promises, debt, inflation, and Imperial wars! Ron Paul, 2012!