The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, January 09, 2006, Page 9, Image 9
Senators talk tough on eve of contentious hearings for Alito
Jesse J. Holland
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Senate
Democrats on Sunday
promised a drawn-out
confirmation and perhaps a
filibuster for Samuel Alito if
the Supreme Court nominee
evades or refuses to answer
their questions on abortion,
presidential war powers and
other issues at this week’s
confirmation hearings.
“If he continuously, given
his previous record, refused
to answer questions and
hid behind ‘I can’t answer
this because it might come
before me,’ it would increase
the chances of a filibuster,”
said Democrat Sen. Charles
Schumer of New York,
a member of the Senate
Judiciary Committee.
Democrats say they will
not decide whether to
filibuster or try to delay a
committee vote until after
me commircee s weeKiong
hearings that begin Monday.
If Democrats attempt a
filibuster based on Alito’s
answers on abortion, at least
one Republican is ready to
vote for Senate Majority
Leader Bill Frist’s plan to
ban judicial filibusters.
“I would consider that not
only not an extraordinary
circumstance, but a threat
to the independence of the
judiciary, and I would stop it
in its tracks with my vote,”
said GOP Sen. Lindsey
Graham of South Carolina.
Graham is one of the 14
senators — seven from each
party — who joined together
to end an earlier Senate
showdown of the stalling
tactic for the president’s
judicial nominees.
That group of centrist
lawmakers decided last year
i
to support such filibusters
only under “extraordinary
circumstances.”
Republicans say there
is no reason to delay or
filibuster Alito, the federal
appeals court judge who is
Bush’s choice to succeed
the retiring Justice Sandra
Day O'Connor. She often
provided the swing vote on
abortion, the death penalty,
affirmative action and other
contentious issues.
“Ihavenotseenanyrational
basis for filibustering Judge
Alito,” said the Judiciary
Committee chairman,
GOP Sen. Arlen Specter
of Pennsylvania, on CNN’s
“Late Edition.”
Alito will face at least
two days of questioning
from senators; the nominee
and the lawmakers planned
to give their opening
statements at noon EST on
Monday, hours after Alito’s
scheduled breakfast meeting
at the White House with the
president.
Questioning begins
Tuesday and is expected to go
through at least Thursday.
Specter has called for a
Jan. 17 committee vote.
But Sen. Patrick Leahy of
Vermont, the committee’s
top Democrat, would not
promise that Democrats
would stick to that schedule,
which Senate leaders hope
would lead to a final vote in
the full Senate on Jan. 20.
“Obviously, if he doesn’t
answer the questions, then it
gets out of my control. Some
senator would move to hold
it over. Let’s hope we get all
the answers, so that doesn’t
happen,” Leahy told CBS’
“Face the Nation.”
Alito was the White
House’s second choice to
replace O’Connor, the high
court’s first female justice.
White House counsel
Harriet Miers withdrew
from consideration after
conservatives questioned
her judicial philosophy
and qualifications for the
Supreme Court.
Bush then turned to Alito,
a 5 5-year-old conservative
judge on the 3rd U.S. Court
of Appeals in Philadelphia
who previously worked as
-1
a federal prosecutor and
a lawyer for the Reagan
administration.
Even with the current
debate over the government’s
wiretapping without court
approval and other uses
of executive authority in
the fight against terrorism,
abortion was expected to be
the most contentious topic
at the hearings.
“I believe that presidential
power will be very, very
important,” said Specter, an
abortion rights moderate.
But, he added, “I do not
think that you can put aside
the issue of a woman’s right
to choose. I think that that
still, in the popular mind, on
day-to-day activities, is still
the bigger question.”
Senators who have met
privately with Alito say he
told them that 1985 written
comments stating that there
was no constitutional right
to an abortion were part
of.a job application for the
Reagan administration,
which opposed abortion.
At the same time, he wrote
in a separate legal memo while
at the Justice Department
that the department should
try to chip away at abortion
rights rather than mount an
all-out assault.
Balce Ceneta / The Associated Press
U.S. Supreme Court nominee Samuel Alito, center, walks through the hallways of the Hart Senate office building with
Special Assistant to the President, Office of Legislative Affairs Jamie Brown, left, and former Indiana Sen. Dan Coats,
right, for meetings with senators on Capitol Hill in Washington in this Dec. 14, 2005 file photo.
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