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July, 2005
There’s a mistaken view that nominee John Roberts’ advocacy on behalf of his various clients tells us something useful
about how he will acquit himself as a justice on the nation’s
highest court.
It ain’t necessarily so and those who would try to
read the tea-leaves of his lawyering life (including members
of the Senate Judiciary Committee) are ill advised. There
is a line between representing the interests of a client and allowing one’s personal
philosophy to interfere
with that representation. That line is not only a matter
of fair representation, it is actionable against attorneys
who confuse the one issue with the other.
Thou shalt not stick your personal nose into a client’s
legal business.
Put another way, a lawyer’s duty is to the law, else
how would the unsavory and unattractive of the world get
justice?
Those who have their own agenda, and that includes almost
everyone opposed to this current president of ours, were
and are powered-up to fight this nomination. Actually, they
were powered-up to fight any nomination by GWB and now they’re
flummoxed by the choice he’s made. It’s a national
example of being ‘all dressed up with nowhere to go’ and
so they flock to the archives and try to make a connect between
an advocacy (active support; especially the act of pleading
or arguing for something) and a philosophy (any personal
belief about how to live or how to deal with a situation).
I myself am not all that happy over some of Roberts’ decisions
as a judge, particularly his participation in the three-judge
panel that overturned lower-court rulings about our terrorist
prisoners. But I understand that the lower-court opinion
was flawed as a matter of law and that is quite a different
thing than agreeing with and advocating the abuse of prisoners.
The quite different thing is what needs to be evaluated
in judging this candidate.
Finally, there is the matter of a better man than
we might have got. In a perfect world, the Supreme
Court would be our national repository of the best
of the best. It is not. It is often the best we can
get or the best we can approve.
Outgoing Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor
said John Roberts was a ‘brilliant choice.’
Those who would so love to see another O’Connor should
at least pay some attention to her opinion.
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