Alito?

Both SCOTUSBlog and Confirm Them predict that the new Supreme Court nominee will be Samuel Alito of the Third Circuit, a judge whose chambers are in Newark, New Jersey – and not too far from my office! And I worked in his building one summer during law school when I interned with a federal district judge in Newark. Alito is nicknamed “Scalito” because his views apparently resemble those of Scalia, but apparently he’s not an ass like Scalia is.

Article III Groupie thinks it could be Luttig. She thinks Alito could wind up as the Edith Clement of this round to John Roberts’s Luttig. We’ll see.

I was thinking it might be McConnell, but apparently he’s not under consideration because conservatives might not be totally comfortble with him on Roe and other issues.

This could be announced Monday.

The Krauthammer Compromise

From Miers’s withdrawal letter:

As you know, members of the Senate have indicated their intention to seek documents about my service in the White House…

Repeatedly in the course of the process of confirmation for nominees for other positions, I have steadfastly maintained that the independence of the Executive Branch be preserved and its confidential documents and information not be released to further a confirmation process. I feel compelled to adhere to this position, especially related to my own nomination… I have decided that seeking my confirmation should yield.

From the White House statement in response:

It is clear that Senators would not be satisfied until they gained access to internal documents concerning advice provided during her tenure at the White House — disclosures that would undermine a President’s ability to receive candid counsel.

Wow. The Washington Post’s Charles Krauthammer couldn’t have scripted it any better. But he didn’t have to – this is exactly how he scripted it last Friday, and the White House was listening:

Finally, a way out: irreconcilable differences over documents.

For a nominee who, unlike John Roberts, has practically no record on constitutional issues, such documentation is essential for the Senate to judge her thinking and legal acumen. But there is no way that any president would release this kind of information — “policy documents” and “legal analysis” — from such a close confidante. It would forever undermine the ability of any president to get unguarded advice.

That creates a classic conflict, not of personality, not of competence, not of ideology, but of simple constitutional prerogatives: The Senate cannot confirm her unless it has this information. And the White House cannot allow release of this information lest it jeopardize executive privilege.

Hence the perfectly honorable way to solve the conundrum: Miers withdraws out of respect for both the Senate and the executive’s prerogatives, the Senate expresses appreciation for this gracious acknowledgment of its needs and responsibilities, and the White House accepts her decision with the deepest regret and with gratitude for Miers’s putting preservation of executive prerogative above personal ambition.

Faces saved. And we start again.

Bush was clearly laying the groundwork for this the other day:

When George W. Bush was asked this morning about a report that the White House is thinking through contingency plans for the withdrawal of Harriet Miers’ nomination, he responded with what we thought was a non sequitur: Rather than confirming or denying the report, the president said that he will refuse to release documents reflecting the advice Miers has given him as a member of his White House staff.

It wasn’t an answer to the question he was asked, but… maybe it wasn’t quite the non sequitur we thought it was, either…

At his Cabinet meeting this morning, the president all but blurted out that he wouldn’t and couldn’t turn over such documents without jeopardizing the ability of future presidents to hear frank advice and “to make sound decisions.”

And like clockwork, the mainstream press is now reporting that a “document snag” is threatening to “scuttle” Miers’ nomination. Maybe this is all just coincidence. Maybe Krauthammer was tipped off to a plan already in the works. Or maybe, with Karl Rove distracted by other matters, the president is taking advice from wherever he can find it.

So, there we go – the Krauthammer Compromise. Miers is gone. Her name will never sully the Court.

I wonder who’s next.

Poor O’Connor – she was really hoping to be living it up in Arizona by now, wasn’t she?

More On Miers

I have no respect for any Democratic senator who finds Harriet Miers’s nomination to the Supreme Court acceptable, such as Charles Schumer, Harry Reid and others. I understand why most Republican senators would support her – despite her utter lack of qualifications, she passes their religion/abortion tests. But how can a Democratic senator support her when she lacks any evidence of the intellectual firepower necessary to sit on the Court, and probably doesn’t agree with them on substantive issues to boot? I’m flummoxed, unless they’re pretending to like her in order not to give Republicans more reasons to support her.

I loathe this nominee. It’s odd that I find myself agreeing with people like George Will and Charles Krauthammer (BTW, doesn’t he totally look like Mandy Patinkin?), but I do.

Of course, I feel some schadenfreude watching many conservatives get as angry about this nomination as I am. But that doesn’t mean I don’t agree with them, even if my reasons are slightly different than theirs:

For more than two decades, conservatives have been developing a team of potential justices for the high court in preparation for a moment such as this. They point to jurists such as Judge J. Michael Luttig of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit, Judge Michael W. McConnell of the 10th Circuit and Judge Priscilla R. Owen, newly sworn in on the 5th Circuit, as examples of people who have not just paid their dues but also weathered intellectual battles in preparation for reshaping the Supreme Court….

“The feeling was after John Roberts that surely the president was going to have to go to the bench where there were all these very excellent people who are serving on the circuit court or scholars who have been grooming for this possibility for years and years,” said Paul M. Weyrich, a leading voice in the conservative movement and one who has been openly skeptical of Miers.

Luttig and McConnell are highly qualified for the Court and I could respect them. But Owen? She might be intellectually qualified (is she? I don’t know), but she’s a major radical and I find her decisions odious. It’s Miers’s lack of intellectual qualifications and experience that concern me more than her purported judicial “philosophy” (if she even has one). Although that does bother me, too.

That said, she could pull a John Kerry during her confirmation hearings. Many people were surprised by John Kerry’s first presidential debate performance because they had built up all these preconceived notions about him in a portrait painted by the Republicans. It’s possible that Miers is a lot smarter than I’m giving her credit for.

But there’s no reason to believe that’s true unless there’s any evidence for it.

Harriet Miers was an awful, awful choice for a nomination. She’s completely unqualified to sit on the Supreme Court and her name should be withdrawn.